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#41
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Shirl,
The question couldn't GET any more basic than that, and even after asking four times, the guy *did not understand* that it was a *question*, NOT a clearance. Missed that one. Again, there are NO questions asked by changing inflection in standard phraseology. The proper way would have been "confirm you have been cleared..." or something like that. -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#42
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Mxsmanic,
There is no correlation between the quality of the instructor and the pay she receives in my area. Yes, there is. I know instructors in Paris. -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#43
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On Fri, 29 Jun 2007 08:29:40 -0700, deanwil wrote:
The Air China captain didn't understand what had happened until the tapes were replayed in a simulator, at which point he was reportedly quite shocked. I don't understand. The captain was in the plane at the time of the event, so why would "reliving" the event in a simulator help his understanding? I'm obviously missing/misunderstanding something. - Andrew |
#44
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On Fri, 29 Jun 2007 12:40:15 -0400, Mortimer Schnerd, RN wrote:
Oh ... good ... God! Yes? No, no. The "good" one was being invoked. - Andrew |
#45
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On Jun 29, 1:37 pm, Andrew Gideon wrote:
On Fri, 29 Jun 2007 08:29:40 -0700, deanwil wrote: The Air China captain didn't understand what had happened until the tapes were replayed in a simulator, at which point he was reportedly quite shocked. I don't understand. The captain was in the plane at the time of the event, so why would "reliving" the event in a simulator help his understanding? I'm obviously missing/misunderstanding something. - Andrew Apparently the snap-roll occured so fast that he didn't realize what exactly had occured or why. The simulator replay allowed him to see what led up to the event, and how the event actually transpired. Remember, he had been engaged in the engine shutdown checklist, and probably wasn't paying a lot of attention to what was happening until he realize he was in an upset attitude. At least that was my interpretation when I heard the story originally... Here is the NTSB report, but it is very brief and doesn't go into the detail that I heard from the Boeing chief mechanic: http://www.ntsb.gov/ntsb/GenPDF.asp?...85AA015&rpt=fi |
#46
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"Thomas Borchert" wrote in message
... Mxsmanic, The AIM and glossary do not provide sentences, only sentence fragments (with rare exceptions). Read them (again)! If the foreigner can understand English, he can understand "non-standard" phrases. He is not required to understand general English, he is required to understand aviation English and standard phraseology. There's a reason common language questions are a no-no in radio work. Even you can figure it out. Apparantly not. -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#47
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![]() wrote in message ... Here is the NTSB report, but it is very brief and doesn't go into the detail that I heard from the Boeing chief mechanic: http://www.ntsb.gov/ntsb/GenPDF.asp?...85AA015&rpt=fi Thank you for that summary in your previous post. That fills in a few questions I had after watching the video on this event. I haven't downloaded the entire episode, here's the YouTube 10 minute version. Remember this is for mass TV audience so beware some accuracy holes. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SeznpFQHbSk |
#48
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On 2007-06-28 16:20:06 -0700, (Paul Tomblin) said:
In a previous article, said: Was it just me or did it sound like the pilot was trying to BS his way through the readback unwilling to admit that he didn't understand the word "question"? If there's one thing I've learned about the Chinese dealing with off-shore programmers, it's that they will *never* admit that they don't understand you. Even after they deliver something and you tell them it's nothing like what you contracted for, they'll smile and nod and be very proud of the quivering piece of **** that they delivered. This is true in some other Asian cultures as well. The political and social history are such that people are afraid of admitting a mistake for fear of being severely punished, perhaps even killed, and their families shamed. This creates problems in the cockpit, especially if you have a not-so-subservient American copilot on board. "Captain, you are below glide slope." Ignoring rude American who does not know his place. "Captain, you are below glide slope." continuing to ignore this appallingly rude American "Captain, my airplane." reaches for controls slaps American's hand -- that'll teach him! Walking into the pilots' lounge, with dozens of other Korean pilots there, the American copilot hauled off and decked his captain (formerly a colonel in the South Korean Air Force) in front of everybody. "You ever slap my hand again, I'll kill ya." dead silence throughout the room Amazingly, the American lived. But then, he was burly. -- Waddling Eagle World Famous Flight Instructor |
#49
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On 2007-06-29 03:09:59 -0700, Cubdriver usenet AT danford DOT net said:
On Fri, 29 Jun 2007 01:44:22 GMT, Larry Dighera wrote: Granted the controller was speaking normally as he would to someone who understood English. I often have trouble understanding controllers. I often suspect that they try to mumble, on the theory that if the pilot doesn't know what's going on, then he's not much of a pilot. "My speech is more abbreviated and monotonal than your speech, so there!" My most frequent requestt to ATC is "Say again" which is pretty abbreviated and monotonal itself. So there! Huh. My most frequent request to ATC is "Ready to depart." Never had a problem understanding them. The contract controller who worked the Tacoma Narrows tower *until recently* was fired for departing the runway without a clearance. He only flew 60 feet, though. In an automobile. Ended upside down at the fence. Blood alcohol level was high. This was a guy who had already been arrested twice for behavior resulting from drunkenness, such as brawling at a bar. He was not driving the car in the recent incident. He claims he was just sleeping there and somebody else suddenly jumped into the car and started racing up and down the runway. Yeah, right. As if he had never done it before. This time he got caught. Lucky he wasn't killed. But I suppose he mumbled quite a bit giving this lame explanation to the cops. :-) -- Waddling Eagle World Famous Flight Instructor |
#50
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On 2007-06-28 19:33:05 -0700, "Aluckyguess" said:
The controller getting upset doesn't do any good. That just makes a bad situation worse. I don't think the controller was upset or angry. He spoke with emphasis trying to make himself understood. You either take the time or you tell him to shut the thing down. Nobody needs to get upset. I hate it when controllers act all ****y. I was flying through the palm springs tursa one day and ATC was getting all over this guy in a helicopter. The guy didn't speak good English and was getting more and more confused as the guy yelled at him. I almost asked for his number so I could call him and remind him what his job was. His job is to make sure everyone is safe not panic some new pilot into running into the side of a mountain. After he gets the situation under control he can tell the pilot to call and yell at him without the whole world listening. I think you would have been way out of line to call him. The helicopter pilot is obligated to obey ATC instructions. The controller has no way of keeping people from running into each other or into mountains if they just do whatever they want because they don't understand English. If the helicopter pilot panicked and flew into a mountain it would have been his fault, not the controller's. -- Waddling Eagle World Famous Flight Instructor |
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