C177 PLT LANDED ON A CLOSED RWY AT MDS.

2006-05 · NASA ASRS report 696358

Date: 2006-05 · Aircraft: Cardinal 177/177RG · Phase: landing

Anomalies: deviation-discrepancy-procedural-far

Synopsis

C177 PLT LANDED ON A CLOSED RWY AT MDS.

Narrative

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

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

Loading the flight search…

Frequently asked questions

How do I search flights by aircraft type on FlightFinder?

Pick an aircraft model — Boeing 737, Airbus A320, A380, Boeing 787 Dreamliner and more — enter your origin airport, and FlightFinder shows every route that plane flies from there with live fares.

Which aircraft types can I filter by?

We support Boeing 737/747/757/767/777/787, the full Airbus A220/A319/A320/A321/A330/A340/A350/A380 family, Embraer E170/E175/E190/E195, Bombardier CRJ and Dash 8, and the ATR 42/72 turboprops.

Is FlightFinder free to use?

Search and schedules are free. Pro ($4.99/month, $39/year, or $99 one-time lifetime) unlocks the enriched flight card — on-time stats, CO₂ per passenger, amenities, live gate & weather — plus My Trips with push alerts.

Where does the route data come from?

Live schedules come from Amadeus, AeroDataBox and Travelpayouts. Observed routes (which aircraft actually flew a given city pair) are crowdsourced from adsb.lol ADS-B data under the Open Database License.