At least, it was a good practical joke about paying attention what you write as journalist. Should happen more often :lol:
Much like when the NY Times get caught reprinting an Onion article.
At least, it was a good practical joke about paying attention what you write as journalist. Should happen more often :lol:
I hope the bet was worth the reprimand.....
Quite amazing that the NTSB allowed that to happen, and quite stupid for the news channel not to fact-check it, especially since the names had been well known for over a week.
Quite amazing that the NTSB allowed that to happen, and quite stupid for the news channel not to fact-check it, especially since the names had been well known for over a week.
I think it is rather a sign of "not calling the official channels, but trying to bypass and get insider information".
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3. Technical discussion on the 777 controls, approach mode options, auto-throttle settings, analysis of the glideslope, stabilization criteria, etc. Lots of interesting discussion on human/computer interfaces and how can a human be lulled into crashing a relatively brand new quarter-billion dollar plane short of the runway on a beautiful cavok day, and how we come this far that pilots don't know how to even fly their planes without the magenta line?
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I read that discussion on Pprune that a "FLCH trap" can cause the autothrottle to be cancelled out but surprisingly nothing about this possibility mentioned by 777 pilots interviewed by news sources, TV or newspapers.
In fact very little discussion about the how autothrottle can be armed and yet an experienced 777 pilot, as was the instructor pilot, could not be aware of this relatively common manual landing scenario where it is not controlling the speed.
Bob Clark
Gadgets are tools, but the aviator must aviate. Be responsible for what your aircraft and its gadgets are doing.
On the one side - you could argue for more automation (e.g. EGPWS mode to check for stabilized approach at say 600/500/400 ft to show good descent, good speed, good landing config, etc). On the other side ... how much automation do you need to check heading, attitude and speed?
Here I have to disagree with you, I'd say that we need LESS automation during that last part of the flight. AF447 crashed because the autopilot said 'I have no idea what's going on here, over to you'. I believe that this 777 crashed because the automation wasn't available and the crew were not (as the video about says) 'One with the aircraft'. As I said above, any pilot should be connected to the aircraft. Without even looking at the speed the pilots should have known they were going too slowly because the engine pitch was wrong and the nose was too high.
They should have felt it but they were too reliant on the automation.
No harm with adding the mechanical checks for unstabilized approach as well though, with a go-around Resolution Advisory.
I am just a simple caveman pilot. Your discussion of autothrottles and other gadgets confuse and frighten me! In the prehistoric days I was taught to keep an eye on your AIRSPEED INDICATOR during an approach, by a pilot who was even more of a caveman than I.
Gadgets are tools, but the aviator must aviate. Be responsible for what your aircraft and its gadgets are doing.
Quite.
I'm not sure how old this video is but I think it's very relevant. It's a course that one of the American airlines started to doing a few years back which is attempting to teach pilots that if you're in unfamiliar territory or in a situation where you will speed more time typing into the FMGC than dealing with the problem that's the time to hand fly the aircraft and FEEL what it's upto.
I agree up until the word "feel". I was taught that feeling, especially via the inner ear, can be very deceptive
But this does not mean that the autothrottle state is not part in considerations. You have to know how your aircraft will react in the current state, and make sure that the aircraft will react in the future so that it will fly where you want it to.
Agreed, the automation is a very good thing but how much do you want to bet that the pilots were head down typing and why didn't the PF have his hands on the throttles? In an Airbus the throttles don't move with engine power changes when A/T is engaged but in a Boeing they do. If he was on approach and, as said in the video, was 'tactically connected to his aircraft' and 'mentally flying it' he'd have known a lot sooner that something wasn't right because the throttles hadn't moved.
until the automation says 'huh? This approach is unsteady. ABORT!!' when all the pilot is trying to do is sidestep or land in a gusty conditions or at the absolute worst - when there is a major fault like the loss of all hydraulics or because both engines have more birds in them than fan blades.
Hmm - maybe not a RA then, but at least master caution?
Else how do you avoid a similar fate again to this crash, where inattention to basic airmanship leads to disaster?
If you are fighting with a disabled plane, you can cancel the warning and continue at your discretion. If you have a perfectly serviceable plane in a cavok sky with light winds, and you get that caution, it should wake you the hell up and get you focused on the problem.