So, boils down to someone who barely had the skills to fly, teaching someone else who barely had skills to fly and neither one of them actually flying the plane.
I wish AOPA would do more of these videos. They are very well produced and hard-hitting reminders of what can go wrong up there.
In a two pilot environment a weak pilot can manage to succeed, until they are paired with another weak pilot and have something out of the ordinary happen.
Problem is that this particular approach/landing scenario cannot be tested for the privilege of carrying paying customers. There is a specific, limited set of operations that can be tested, and most pilots could be trained to pass the test.It just sickens me to think that the plane could have been full of paying customers.
I think they said wanted a go around or missed, but they stalled before recovering from the steep turnSuper sad. All I could think was why didn't they just go missed?
I thought the tower controller said to go missed, but either way the PIC should have gone missed way earlier. I’ve never heard so many missed calls and missed instructions! As screwed up as the flight was, if the had started the circle at the proper fix, they might have lived. At least a few more days!I think they said wanted a go around or missed, but they stalled before recovering from the steep turn
I thought the tower controller said to go missed, but either way the PIC should have gone missed way earlier. I’ve never heard so many missed calls and missed instructions! As screwed up as the flight was, if the had started the circle at the proper fix, they might have lived. At least a few more days!
Exactly. Just look through the NTSB docket for Giant 3591 (Atlas 767 crash last year) for another eye opening example.This can sum up most of the 121/135 Operations crashes lately. In a two pilot environment a weak pilot can manage to succeed, until they are paired with another weak pilot and have something out of the ordinary happen. There needs to be a way to label or rate pilots at that level, to avoid such pairings.
I cannot believe they put a guy in the right seat that wasn't even allowed to touch the controls.
I can’t even believe a 1200 hr guy getting the right seat of a Lear jet after essentially failing everything in SIM
One place I worked established a policy that new hire copilots couldn’t fly the airplane until they had 100 hours in the type or 1 year with the company. Pretty much prevented copilots from developing as crewmembers for that period, because they had no clue what the PF was doing, and had no good example of what PM duties looked like.I still get hung up on that. The "0" grade SIC in their system should never have been allowed to exist. The SIC should be capable of at least operating the basics of the aircraft. A PM that you don't trust to touch anything is a passenger.
One place I worked established a policy that new hire copilots couldn’t fly the airplane until they had 100 hours in the type or 1 year with the company. Pretty much prevented copilots from developing as crewmembers for that period, because they had no clue what the PF was doing, and had no good example of what PM duties looked like.
However misguided it may be, and not having read the docket, I’d guess it’s probably a policy like that rather than the copilot’s performance that made him a “0”.
Edit: I did scan the final report, and find it interesting that the company didn’t have any captains who could fly with an SIC-1, so there was actually no way to not be an SIC-0.
Amazing the messages that management sends sometimes simply because they don’t know what message they’re sending.I can understand not wanting a green SIC flying with passengers on board, scaring the hell out of them. But to not even allow them to fly on deadhead legs says they have no business being in that aircraft to begin with, or that the training and testing program is extremely lacking.
Aside from not getting along with instructors, which by itself doesn’t say much, I don’t see much in this that would indicate a crash in the making.In the "interviews" section of the NTSB report, there were some comments about the captain that raised some red flags. These are excerpts from a few different interviews with people that flew with him.
They talked very little outside work. He knew William led an “odd life”, and had no bank accounts and only a PO box. William was nervous about the government knowing his business. For instance, at the hotel once, the clerk was going to make a copy of his ID at check-in, and he didn’t like that. He gave the clerk his airport id badge, instead. He did not know why William was that way. William was very private. They would talk about guns, and went to pawn shops and gun shows. They were not close since they did not have compatible personalities.
He had an issue once with William talking below 10,000 feet in sterile cockpit. He pulled William to the side to discuss it, and then he went on to do a good job. William was a little rough around the edges with the passengers, not presenting himself as being personable, and would drop the F-bomb very loud in the FBO and in front of passengers. It was very unusual, more so than normal. After he got through that, he did a fine job, was always on time, was never late for work, and was good employee. William was highly intelligent, but would that would also get him in trouble. At CAE, he could read and know the whole manual on an airplane, but he would also correct an instructor on things like the systems, and point out their errors. During training, it was a bit of a distraction, to the point that CAE finally had to separate him and William in the end since it was holding him back. Will did not get along with the instructors.
He knew Will had served several years in the army, and they had a common interest in guns. When asked if Will would swear in his personal life, he said Will was a Mormon, and that was a “silly question.”
Asked about William’s reputation at the company, he said he had heard stories, but did not have any specifics. He had heard William had personality differences with another pilot, but did not know the specifics on that, either. He heard stories about quirks he had, didn’t like to talk to the desk clerk at hotels, but did not see it himself.
Aside from not getting along with instructors, which by itself doesn’t say much, I don’t see much in this that would indicate a crash in the making.
That may be true, but general incompetence is far more pronounced and far more relevant, IMO.Shows that he was perhaps a little mentally unstable, which could could certainly lead to other issues. Cursing out the controller because they wouldn't give him FL270 on that flight reinforces my impression.