Of course if there’s a million emergencies etc it wouldn’t be easy at all, and it wouldn’t be easy from the beginning regardless. I’m talking about the straight situation. Private pilot in the flight deck at cruise can you get him down.
I stand by yes. And of course the controller won’t tell you how to fly the plane but they could find someone who could help. With time, which obviously you may or not have fuel emergency depending etc. but if you had time, and gas. Yes you could walk someone through it, I stick by that
And the two jets I’ve got types in th radio panel is pretty straight forward. I believe a private pilot could figure out how to work the radio to get to speak to the controller
In any case it’s a highly unlikely scenario and I hope no ever has to find out the real answer to this question
I don’t think you’re wrong in that if everything is working fine, it’s an airplane. But I agree with @Krichlow that it’s not likely to be pretty. Ugly and everyone alive would be a pretty good outcome.
The recordings of folks landing various smaller things and even the famous King Air guy don’t support the idea that the controllers will ever find real aeronautical help unless it’s close at hand. In the King Air incident, if I recall correctly, one of the controllers was an instructor and his interview words afterword were along the lines of, “I didn’t want to tell him to do anything that would kill all of them.”
Besides the difficulty finding an instructor without a solid plan to do so, which almost no facilities have, but COULD if their Safety reps are on the ball, there’s the problem of the instructor not being able to see anything in that cockpit and having to play 20-questions — quickly, and in the correct order — to assess any changes requested. Basically that instructor needs time in type to be able to visualize exactly what things are going to do in that cockpit.
In King Air guy’s case, he knew the autopilot was on, and he kept asking the controllers how to turn it off so he could hand fly it. That took an inordinately long time to get him that answer. The instructor they had available on the ground wasn’t there yet.
The answer, “Before you press it, let me tell you all of this... there’s an autopilot disconnect button along with other buttons on the yoke... and when you press it there’s going to be a loud audible warning when the autopilot disconnects. Be ready for any out of trim situation where the aircraft may want to pitch or roll immediately upon disconnect... if you understand that let me know and be ready.” ... never came. The guy figured it out on his own.
Telling him step by step how to program the nav source and get that thing configured to fly an approach or similar would be a very touchy and time-sensitive exercise. All depends on how fast someone can learn and their general familiarity with advanced avionics.
He also kept asking for an approach speed and the answers coming back weren’t great. They felt “wishy washy” if you listen to it. The ground assumption was basically, “Its flying at that speed, use that.” They did at least remind him to get the gear and flaps down, but he was ahead of the game on those by then in the recording.
The simpler the systems, the easier talking someone through using them is going to be. Any complex systems mixed with failures is going to be very very difficult for the person on the ground. They’re having to imagine what the indications are doing and ask pointed questions to confirm them, all under a time constraint. The airplane and the inexperienced pilot are going somewhere and going there pretty fast.
Similarly the wife who landed something else... I forget what it was... that recording is fraught with problems but she stepped up and figured out a number of things. At one point in her recording she got impatient with them, “I need to go to an airport now...” she had it under control but they were unsure on the ground and were figuring out what to tell her.
In both scenarios the “pressed into service pilots” actually knew what questions they needed answers to, and both got iffy responses. Not a condemnation of the controllers in any way, but it’s clear in recordings of this stuff that ATC isn’t prepped for this very well. It’s rare enough it’s not a planned emergency nor practiced ahead of time by anyone.
Just not enough hours in the day nor resources to do it.