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Southwest u0026 FedEx Near Miss at Austin Airport • NTSB Animation

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AIRBOYD

Credit: NTSB
Runway Incursion and Overflight, Southwest Airlines Flight 708, Boeing 737700, N7827A, and Federal Express Flight 1432, Boeing 767300, N297FE

This incident involved Southwest Airlines (SWA) flight 708, a Boeing 737700, and Federal Express Corporation (FedEx) flight 1432, a Boeing 767300, which were involved in a runway incursion at AustinBergstrom International Airport (AUS), Austin, Texas. The local controller had cleared the SWA airplane for takeoff on runway 18L and instructed the FedEx airplane to continue its approach to the same runway. The controller was unable to see the SWA airplane on the taxiway and runway because of dense fog, and the AUS air traffic control tower (ATCT) did not have surface detection equipment to aid the controller in monitoring ground traffic.

Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) procedures required the controller to apply a 2mile separation between the airplanes. However, when the SWA airplane lined up with the runway 18L centerline and came to a complete stop (so that the flight crew could perform an engine runup), the FedEx airplane was 1.5 miles away. The separation between both airplanes continued to decrease until the FedEx flight crew saw the outline of the SWA airplane through the fog and began a missed approach. At that time, the FedEx airplane had just crossed the runway 18L threshold, and the SWA airplane was 1,020 ft down the runway. The airplanes were separated at their closest point by 150 to 170 ft (which was less than the 180ft length of the FedEx Boeing 767 airplane).

The FedEx airplane continued to climb, and the SWA airplane continued to accelerate, which increased the separation between the airplanes. The SWA airplane lifted off and continued to its planned destination. The FedEx airplane circled to the left and landed on runway 18L without further incident.

The National Transportation Safety Board determines that the probable cause of this incident was the local controller’s incorrect assumption that the Southwest Airlines (SWA) airplane would depart from the runway before the Federal Express airplane arrived on the same runway, which resulted in a loss of separation between both airplanes. Contributing to the controller’s incorrect assumption were

​his expectation bias regarding the SWA airplane’s departure, his lack of situational awareness regarding the SWA airplane’s position when the flight crew requested takeoff clearance, and
the air traffic control tower’s lack of training (before the incident) on lowvisibility operations.
Contributing to the incident was the SWA flight crewmembers’ failure to account for the traffic that was on short final approach and to notify the controller that they would need additional time on the runway before the takeoff roll. Also contributing to the incident was the Federal Aviation Administration’s failure to require surface detection equipment at AustinBergstrom International Airport and direct alerting for flight crews. ​

Read the June 6, 2024 Board Meeting Presentation
https://www.ntsb.gov/investigations/D...

Read the Board Meeting Abstract
https://www.ntsb.gov/investigations/D...


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posted by genantaho