ROK Drop

By on May 17th, 2009 at 12:45 pm

Airman spots aircraft fuel leak at 35,000 feet

» by in: U.S. Air Force

Was anyone monitoring the fuel status in the cockpit?

Most of us hear stories of Airmen saving lives in combat, but an Airman who saves the lives of more than 300 passengers is definitely a story worth hearing.leak

A fuel leak on a civilian aircraft caught the attention of Staff Sgt. Bartek Bachleda, 909th Air Refueling Squadron boom operator, during a flight from Chicago to Narita airport, Japan. After alerting the pilots and aircrew, the ranking pilot made the decision to divert the flight to San Francisco.

“I noticed the leak on the left side of the aircraft right behind the wing earlier during take-off,” said Sergeant Bachleda.

Sergeant Bachleda continued analyzing the outflow of fuel to be 100 percent sure it was a leak while the plane was reaching cruising altitude. Almost an hour into the flight, he told a stewardess of the possible leak, but was given an unconcerned response.

Sergeant Bachleda then began to capture the possible leak on video. He then got the stewardess’ attention by saying, “Ma’am it’s an emergency.” He identified himself to her and showed her the leak on video.

“She was completely serious and was no longer handing out drinks,” he said. “I told her you need to inform your captain before we go oceanic.”

The captain came from the cockpit to where Sergeant Bachleda was sitting to see the leak and view the video footage. Sergeant Bachleda said the captain and the crew were trying to figure out how the aircraft was losing 6,000 pounds of fuel an hour and then they knew exactly what was going on.

The captain made a mid-air announcement the flight would be diverted back to Chicago, but then changed it to San Francisco so passengers could catch the only existing flight to Narita airport.

Once the flight arrived in San Francisco, Sergeant Bachleda and a coworker were asked to stay back while the aircraft was deplaned. They waited for the arrival of investigators, the fire chief, and the owner of the airport to explain what went wrong.-U.S. Air Force

The sergeant was thanked by deplaning passengers. Bachleda may well have saved all their lives. He also helped investigators afterwards. As a reward, Bachleda got a first class airline seat from San Francisco to Tokyo.

I’ve flown over a half million flight miles in my life, 400,000 of which was between 1997 and 2001. The only near incident I ever encountered, was an aborted landing at Fort Lauderdale airport. The pilot said we were going around because a plane was on the runway.

- 636 views
3
  • Hamilton
    9:33 am on May 17th, 2009 1

    I'm just waiting for a FAA drone to bring charges against the good SGT for using an unauthorized video device during flight.

  • gerry
    12:27 pm on May 17th, 2009 2

    Flew a C-123 from Fort Brag to England AFB in Louisiana, when I told the crew chief the engine was on fire. He said 'no problem', notified the pilot and they used the fire extinquiser, feathered the prop and used the J-pod in its place. The crew chief didn't seem too worried, so neither was I. Otherwise an uneventful flight. (1968)

  • ZenKimchi
    9:01 pm on May 17th, 2009 3

    That's an amazing story.

 

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