dtuuri
Final Approach
Apologies if this has been posted already:
A bit more than Darwin since they took 44 others with them.Darwin Award candidates
Scary, huh? The FO was begging for the captain (who had taken the controls) to turn to the right toward a saddle in the ridge. It looked to me like the captain had fixated on the ridge line and was trying to determine if the flight path would clear it. He ran out of time. That seems to be the real problem with mountain flying, IMO. Your horizon is obscured by irregular terrain and you just can't tell whether you can clear it, especially the lower you are.I have zero expert with jets or big iron but isn’t this the exact situation those commercial maneuvers come into play. They just tried to climb and ran right into a mountain?
It only said about 3 things. 50 times each. But I assume you’re being sarcastic.Good video, but too fast. Could not read it fast enough.
So they coincidentally sat at the end of the runway for the exact same time they sat before taxi?While it's hard to say from the video and the transcripts I've been able to find are missing time stamps, it appears that the flight sat for a bit waiting for departure clearance. The FO calls in that he needs the clearance and the TWR says they're still waiting for it.
Infuriating
It’s very possible that they had attitude, just not heading…or at least a mechanical standby attitude indicator.you can always get away with something until you don't
the fact that they were flying through the clouds without an ahrs looking at just their compass (and presumably VS?) is crazy
you can always get away with something until you don't
the fact that they were flying through the clouds without an ahrs looking at just their compass (and presumably VS?) is crazy
I disagree, but…That video was well done.
I disagree, but…
I would agree that it’s shiny, just not good.All the animation and perspectives and such? I don’t know how to do any of that, and it seems like it would take a LONG time plus editing and overlaying voice and text.
I don't know if I'd put too much credence in what the video was showing versus what real world terrain looked like out the window (re: saddle to the right).Scary, huh? The FO was begging for the captain (who had taken the controls) to turn to the right toward a saddle in the ridge. It looked to me like the captain had fixated on the ridge line and was trying to determine if the flight path would clear it. He ran out of time. That seems to be the real problem with mountain flying, IMO. Your horizon is obscured by irregular terrain and you just can't tell whether you can clear it, especially the lower you are.
The video is a little misleadig at the end…the implication is that if they had sat on the runway for another 28 seconds, they’d have AHRS…more likely they’d have to sit for the full 3 minutes it takes to align.
It’s very possible that they had attitude, just not heading…or at least a mechanical standby attitude indicator.
That vid makes me want to try chandelles under foggles.
You joke, but in Air Force pilot training, in the instrument phase, an instrument aileron roll and instrument wing-over were required maneuvers.That vid makes me want to try chandelles under foggles.
All the animation and perspectives and such? I don’t know how to do any of that, and it seems like it would take a LONG time plus editing and overlaying voice and text.
Excellent point.I think an important concept only partially raised at the end of the video is that when you deviate from normal procedures, it can have a negative effect on other aspects of the flight that you normally don't have to worry about. One of the reasons why you don't cut corners is because it can have additional implications, in some circumstances, that weren't obvious.
Yes indeed, but you also have to consider this loss of both side flight instruments might happen even when you don't cut corners. My brother turned on the radar one night and both EFIS tubes suddenly turned black. American Airlines had promised the pilots that could never be possible. It was a non-event in that after awhile they came back online, but you wouldn't want something like that happening during an ODP in a place like the video. Having steam gages as backup and a plan for using them would be a good idea I think.Like RLGS said, if you are thinking about cutting corners, you really have to consider the potential downstream implications.
That vid makes me want to try chandelles under foggles.