Doesn’t declaring an emergency set certain things in motion like switching to 121.5, squawking 7700 alarms going if with various ATC facilities and emergency equipment being deployed?
This about sums up my feelings as well.I kinda want to buy the Captain a drink. I might punch him in the face before the night is over, but it's a story I'd like to hear.
Ready-Room-Commandos make me tired ... but for the sake of discussion:
Having said that: if you listen I think the original 'wind call' on the audio was something like '23 gusting to 35' ... the 'gusting to 35' part was NOT repeated in the audio offered to the following flights which is kind of telling ... it's almost like tower didn't want anyone else going around to 31 after hearing the gust factor put landings 'out-of-limits' ... ???
But: the rapidity with which the AA crew went to the mat in 'declaring an emergency' makes me question whether or not there was 'something else going on' here?? It's not the kind of 'snap decision' a Captain makes when in the short-hairs and is close to landing. He might go around (I have) ... but to declare an EMERGENCY and blow up the pattern is something else ...
Sounds to me like the controller created his own problem, and the fact that he stopped telling people that winds were gusting to 35MPH just backs up the fact that he probably needed an attitude adjustment.
Yes, the controller is only required to give the spot winds at the time he looks at his wind gauge. The ATIS gives the trend. Many of us have used this to stay "legal" for landing (but you gotta know your own limits and be willing to take the heat if you screw it up....).Is it legal for a controller to intentionally misrepresent the wind conditions like that?
Coming into LAX one day in one of China Lake's U-3s headed for 25R and approach told me to maintain an airspeed above the U-3s gear speed. Since I was close in, I said negative, I'm slowing to gear lowering speed. The controller said "Roger come left 180. After a while he said come left 090. then left 360 and finally left 250. He then said NOW - will you maintain XX knots? I said Yes Sir - Yes Sir ( the three bags full was implied) and ended up landing two thirds of the way down the runway. It's a long runway, so I got it stopped okay, and I sure didn't want another tour of Orange County. Never heard anything more about it. There was no rancor involved and neither tower or ground said a word.