Jack Frost wrote:
In 35 years of airline flying, much of it at the low altitudes I only had one serious bird strike. I was flying a Convair 580 betweer Columbus and Grand Island NE at night and took 2 Canadian Snow Geese into the air inlet on the right engine. Banging, popping, surging and an off-scale EGT. A quick prop feather solved the problem. The engine was changed at GRI. How did we know it was 2 geese? The mechs found 3 geese feet inside the engine.
I've had about 6 or 7 in my airline career so far, with about 20 over my whole aviation experience, though none have been serious, and none caused any engine damage.
Jack Frost wrote:
During the migratory fowl season, we always turned on the weather radar at low alititudes. Not to spot the birds but for whatever reason, nobody got a serious bird strike with the radar on. That incident made a believer out of me since I had the radar off that night.
Wow, I didn't know that "technique" had been around that long. I've often heard that birds can "sense" the radar and will avoid it. I've always chalked that up to being an old "wives-tale" and legend that was probably not true. Every once in a while, I'll fly with a pilot who insists that we always have the radar on at low altitude, regardless of the actual weather for this very reason. I still don't know whether to believe this or not. I would love to see some actual statistical analysis to prove this. On one of the airplanes I fly, the radar is always on and can't be turned off with the engines running, because that's what gives input into the Predictive Wind Shear system. Those airplanes still get bird strikes, and I've had them, so I don't know what to think.