VIDEO: Arline pilots film landing in heavy cloud

VIDEO: Arline pilots film landing in heavy cloud
VIDEO: Arline pilots film landing in heavy cloud
Flying blind! Boeing 767 pilots descend through cloud so thick that they may have to abort landing at last moment in nerve-wracking footage Pilots Steve Giordano and Bob Allen were flying a jet from Japan to Arkansas  The pair were bringing an ex-Japanese Airlines Boeing 767 to long term storage On approach to their destination in Blytheville, the runway was covered in cloud 

View
comments

This is the heart-stopping moment when a pilot landing in a small airport in Arkansas flew through heavy cloud that covered the runway until moments before the aircraft touched down. 

Steve Giordano was flying the Boeing 767-300 from Tokyo to Blytheville, Arkansas which is not equipped with high tech navigational equipment which helps the crew find the runway in poor weather. 

Instead, Giordano and his colleague, Bob Allen, were performing a non-precision approach, which involves flying the aircraft using radio beacons on the ground to determine its location. 

The non-precision system is similar to the way aircraft were forced to navigate in the post-war period.  

Steve Giordano and his colleague Bob Allen were flying into Blytheville, Arkansas on board a Boeing 767-300 when they were blanketed in cloud just seconds before they were due to touch down

Steve Giordano and his colleague Bob Allen were flying into Blytheville, Arkansas on board a Boeing 767-300 when they were blanketed in cloud just seconds before they were due to touch down

With less than three miles to go to the airport, Allen spotted the ground although they were still not able to see the runway

With less than three miles to go to the airport, Allen spotted the ground although they were still not able to see the runway

As the aircraft descends through the cloud, one pilot monitors the instruments, keeping a close eye on the jet's speed and altitude while the other looks out for the the runway. 

Wednesday's footage, which was broadcast on Giordano's YouTube channel Cockpit Casual, shows the wipers on the windshield working at full speed as the aircraft descends through the cloud.  

In a precision approach, a beam is broadcast from the end of the runway which tells a pilot if they are on the correct course to land on the center of the airstrip. 

In the non-precision

read more from dailymail.....

PREV The tragic life of the 'girl born on plane' who went viral in 2015 then met ... trends now
NEXT Female teacher, 35, is arrested after sending nude pics via text to students ... trends now