meat servos
meat servos
My tag line came from a quote about that incident.I am kind of wondering if this was similar to Transair flight 810, where the crew inadvertently shut down the good engine. Or possibly killed both engines on the go-around, leaving them dead stick or nearly that for the eventual landing.
Another possibility, just throwing it out there, that the cockpit also took a bird strike causing damage to the overhead panel which could have killed power to all kinds of stuff that wouldn't normally have been affected.
Trips the generator field relay, closes pylon firewall valves for the fuel, hydraulics, and pneumatics. Arms the fire extinguisher bottles to fire to that engine.Dan Gryder, POA's favorite, thinks the pilots pulled a fire handle. That apparently severs all fuel and electric connections to the engine, including the generator. I don't know how that extrapolates to both engines, unless both fire handles were pulled.
"Turn your key Sir"Trips the generator field relay, closes pylon firewall valves for the fuel, hydraulics, and pneumatics. Arms the fire extinguisher bottles to fire to that engine.
The fire handles are normally latched. The latch is removed if a fire is being detected for the associated engine/apu. The latch can be overridden with a release that is difficult to operate with a single hand. Pulling a fire handle is NOT a memory item on the engine fire, severe damage, separation checklist. It is a couple of steps into the checklist after the memory items. Confirmation from both pilots is required prior to pulling the handle.
Uh, Dan, if both fire handles were pulled at the instant of ADS-B, CVR, and DFDR failure, how did the aircraft manage four more minutes of flight and a teardrop reversal return to the runway?Trips the generator field relay, closes pylon firewall valves for the fuel, hydraulics, and pneumatics. Arms the fire extinguisher bottles to fire to that engine.
The fire handles are normally latched. The latch is removed if a fire is being detected for the associated engine/apu. The latch can be overridden with a release that is difficult to operate with a single hand. Pulling a fire handle is NOT a memory item on the engine fire, severe damage, separation checklist. It is a couple of steps into the checklist after the memory items. Confirmation from both pilots is required prior to pulling the handle.
Uh, Dan, if both fire handles were pulled at the instance of ADS-B, CVR, and DFDR failure, how did the aircraft manage four more minutes of flight and a teardrop reversal return to the runway?
Really? Sure is for us. Requires confirmation from the other pilot, but still a memory item. Was the same on the 777 when I flew it.Pulling a fire handle is NOT a memory item on the engine fire, severe damage, separation checklist.
Was this based on anything he stole from the crash site?Dan Gryder, POA's favorite, thinks the pilots pulled a fire handle. That apparently severs all fuel and electric connections to the engine, including the generator. I don't know how that extrapolates to both engines, unless both fire handles were pulled.
On the Boeing FM, just the autothrottle and thrust lever are memory items. Pulling the engine fire switch is step 4.Really? Sure is for us. Requires confirmation from the other pilot, but still a memory item. Was the same on the 777 when I flew it.
Perhaps the right handle was pulled when we saw the puff of smoke and the other pulled later.Uh, Dan, if both fire handles were pulled at the instant of ADS-B, CVR, and DFDR failure, how did the aircraft manage four more minutes of flight and a teardrop reversal return to the runway?
It wouldn't make much sense to pull the fire handle on your only operating engine. Even if it's on fire. As long as it is producing power, you need that power to land.Perhaps the right handle was pulled when we saw the puff of smoke and the other pulled later.
But if you've misidentified the lame engine ...It wouldn't make much sense to pull the fire handle on your only operating engine. Even if it's on fire. As long as it is producing power, you need that power to land.
Then you didn't follow the procedures.But if you've misidentified the lame engine ...
And that has happened more times that pilots would like to admit.
On the 777 right now. Not a memory item for us.Really? Sure is for us. Requires confirmation from the other pilot, but still a memory item. Was the same on the 777 when I flew it.
In the old days they were. (I was young then, it was easy to learn longer memory item checklists) More recently, there was an effort to minimize the memory items to just what needs to be done promptly to reduce the mistakes that are likely to be made while trying to recall a long list of memory items in an emergency.Interesting. I'm with a foreign carrier and they have always been memory items here. Still are.
It's a very different environment. On a transport jet, you have a pilot-flying and a pilot-monitoring. The PM can read and do checklists without affecting the PF's ability to maintain aircraft control. The PF is kept in the loop by the PM reading aloud then doing each step of the checklist.Dovetailing off this, is reducing memory items possibly applicable to single-engine piston aircraft for something such as an engine failure? Would the time consumed by using the checklist instead of doing memory items make a critical difference between a restart and an engine-out landing? Or is the need to memorize the steps to attempt a restart overstated?
