IAA Safety Leaflets
No. | Title | Date of issue | Type | Size | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
EASA DG | GA Dangerous Goods Safety | 18/08/2020 |
pdf
|
1355 KB | Download |
IGA 9 R3 | Using Unleaded Petrol (Mogas) in Aircraft | 25/07/2023 |
pdf
|
147 KB | Download |
IGA 8 | GA Passenger Safety Considerations | 19/08/2014 |
pdf
|
224 KB | Download |
IGA 7 | Fuel Starvation/Fuel Exhaustion | 13/11/2013 |
pdf
|
153 KB | Download |
IGA 6 | Wire Strikes - The Hazard to Aviation | 26/04/2013 |
pdf
|
135 KB | Download |
GA 3 | Weather Anticipation | 14/02/2012 |
pdf
|
3991 KB | Download |
HE 2 | Helicopter Airmanship - Methods to Improve Helicopter Pilots Safety | 12/01/2012 |
pdf
|
1463 KB | Download |
IGA 4 | Use of GNSS/GPS in General Aviation | 16/12/2011 |
pdf
|
121 KB | Download |
IGA 3 R1 | Aircraft and Components with Low Utilisation | 14/02/2025 |
pdf
|
186 KB | Download |
IGA 2 | Sky Lanterns and the risk to Aviation | 23/09/2011 |
pdf
|
97 KB | Download |
SKYbrary Articles
A classic example of plan continuation bias...
16 May 2022
On 7 August 2020, a Boeing 737-800 making its second attempt to land at Calicut off a night ILS approach with a significant tailwind component became unstabilised and touched down approximately half way down the 2,700 metre-long wet table top runway and departed the end of it at 85 knots before continuing through the runway end safety area and a fence and then dropping sharply onto a road. This caused the fuselage to separate into three pieces with 97 of the 190 occupants including both pilots being fatally or seriously injured and 34 others sustaining minor injuries. Significant fuel spillage occurred but there was no fire.
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