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Have you ever experienced a midair Dutch roll?

The Tradition

HB King
Apr 23, 2002
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A Southwest Airlines flight from Phoenix to Oakland experienced a Dutch roll at 32,000 feet mid-flight last month, causing the aircraft to be taken out of service.

The crew of Southwest Flight 746, operated with a Boeing 737-8 MAX, regained control and safely landed at San Francisco Bay Oakland International Airport about an hour after the incident, according to a Federal Aviation Administration report.

The aircraft, which sustained structural damage, carried 175 passengers and six crew members. No injuries were reported.

A Dutch roll, a rare phenomenon where an aircraft rocks side-to-side and sways left-to-right simultaneously, was due to a damaged power control unit that impaired the aircraft’s directional stability, according to the Aviation Herald.

The plane, delivered to the airline in December 2022, remained grounded in Oakland until June 6 before being transferred to a Boeing facility in Everett, Wash., for repairs, flight records show.

Boeing declined to comment on the incident. The Chronicle has reached out to Southwest Airlines for further information.

 
Those Max8’s are struggling. Wish we had an individual who would tell us what it’s like behind the scenes…….someone that could whistle or something. Too bad no one like that ever existed.
 
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I've had Dutch letters....Dutch Almond patties, Dutch Stroepwafels....but never midair and no Dutch rolls....we just called them rolls
 
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OMG.... this story about the worst passenger airline crash in history, featuring the Dutch roll, is absolutely horrifying.


In the aftermath of the incident, Hiroo Tominaga, a JAL maintenance manager, died from suicide intended to atone for the incident,[29] as did Susumu Tajima, an engineer who had inspected and cleared the aircraft as flightworthy, whose suicide note cited "work problems."[30]

Japanese society is different.
 
Old plane was an early model 737?
No but they did have their fair share of those. Saab 340.

Also have had some nasty wake turbulence upsets in the E145 that rolled enough to kick off the autopilot. Nothing like these Southwest guys though.
 
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A Southwest Airlines flight from Phoenix to Oakland experienced a Dutch roll at 32,000 feet mid-flight last month, causing the aircraft to be taken out of service.

The crew of Southwest Flight 746, operated with a Boeing 737-8 MAX, regained control and safely landed at San Francisco Bay Oakland International Airport about an hour after the incident, according to a Federal Aviation Administration report.

The aircraft, which sustained structural damage, carried 175 passengers and six crew members. No injuries were reported.

A Dutch roll, a rare phenomenon where an aircraft rocks side-to-side and sways left-to-right simultaneously, was due to a damaged power control unit that impaired the aircraft’s directional stability, according to the Aviation Herald.

The plane, delivered to the airline in December 2022, remained grounded in Oakland until June 6 before being transferred to a Boeing facility in Everett, Wash., for repairs, flight records show.

Boeing declined to comment on the incident. The Chronicle has reached out to Southwest Airlines for further information.

Opened this thread expecting a new little Debbie snack; received another footnote in the story of the death of a once great American institution.
 
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