luvflyin
Touchdown! Greaser!
Wonder if Boeing had a little input on this.
https://www.avweb.com/aviation-news/faa-wants-action-on-declining-pilot-skills/
https://www.avweb.com/aviation-news/faa-wants-action-on-declining-pilot-skills/
Wonder if Boeing had a little input on this.
https://www.avweb.com/aviation-news/faa-wants-action-on-declining-pilot-skills/
I don't have direct experience, nor am I an airline pilot, but is there any truth to the sentiment that crashes due to lack of airmanship seem to happen more frequently in foreign countries than the U.S? AF447, Lion Air and Ethiopian 737 Max crashes, Asiana 214.. etc. Of course there are U.S examples as well, such as Colgan Air 3407, Comair 5191 and Eastern Airlines 401. On the other hand, Alaska 261 is a different example - the pilots never stopped flying the airplane, including inverted flight, until it hit the water.
In the airline world most of us fly to roughly 10,000 feet or at least until the turns are done. We usually click off the auto pilot somewhere on final. What more do you want?? Hand flying endless hours straight & level at 35 thousand feet?
I don't have direct experience, nor am I an airline pilot, but is there any truth to the sentiment that crashes due to lack of airmanship seem to happen more frequently in foreign countries than the U.S? AF447, Lion Air and Ethiopian 737 Max crashes, Asiana 214.. etc. Of course there are U.S examples as well, such as Colgan Air 3407, Comair 5191 and Eastern Airlines 401. On the other hand, Alaska 261 is a different example - the pilots never stopped flying the airplane, including inverted flight, until it hit the water.
Caveman Society: Poor People Good, Rich people bad. Cars good. Planes Bad. No Mess with good stuffs. /cavemanI totally agree that all pilots should be able to manually fly their planes, especially when systems malfunction.
I wonder why we don’t hold drivers on the road to the same standard? Remember when the Prius would accelerate and caused crashes, but not one driver thought to put the car in neutral or turn it off? Toyota was blamed (rightfully, like Boeing), but no one ever suggested the driver should get more training. I don’t think that would be the case even if it were a city bus that malfunctioned.
Why the double-standard?
Caveman Society: Poor People Good, Rich people bad. Cars good. Planes Bad. No Mess with good stuffs. /caveman
Every single politician would be out of a job if people were required more or recurrent training for their "right" to drive.
Sure... for everyone else maybe. I’m not dealing with the DMV every year.I would be all for annual driver tests, and medicals, to keep a driver's license current. Drivers are far worse than pilots, and they have nothing in place to make sure that they can drive competently.
Designated instructors so you dont have to deal with them. And yes you pay them a fee.Sure... for everyone else maybe. I’m not dealing with the DMV every year.
Spoken like a CFI. We'll just have to disagree on this. Anyone can drive well enough for the few minutes it takes to pass an exam, all they have to do is put the effing phone down. I'd prefer to see more than one cop covering half the city, and even a token effort made at enforcement of traffic laws. Around here, people drive like morons with impunity simply because they know they'll never get caught or ticketed for it... and I'm pretty sure it's not just around here, either.Designated instructors so you dont have to deal with them. And yes you pay them a fee.
Spoken like a CFI. We'll just have to disagree on this. Anyone can drive well enough for the few minutes it takes to pass an exam, all they have to do is put the effing phone down. I'd prefer to see more than one cop covering half the city, and even a token effort made at enforcement of traffic laws. Around here, people drive like morons with impunity simply because they know they'll never get caught or ticketed for it... and I'm pretty sure it's not just around here, either.
I would be all for annual driver tests, and medicals, to keep a driver's license current. Drivers are far worse than pilots, and they have nothing in place to make sure that they can drive competently.
Rules like that are for other people, not meSure... for everyone else maybe. I’m not dealing with the DMV every year.
And how will that be different than the way it is now?Just wait till federally mandated "driver assisted cruise control" and "automated following distance" become the law of the land. When technology fails, people will be unable to cope with it. And, 1 accident will create massive traffic jams that will throw entire metropolitan areas into complete gridlock.
Yeah, that was absolutely crazy to me. Toyota took the high road there, but it wasn't even software related..it was floormats getting stuck! You have to remember that 99% of people are raging idiots and can't think for themselves, they need Dr Phil and Oprah to tell them how to think. Most people could be sinking on an open platform in the water and unless someone says "put this life vest on and swim to shore" they'll just sit there and drown.. like idiotsRemember when the Prius would accelerate and caused crashes, but not one driver thought to put the car in neutral or turn it off?
I mean... how? You used to require like 4 people to fly an airplane.. now one person can do it. I don't get this argument I often here with automation. It's surely different (don't call me Shirley), but just learn it and be trained different then. The Air France situation was poor CRM and not actively electing to fly the plane like you were taught in your first 20 hrs of instruction, pitch and poweroverwhelmed by technology
And how will that be different than the way it is now?
I never did get why they paint those lines parallel. Diagonal parking is a lot easier and more efficient.Then, the rest of the world will experience, ...."LA".
There are certainly some good examples of airline pilots being overwhelmed by technology and underwhelmed with the need to revert to basic airmanship in the process.
Air France 447 comes to mind, where eventually three pilots in the Airbus cockpit stared at accurate instrumentation and stalled the aircraft into the ocean starting at an altitude of 38,000 feet.
I don't have direct experience, nor am I an airline pilot, but is there any truth to the sentiment that crashes due to lack of airmanship seem to happen more frequently in foreign countries than the U.S? AF447, Lion Air and Ethiopian 737 Max crashes, Asiana 214.. etc. Of course there are U.S examples as well, such as Colgan Air 3407, Comair 5191 and Eastern Airlines 401. On the other hand, Alaska 261 is a different example - the pilots never stopped flying the airplane, including inverted flight, until it hit the water.
Your U. S. examples weren’t issues of the articles point. Autopilot was a factor in Eastern 401 though, the unintentional overriding of it. Yeah, the Alaska 261 guys worked the problem to the end.
Not even close.The ET pilots weren't the ones at fault. They followed the proper procedures.