RGClark
Mathematician
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looking at this graph, i feel like i know exactly what happened since i've done this before in flight sims. coming in at a pretty good angle but didn't slow down, so going way too fast. Horizontal motion due to speed, not lift, then cut the engine to keep angle good, lose airspeed and start falling, but still going to fast so the "correct angle" is an illusion created by falling but trying to gain back the angle with lift then realizing the speed is too slow and you're actually stalling because you slowed down too much to keep the right "angle". Well, that might all sound confusing, but i swear i've made this mistake in sims... the main difference is that i'm not a professional responsible for human lives with hundreds of hours of flight time :facepalm:
Is there an auto throttle in the sims?
Bob Clark
---------- Post added 07-12-13 at 12:08 AM ---------- Previous post was 07-11-13 at 11:31 PM ----------
The latest reports suggest the autothrottle was "armed" but may not have been engaged, as apparently it is a two step process in the 777:
San Francisco probe brings questions over auto speed controls.
By Martha Mendoza
Associated Press
Published: Thursday, July 11 2013 10:13 a.m. MDT
Updated: 1 hour ago
http://www.deseretnews.com/article/765633733/SF-probe-brings-questions-over-auto-speed-controls.html
Anyone know of how autothrottle works in the 747? Both pilots were more experienced in the 747. Is it possible in the 747 simply arming the autothrottle is sufficient for it to protect against dropping below the safe speed?
The training pilot should have known about the two step process in the 777 though the pilot undergoing training may not have been. One possibility is that since this was the training pilots first training mission, when the pilot at the controls said he armed the autothrottle the trainer did not check to see it was also engaged.
Conflicting descriptions on how the auto throttle works. This article says the armed autothrottle should still have prevented the plane from dropping to too low speed:
Asiana 214 Pilot Hints At Autothrottle Confusion.
By John Croft ****@aviationweek.com
Source: AWIN First
July 9, 2013
Hersman says investigators documenting switch positions is the cockpit after the crash noted that the autothrottles were armed. In that state, the system will automatically activate when speeds are low regardless of whether pilots have the autothrottle system turned on or off.
http://www.aviationweek.com/Article.aspx?id=/article-xml/awx_07_09_2013_p0-595503.xml
Bob Clark