This isn't really brief, but it is a pretty interesting piece that the SFO (San Francisco Airport) has on their website about Go-Arounds. I'm surprised to find it on the website, and makes me think they get a lot of questions about it.
Some quick points: Go-Arounds happen every day at SFO, not uncommonly 3 or more. In national statistics, a "normal" rate of Go-Arounds is between 0.02-0.06% of landings. The rate for SFO is 0.03% for the time frame study between 2015 and 2018.
For SFO, which is a far larger airport than KDCA and serves much larger international flights as well as a variety of smaller regional flights of the same size as KDCA. I bolded the one really important cause that gets mixed in all the statistics:
- 1.4 times more likely during busy summer months than fall or early spring months
- 1.8 to 4.0 times more likely in less frequently used airport configurations than when arriving on the most frequently used arrival runways
- 1.5 times more likely during periods of peak daily arrival volume than during mid‐afternoons when arrival volume is generally lighter
- 1.1 times more likely for widebody aircraft than narrowbody or regional jet aircraft
- 1.2 times more likely for small aircraft (jet, turboprop, propeller) than narrowbody or regional jet aircraft
- 1.4 times more likely for foreign flagged passenger carriers than U.S. flagged passenger carriers
The article doesn't directly involve reporting requirements, and I'll research that a bit more.
|The Go‐Around Procedure and CausesAt the highest, most‐general, level, a go‐around is a flight procedure in which an arriving aircraft aborts its landing procedure and returns to the landing queue. Go‐arounds are typically initiated if a pilot or controller is not completely satisfied that the...
www.flysfo.com