Icelandic Volcanic Eruption - Significant Disruption to UK Flights

That is correct, but the risk is so much smaller normally compared to when flying through volcano ash that it is irrelevant.

all the news channels are going on about these planes in the 1980's which flew through Ash clouds, but they are not stating that they flew through thick flumes of the stuff at night, far closer than 1500 miles from the volcano.

at a guess i'd say the risk is probably less than flying in heavy wind/storms, but hey i'm no expert.
 
Yeah, remember it's not just engine failure that the airlines are worried about, the dust causes a maintenance nightmare for anything that flies through it. A sandblasted windscreen isn't a cheap replacement, not to mention the potential problems caused by the dust getting into the various sensors and instrumentation.
 
No, it's just there are too many people on earth...

Well specifically people are everywhere, alongside global communications so incidents are communicated everywhere instantly.

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Volacanic ash is corrosive too, if it junks the engines, your holiday prices WILL go up. If a planes falls out of the sky, ditto.

Why even take the risk.
 
I for one don't fancy being in a commercial glider. Best to clear the skies until the ash buggers off... :)
 
aircrash investigations anyone I remember a Ep where a plane flew over some area and engines cut etc etc , turned out because it was flying over active volcano.

sorry if already been mentioned , but it just reminded of that episode :-)
 
My car and every other car here has ash on it/them, I`m old enough to remember the same thing happening in 1980 when a week after Mt St Helens erupted I had red ash on my green mk 1 ford escort :-), interesting times, we should see some correlations being made now with 2012 etc lol
 
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