There is that. I’m just always wondering about and looking for better ways to do things, plus need to know the why behind everything.It's a very different environment. On a transport jet, you have a pilot-flying and a pilot-monitoring. The PM can read and do checklists without affecting the PF's ability to maintain aircraft control. The PF is kept in the loop by the PM reading aloud then doing each step of the checklist.
I made this same observation on another forum, using the example of Asiana 214 in a neutral and circumspect manner. Several immediate replies to my comments, made in an accusatory and heated manner, blasted out with the usual labels that make rational discourse impossible.A lot of assuming US air carrier practices to a foreign carrier with vastly different cultural and operational practices.
Just look at Asiana 214.
The US has worked hard to fix this in the aftermath of some nasty and preventable crashes.That's unfortunate, because I believe those cultural and procedural differences between Asian and Western aviation practices do exist.
Depends on the checklist and what they say the memory items are. For me, an engine failure in a single would be:Dovetailing off this, is reducing memory items possibly applicable to single-engine piston aircraft for something such as an engine failure? Would the time consumed by using the checklist instead of doing memory items make a critical difference between a restart and an engine-out landing? Or is the need to memorize the steps to attempt a restart overstated?
Checklists primarily deal with systems. Airmanship is generally on the pilot.They don't even have landing area on the list at all,
Take the example of the Southwest engine failure/decompression that landed in Philly a few years ago. I think they were on the ground 17 minutes after the initial failure, and basically had 4 checklists to complete on the way (decompression, emergency descent, engine shutdown, and one engine inop approach & landing.) There were so many distractions that pulled them out of the checklist, they couldn’t get through one top to bottom.Speaking from my extensive anecdotal experience of 1 engine failure in a single, I strongly recommend that checklist be memorized and brief. It happens fast and you will probably be focused 100% on flying the plane. Everyone assumes engine failure will occur enroute with plenty of altitude, but it is at least equally likely to happen at or below pattern altitude.
I think something like this happened. Still not buying the "missing 4 minutes" excuse. The Hultgreen cover-up attempt opened my eyesThe US has worked hard to fix this in the aftermath of some nasty and preventable crashes.
There is one (flight number escapes me right now) where a captain verbally abused a first officer (for missing something on the preflight) to the point that he gave up on even being pilot monitoring. I recall the captain didn't set the flaps correctly and the FO didn't even attempt to challenge him anymore.
They do... But in an emergency situation, you have no idea what frame of mind a pilot will be in, so it needs to include everything important, just in case. We'd all like to think we'll be steely-eyed missile men and cool as a cucumber when the time comes, but nobody really knows. So I'm putting it on my checklist anyway.Checklists primarily deal with systems. Airmanship is generally on the pilot.
Which is how checklists get ridiculously overblown to start with. One checklist I’m aware of for electrical smoke or fire in a jet takes 45 minutes for the test pilots who wrote it to complete. Life expectancy with smoke or fire is less than half of that.They do... But in an emergency situation, you have no idea what frame of mind a pilot will be in, so it needs to include everything important, just in case. We'd all like to think we'll be steely-eyed missile men and cool as a cucumber when the time comes, but nobody really knows. So I'm putting it on my checklist anyway.
I think something like this happened. Still not buying the "missing 4 minutes" excuse. The Hultgreen cover-up attempt opened my eyes
I will preface this by stating that I have no idea how the engine firefighting system is set-up in the 737, and clarification on this by a type rated 737 piliot us welcome.It is now being reported bird remains were found in both engines.
I assume the FDR would record the selection of ARM before it lost power and/or quit getting inputs? Or do FDRs not look at those types of switch positions?Once the engines are off, both generators are off-line. No RAT on the 737, and the APU is probably off. You're down to battery power, and probably not a lot of systems on that bus. Even if the flight recorders are powered, chances are the data acquisition unit for the FDR was not on the battery bus. And we still don't know what electrical bus the recorders are supposed to be on. Maybe they're not even on the battery bus.
A 737 guy (Larry in TN) has posted several times in this thread how the system works.I will preface this by stating that I have no idea how the engine firefighting system is set-up in the 737, and clarification on this by a type rated 737 piliot us welcome.
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In some aircraft, two actions are required to discharge a fire bottle: first you arm it, and then you pull the T-handle/flip the switch. Going to the ARM position of the fire bottle will shut off the fuel to that engine/APU, which will cause fuel starvation as soon as the fuel lines downstream of the valves empty, but not instantaneously.
I am not typed but did full sim training in the 737 for a few days, we did a dual engine flameout. You lose everything, pressurization, hydraulics, and then avionics / electrical.