If you wonder, the flight was KLM 213 (AMS - YVR) and the short missed approach communication happened at 1:37 PM (21:37 UTC)
Just sharing...

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Good friend of mine, who's is getting up there in years, very afraid of flying. Loves flying model airplanes however.confusedalot wrote: ↑Mon Nov 06, 2017 6:40 pm Circumstances for a missed approach are pretty rare. I've done maybe two in an airliner? Shit happens I suppose, when circumstances line up the wrong way.
It's really not a big deal but it does tend to scare the ''bleep'' out of many passengers, even if there is nothing dangerous about it.
Thank god for simulators, you get to do lots of them.
It usually is reported as an AOR (Aviation Occurrence Report) which atc submits for anything that happens out of the norm. An unplanned overshoot fits that description.
Never heard a word from the Airline about any missed approach I've ever done - that's at multiple companies.
I assume you mean pilot initiated missed approaches. In this case it was ATC that initiated the go-around, which costs the airline money even though it was obviously the safe and prudent move by the controller. I think it's reasonable for there to be some sort of a reporting system whereby if there is an unplanned go around then the causal factors could be sussed out. For example, in this case the aircraft ahead had not cleared the runway yet. So was this because the aircraft on the runway flew their approach at a lower speed than expected or did ATC run the second aircraft too close to the first, or did the the second aircraft fly the approach faster than expected. Reporting would probably be more for figuring out if a deficiency exists rather than vilifying anyone.