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![]() "Doug "Woody" and Erin Beal" wrote in message ... On 2/25/04 7:23 AM, in article , "Keith Willshaw" wrote: "Doug "Woody" and Erin Beal" wrote in message ... On 2/25/04 3:32 AM, in article , "Keith Willshaw" wrote: Nope, and admittedly I'm telling tales out of school because I haven't flown one nor studied up on it, but it does have some funky engine failure throttle automation (which I don't understand). So you are criticising a system without knowing anything about it. Autothrottles are scarcely a rarity and the installation on the A-300 can be turned off so the crew has full authority, just as on Boeing aircraft. I've got time in lots of jets with autothrottles, so spare me the preaching to the choir. I bring up the autothrottle issue on the Airbus because of their famous mishap with a jet that turned out to be the "world's most expensive chainsaw" a few years back. Which was an A-320 not A-300 and happened because the pilot was flying in manual mode , THE AUTOTHROTTLE WAS OFF That same throttle automation was responsible for a Russian Airbus doing a wingover about 10 years ago too. No that was due to the Russian pilot having his son sitting in the left hand seat and allowing the kid to turn the control wheel while the autopilot was engaged. The conflict ended up with the autopilot disengaging when control forces reached more than 12 kg Not only was a kid in the left hand seat but the co-pilot was distracted and had his seat pushed right back and the aircraft went into 90 deg bank, pitched up stalled and spun in. No autothrottle was involved To me, the no-greater-than-60-degrees-AOB feature on the A320 is disturbing. The pre-supposition by the folks at Airbus seems to be that the pilot needs to be kept in a box because he's incapable of staying there on his own. Given that both accidents you mention were the result of pilot error and large numbers of people died they may have a point. Keith |
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