ACR X HAD LTSS FROM ACFT Y. SYS ERROR. ACR X NON ADHERENCE TO ATC CLRNC (UNAUTH DSCNT FROM ASSIGNED ALT). PLT DEV.

Date: 1991-08 · Aircraft: Medium Large Transport; Low Wing; 2 Turbojet Eng

Anomalies: atc-issue-all-types|conflict-airborne-conflict|deviation-altitude-excursion-from-assigned-altitude|deviation-discrepancy-procedural-clearance|deviation-discrepancy-procedural-published-material-policy

Synopsis

ACR X HAD LTSS FROM ACFT Y. SYS ERROR. ACR X NON ADHERENCE TO ATC CLRNC (UNAUTH DSCNT FROM ASSIGNED ALT). PLT DEV.

Narrative

ACR X LEVEL AT 4000 FT MLS; 210 KTS ASSIGNED AIRSPD; 270 DEG HDG ASSIGNED BY APCH CTL; AUTOPLT ENGAGED; VECTORS BEING GIVEN WERE TO VECTOR ACFT ON TO LOC TO RWY 35R AT DFW ARPT (GS WAS INOP); ACFT WAS SE OF DFW ARPT APPROX 14 MI. ACR X WAS GIVEN A 170 DEG HDG ASSIGNMENT BY APCH. ACFT WAS STARTED IN A TURN TO THAT DIRECTION BUT APPARENTLY THIS RATE OF TURN WAS INSUFFICIENT TO AVOID A TFC CONFLICT. ACFT WAS IN THE CLOUDS AT THE TIME AND COULD NOT PROVIDE IT'S OWN TFC SEPARATION. AT THE TIME AN APCH SUPVR TOOK OVER (CHANGE IN VOICE) AND GAVE AN 'IMMEDIATE TURN TO 170 DEG HDG.' ACFT AUTOPLT WAS DISCONNECTED AT THIS TIME AND ACFT WAS ROLLED INTO A 45 DEG ANGLE OF BANK AT AN ACCELERATED ROLL RATE THAN THE AUTOPLT COULD HAVE PROVIDED. AT THIS SAME TIME ACR X BROKE OUT OF THE CLOUDS AND ACFT Y COULD BE SEEN IN FRONT OF OURS APPROX 2.5 MI DIRECTLY IN FRONT. WE PASSED BEHIND THIS ACFT AND THEN WERE GIVEN A 020 DEG HDG ASSIGNMENT AND SPD REDUCTION TO 170 KTS BY APCH CTL. THIS VECTOR WAS TO VECTOR ACFT BACK TO THE LOC INBOUND COURSE FOR AN APCH INTO DFW ARPT. STILL BEING TOO CLOSE IN TRAIL TO THE OTHER ACFT IN FRONT OF OURS ON THE LOC APCH WE WERE GIVEN A TURN TO THE E AND VECTORED BACK AROUND FOR ANOTHER APCH. DURING THE EVASIVE MANEUVERS WITH AUTOPLT DISCONNECTED OUR ACFT DSNDED TO 3600 FT MSL. THE ACFT WAS IMMEDIATELY RETURNED TO 4000 FT ASSIGNED ALT AND AUTOPLT ENGAGED. ALT LOSS WAS DUE TO STEEP ANGLES OF BANK; CHANGING ACFT PERFORMANCE (SPD REDUCTION); AND PRIMARY ATTN BEING GIVEN TO CONFLICT ACFT.

Source: NASA Aviation Safety Reporting System (public domain). Reports are voluntary submissions and are not verified by NASA.