On Feb 19, 6:20*pm, Ramy wrote:
On Feb 19, 4:43*pm, Darryl Ramm wrote:
On Feb 19, 12:02*pm, Ramy wrote:
On Feb 19, 7:44*am, Andy wrote:
The following references are provided, without my comment, for those
interested in the subject of stall recognition and recovery.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1234...?mod=djemalert...
reports on the referenced fatal accident:
http://www.ntsb.gov/ntsb/GenPDF.asp?...05MA003&rpt=fa
http://www.ntsb.gov/Publictn/2007/AAR0701.pdf
Andy
I simply don't buy it. How any pilot with even basic experience, not
to mention thousands of hours, will react to a stall warning by
pulling on the stick/yoke?? and "pitched up to a 31-degree angle" ??
It's not like they were so close to the ground that they had to pullup
to clear it. As usual, the NTSB rather put the blame on the pilots...
Ramy
What you think the pilots should not be blamed becasue they could not
possibly be so incompetent to conduct the amazing list of bad
decisions and errors that made? That's an interesting defense.
Well if that accident chain does not deserve to be blamed on the
pilots I don't know what does. Lets see, lets climb the sucker to
FL410, with the AP in rate mode so is really slow when we get there,
lets not monitor airspeed during this (even though we know are pushing
the envelope). Lets not follow engine failure checklists properly,
lets not pitch over and correctly do a windmills start, etc. (I can't
recall if it as established how much they knew about core lock if at
all, but they failed to execute basic restart procedure). Lets not
declare our emergency and try to cover up for a while hoping we can
get ourselves out of this hole. Lets not fly the sucker when all else
goes wrong and maintain glide to any of several airports etc. etc.
etc. This flight crew deserved evey bit of cricism they got. Some
aspects of training programs and the core lock on the GE engines etc.
need to be addressed but are very distant factors in my opinion.
And dude if that does ### convince you these folks were an accident
waiting to happen read ### cockpit transcript. Dude.
Most commentators came down hard on the pilots as well, including
several magazine articles.
There are multiple fatal accidents where things as "simple" as
misunderstanding stick shaker/pusher vs. Mach buffeting, obstructed
pitot/static systems (and fighting the stick pusher thinking it was
Mach induced, etc. etc.). However none of those are even close to *the
chain of events this flight crew managed to accomplish.
Darryl- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
I don't think we are talking about the same accidents Darryl. I was
referring to the recent one in the article. And I don't say pilots
should not be blamed for many possible mistakes they do. All I say is
that I don't buy the claim that experience pilot purposely pulled the
yoke and piched up to 31 degree angle without recognizing he is
stalling the aircraft. Unless I missread the article this is a
complete BS.
Ramy
I am sure we can all think of cases where we read "pilot error" and
know that it is wrong finger pointing. However your reverse argument
that people should not blame pilots because they could not pull back/
pitch up an aircraft into a deep stall or fail to recover from a stall
is fanciful. And I'm not judging anything to do with the current
accident, just saying there is no way to say pilots would not do
something just because you think an experienced pilot would not do it.
While I misunderstood what accident you were referring to there are
enough concerning things circulating already about the recent accident
- enough to guarantee I'll read the report carefully. But I would not
rush to jump to conclusions either way.
In the following accidents forget the flight crew's involvement in
arriving at the point bad things happen, but their efforts to do just
what you say an experienced crew would not do is what I'm pointing
out...
1974 B727 fatal crash, crew screwed up checklists and left pitot anti-
ice off and then mistook what was happening as they climbed with a
blocked pitot, even though they noted things looked strange and fought
the stick pusher all the way into a deep stall. Oh they had the nose
up 25 degrees higher than it should be...
http://flyingsc.com/learn/res/impossible_climb.html
1972 BEA Trident Heathrow. The crew deactivated the stick pusher after
first incorrectly retracting the wing LE droop, and stalled. Lots of
possible contributing factors but it is hard to argue this was not
pilot error in how they handled the stall (may have been complicated
by the possible medical condition of the pilot).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British...ays_Flight_548
and
http://www.super70s.com/super70s/Tec...8(Trident).asp
There are others out there, including likely cases of mishandling of
stall or mach tuck when autopilots either automatically or manually
disconnect and pilots are suddenly faced with unexpected control
forces. Is that mach tuck or stick push? Is that mach buffer or stall
buffet/stick shaker? Do I push or pull?
You should also appreciate how detatched from the reality of what was
happening to their aircraft that the two pilots who screwed up at FL
410 were. They stalled. What made it so amazing was all the other
stuff they did wrong. However even with obvious blame on the crew I
thought the NTSB did a good job highlighting training deficiencies -
especially issue with doing simulator stall training only at
relatively low altitude and not letting them go though to full stick
pusher stage - which may confuse a crew if the stick pusher does
activate. (which kind of mirrors my concern about the need for full on
spin training in GA aircraft and gliders. I think it is unforgivable
to just teach recovery from an the very earliest incipient stall and
pilots should be exposed to deep stalls and spins and their recovery
(and yes I know the irony is some people will die in spin training)).
Darryl