The challenge for the NTSB is that things like this happen so rarely in 2 turbine engine, 2 pro-pilot planes in good weather is that every possibility is very unlikely and finding the specific cause is hard and tedious work.
They are pretty good at it, but it takes time. Sometimes things in life just suk.
Good points. It would have made things a lot easier for everyone if the
Challenger crew said that they hit birds - but they didn't. I'm not saying
that they hit birds because we don't know anything for sure. But I'm
starting to think that they might have hit a flock of birds. I sure hope
that they didn't because I don't want to be downed in the same way - I
fly in that area often. I was just in Fort Myers one hour after this accident -
but the only thing that I heard on Fort Myers approach was that they
weren't allowing any practice approaches / touch-and-goes unless
they were based at Naples.
And just FYI - the first thing that Captain Sully told us was that
he hit birds. Maybe the Challenger crew didn't see the birds -
if it even was birds? If it was, both heads in the cockpit reading
and following the checklist??
Here's Captain Sully:
Watch Sully Cockpit Recording from Miracle on the Hudson video.
www.historyvshollywood.com