![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jan 20, 3:51*pm, wrote:
On Tue, 20 Jan 2009 09:28:27 -0800 (PST), wrote: Where on the checklist is the instruction to flip this switch? The manual states: At 2000 ft CABIN PRESS MODE SEL.............................Check AUTO ENG 1 & 2 BLEED, APU BLEED.......................OFF P/B DITCHING.....................................ON P/A............................................."TOU CHDOWN IN ONE MINUTE" Aim for an impact with an 11° body angle and minimum ROD. Poster However if you're also working an inflight engine unstart which takes precedence? Clarification: two engine unstart w/inflight emergency. Quite a bit different from a situation that begins at cruise altitude or with only *one* emergency rather than a sequence of events. As a PAX I would rather know that the crew are concentrating on landing the aircraft (ditching) as gently as possible. That silly switch won't do a thing to save the buoyancy if the fuselage is fractured by a rough ditching...a point one everyone seems to miss. I would hazard (grin) a guess that the final review will show them to have maintained situational awareness with the concomitant priority management. |
#12
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#13
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Maxwell" #$$9#@%%%.^^^ wrote in news:ex7dl.165906$2w3.143091
@newsfe19.iad: "Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message ... wrote in : She wasn't there either... in any case she's talking ****. It was a low priority in any case. Bertie Like you had a clue. Snort! Bertie |
#14
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#15
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Flydive wrote in :
wrote: Low priority compared to flying the plane, deadstick, in a congested urban environment. Or would you rather he spend time looking for a button on the panel? Well it takes 3 seconds to flip the switch, you should know where is located. one pilot is flying the aircraft, the other one is assisting and going through the checklist. Yep, and the checklists can lead you into a workd of trouble. There wasn't time. In this case, a relight checklist was really all they should have been interested in. Bertie |
#16
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Flydive wrote in :
wrote: On Jan 20, 10:11 am, Flydive wrote: wrote: Low priority compared to flying the plane, deadstick, in a congested urban environment. Or would you rather he spend time looking for a button on the panel? Well it takes 3 seconds to flip the switch, you should know where is located. one pilot is flying the aircraft, the other one is assisting and going through the checklist. Yep. Where on the checklist is the instruction to flip this switch? One may assume that since it was not flipped it was not at the top of the list and thus was of a lower priority. Flying the airplane and only those steps necessary to (1) avoid obstacles while (2) setting up for landing are of high(est) priority. The ditch switch is at the top of the ditching checklist and usually is a memory item, if you are going to ditch I would say is a priority item. Only if you have time. Ditchig checklists don't have any memory items at all, and in fact Bus checklists, with most airlines, have very few memory drills. Lkikely the only memory checks are the engine fire drill and a pressurisations blowout, and those would have only the initial itiems on them. Airliners have 2 pilots and usually only one of them is handling the controls, the other one takes care of the emergency and assists the flying pilot. You say setting up for landing, well if you are "landing" No, you tell him to do what you need him to do in the circumstance. In this case, the non handler was probably try to relight and telling the cabin and ATC waht was happening. in water the water, prepare the aircraft for ditching is part of it, a priority. Nope, not in this case. if they didn;t fly the airplane, the holes in the bottom of the airplane would have been the least of their problems, since they would have made significantly larger holes. Bertie |
#18
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#19
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Flydive wrote in :
wrote: On Jan 20, 3:51 pm, wrote: On Tue, 20 Jan 2009 09:28:27 -0800 (PST), wrote: Where on the checklist is the instruction to flip this switch? The manual states: At 2000 ft CABIN PRESS MODE SEL.............................Check AUTO ENG 1 & 2 BLEED, APU BLEED.......................OFF P/B DITCHING.....................................ON P/A............................................."TOU CHDOWN IN ONE MINUTE" Aim for an impact with an 11° body angle and minimum ROD. Poster However if you're also working an inflight engine unstart which takes precedence? Clarification: two engine unstart w/inflight emergency. Quite a bit different from a situation that begins at cruise altitude or with only *one* emergency rather than a sequence of events. As a PAX I would rather know that the crew are concentrating on landing the aircraft (ditching) as gently as possible. That silly switch won't do a thing to save the buoyancy if the fuselage is fractured by a rough ditching...a point one everyone seems to miss. I would hazard (grin) a guess that the final review will show them to have maintained situational awareness with the concomitant priority management. Again, there are 2 pilots in the cockpit, only one is steering the aircraft. If the captain was flying the aircraft, what was the copilot doing in those 7-8 minutes if he was not going through the emergency checklist? What the use of a perfect water landing if then the aircraft quickly fill with water because the ditching checklist has not been done? There were dozens of things he would be doing. One, determining waht the problem was. Then, dealing with the immediate problem, an engine failure. Immediate relight attempt. Probably the APU was fired up to assist in the relight. as they would have been too slow for a windmill start. Then a quick call to ATC and probalby a couple of nav selections for the captain to look for a runway they could plunk it on.Then back to the relight drill. We're taught to keep trying that to the bitter end, BTW. They take a minute or so so he wouldn't have had time for more than one or two, and that would have been after the APU had fired up, say at abotu 1200'. A couple of calls to the cabin would have been tossed in their somewhere as well. The act of picking up the book and finding the ditching checklist would have taken a good 20-30 seconds...Time they simply did not have. And this scenario is not done in the sim, so there would have been no trigger for it. BTW, I'm beign generous with the actions they may or may not have accomplished in the time they had. But all of them would come ahead of doing a "nice to do " ditching checklist. Bertie |
#20
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
ah wrote in news:4973fef3$0$57681
: Bertie the Bunyip wrote: wrote in news:6thqo1FartetU2 @mid.individual.net: On Sun, 18 Jan 2009 21:49:45 +0000 (UTC), Bertie the Bunyip wrote: Actually they can in most arplanes. The 'bus has one that will do the whole lot in one go, though. Some old Brit airplanes had the same thing. you know,in case "Gerry snuck up on us over la Manch after a jolly good thrashing of Dresden" Thank you for your answer. There is only one thing: The ditch switch on flight 1549 was not activated as reported by the NTSB interview. You don' tknow that. The crew didn't have time You don' tknow that either. to flick the switch. So, Captain C.B. Sullenberger III is after all just a human being. The plane floated anyway. For a while at least. What about the in-flight tea reserves? Well, if you want to get into a nightmare situation.. Bertie |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|