Originally posted by 347Mike
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What Really Happened Aboard Air France 447
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"It is in truth not for glory, nor riches, nor honours that we are fighting, but for freedom - for that alone, which no honest man gives up but with life itself."
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Originally posted by Treasure Chest View PostIt's scary how dumb and technology dependent the world has become--from cashiers who can't make change without reading a register screen to pilots who can't fathom that the computers have failed and they're flying on their own.
It's fear of this type of technology rendered stupidity that gets me worried about the future of health care.
Soon, you will step into chamber and your exact illness will be diagnosed in seconds. What is to fear about this? I'd rather get it right the first time.
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Originally posted by helosailor View PostBased on erroneous readings (because of the iced-up pitot/static system), he thought thought they were descending. Or, he was just a n00b that didn't know what he was doing.
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Originally posted by Taylor View PostWatson will diagnose us. I'm fine with that.
Soon, you will step into chamber and your exact illness will be diagnosed in seconds. What is to fear about this? I'd rather get it right the first time.
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Originally posted by 2011GT View PostI read it a few hours ago but I thought the pitot system only was disabled. You being a pilot you know that the static system is for elevation. Still though 75 times the plane yelled "stall", idiots. Basically it was two f/o's that neither was capable of making a command decision. I also can't believe the Captain didn't rush to the cockpit when the plane pitched so quickly. 7000 fpm is insane not to mention the engines screaming at TOGA.
First and foremost, why did it take him so long to get back to the FD? He must have been in the "sin bin", which is amidships and below the cabin. The flight deck crew are supposed to use the rest compartment that is immediately aft of the flight deck.
Secondly, why in the hell would he leave the most junior FO in charge, knowing the weather they were coming up against? Even with their underestimation, it still sounded rough enough that Robert should have been in charge, if not actually on the controls.
Not directly related to the Captain, but CRM should have addressed it...why, when Bonin was obviously struggling and overwhelmed, didn't Robert TAKE control. In a grave emergency, you don't ask for control, you take it. I HAVE THE CONTROLS, followed by a swift smack in the head if you don't get your point across.
There is no reason, other than the flight deck crew, that the aircraft could not have been saved and continued safely to its destination."It is in truth not for glory, nor riches, nor honours that we are fighting, but for freedom - for that alone, which no honest man gives up but with life itself."
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Originally posted by SS Junk View PostWas a little more pissed a highly experienced captain left two idiots in control and then didn't make himself available while any of this was going on.
Originally posted by Forever_frost View PostIt's insane that this could happen. The plane is losing speed, nose is up and engines at full bore and you're still pulling up?
Originally posted by QIK46 View Postdefinately some very clueless pilots. if the thing is stalling you dont try to stall it more. people that fly professionally should know this
Originally posted by Treasure Chest View PostIt's scary how dumb and technology dependent the world has become--from cashiers who can't make change without reading a register screen to pilots who can't fathom that the computers have failed and they're flying on their own.
It's fear of this type of technology rendered stupidity that gets me worried about the future of health care.
Originally posted by Chas_svo View PostHow many read that thinking "damnit push the nose down"?
Good read.
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