Steve
En-Route
Absolutely nothing can go wrong...go wrong....go wrong....
http://cbs5.com/video/?id=65214@kpix.dayport.com
http://cbs5.com/video/?id=65214@kpix.dayport.com
I couldn't google up any details. Sounds like a database problem ie a rnav approach...but wouldn't they be doing an ILS in the bay fog?
I couldn't google up any details. Sounds like a database problem ie a rnav approach...but wouldn't they be doing an ILS in the bay fog?
If I understand correctly, Taylor was the CO-pilot and that the pilot told him to initiate a go around. Sounds like they did all the right things. Bad database, not the first for honeywell (or any manufacturer for that matter).
Taylor sounds like he's just setting up his retirement account.
Computers lie. Trust but verify. That's the lesson here. What happens when NDBs are gone, ILSs are a thing of the past, and all we have left is GPS?
Was it an approach to mins, or was it a Cat III approach (e.g "0/0")? If it's the former, I'm with the "Seriously?" line of thinking. If it was the latter, well, that's a brown shorts incident.
Cheers,
-Andrew
but wouldn't they be doing an ILS in the bay fog?
You see water at SFO all the way until the runway. I am confused by some of the things in this report. Like talking about the localizer. If they were on a LOC or ILS approach who cares what the database says? If it was a db problem and they were on an RNAV approach why were they the only plane affected? Lastly about the FO, seems like a pretty minor thing to go all PSTD over.So flying an approach to minimum at SFO and seeing water and not the runway environment the pilots goes missed.
On the second approach they detect a problem and divert.
That sounds like a normal procedure to me?
This event causes the FO to experience so much trauma he can no longer fly.
How did he pass his IFR checkride?
You see water at SFO all the way until the runway. I am confused by some of the things in this report. Like talking about the localizer. If they were on a LOC or ILS approach who cares what the database says? If it was a db problem and they were on an RNAV approach why were they the only plane affected? Lastly about the FO, seems like a pretty minor thing to go all PSTD over.
Well, a good plan would be to use a robust and redundant RNAV system - say, eLoran.
If it was RNAV it can't go to 0/0 right? Only ILS has Cat III, 0/0.
It seems a lot of people forget that "identify" step and just get used to things working. You get away with that until you don't...and by then it might be too late.That actually makes some sense. However, part of the approach briefing is radios tuned and IDENTIFIED. IF this is what actually happened, then two, maybe four, someone's screwed up twice. Sounds like crew error as much as or more than data base error to me.