Search icon

News

05th May 2022

Holidaymakers terrified as Virgin Atlantic plane forced to turn back because of ‘untrained pilot’

April Curtin

Airplane film with blow up pilot

‘You could have cut the tension in the cockpit with a knife’, a source said

Passengers flying from London to New York were left “furious” when their plane had to make a U-turn mid-flight after it emerged the co-pilot had not completed his training.

The Virgin Atlantic A330 flight took off from Heathrow Airport at 9.41am on Monday – but while the plane was flying over Ireland, the captain was informed that his first officer had not completed his final flying test, The Sun reports.

It was around 40 minutes into the flight that the pilot was ordered to return to London – landing back at Heathrow at 11.12am. Nearly 300 passengers were then forced to wait on the runway while an appropriate first officer replacement was found.

The plane eventually landed in the US nearly three hours later than expected. Virgin Atlantic apologised for the error and said it was a mistake with the rota.

A source told The Sun: “You could have cut the tension in the cockpit with a knife. The plane got as far as Ireland and then they found out the first officer was still in training.

“The skipper had no choice but to go back to Heathrow and find a more experienced member of the crew. It was embarrassing for everyone and the passengers were furious.”

The first officer, also known as the co-pilot, is second in command on the aircraft after the captain. They help navigate and operate flights and can be required to control the airplane in the case of an emergency.

Sources told MailOnline that the captain on the aircraft had been with Virgin Atlantic for 17 years and had completed thousands of hours of flight time.

The first officer, who joined the airline in 2017, had been trained, fully licensed and fully type-rated in accordance with UK regulations but was still in need of a final assessment flight with a training captain to comply with the Virgin Atlantic’s policies.

Despite the error, the airline said the safety of the plane was not compromised.

A Virgin Atlantic spokesman told MailOnline: “Due to a rostering error, flight VS3 from London Heathrow to New York-JFK returned to Heathrow on Monday 2nd May shortly after take-off.

“The qualified first officer, who was flying alongside an experienced captain, was replaced with a new pilot to ensure full compliance with Virgin Atlantic’s training protocols, which exceed industry standards.

“We apologise for any inconvenience caused to our customers who arrived two hours, 40 minutes later than scheduled as a result of the crew change.”

A Civil Aviation Authority spokesman said: “Virgin Atlantic have made us aware of the incident. Both pilots were suitably licensed and qualified to undertake the flight.”

Related links: