Rubber deposits at TIA runway pose threat to aircraft safety
Rubber deposits at TIA runway pose threat to aircraft safety
Published: 05:22 am Jul 31, 2016
Kathmandu, July 30 With equipment lying in a state of disrepair, the country’s sole international airport continues to operate with ever-accumulating rubber deposits at the southern end of its only runway, creating conditions that could make a landing aircraft lose directional control and make undesired runway excursion in the rainy season. Stakeholders said sheer negligence on the part of Civil Aviation Authority of Nepal has turned a water pressure rubber-deposit removal machine dysfunctional, leaving the runway threshold at Tribhuvan International Airport soiled by rubber deposits. Researches show that an average aircraft landing leaves 700 grammar rubber in a thin layer on the runway. Senior Captain YK Bhattarai said piling rubber deposits on the runway designated 02, where most arriving jet aircraft make first ground contact, could cause aircraft not only to skid, but also lead to engine damage with possible fatal consequences. “It’s very risky mainly in the rainy season,” he added. Deputy Director General at CAAN Mahendra Singh Rawal admitted TIA had failed to use a water pressure rubber-deposit removal machine purchased a few years ago. “A process has, however, been initiated to rent a machine from abroad,” he told this daily.
- Rubber deposited in the touchdown zone by tires of landing aeroplanes obliterates runway markings and, when wet, creates an extremely slick area on the runway surface
- Snow, slush, ice, standing water, mud, dust, sand, oil, rubber deposits and other contaminants shall be removed from the surface of runways in use as rapidly and completely as possible to minimise accumulation as per the ICAO stipulations