MD11Pilot
Line Up and Wait
This is a pretty good article on what "happened" aboard Air France 447 based upon the recovered voice recorder and data recorder. Some personal observations prior to reading and these are MY opinions only and biased.
1. Airbus levels of automation are designed to keep the pilot out of the loop. Example...the side stick controllers do not, for lack of a better term, crossfeed inputs so that one pilot can see and feel what the other is doing. The auto throttles do not move the throttles so you do not have a visual sense that they are doing something other than the instruments.
2. Air France "Babies". Their program of training a pilot from day one and they do not have much experience beyond take off and landing...the majority of their time is en-route on AP. Other airlines do this also. To paraphrase...they don't have that "pull back - houses get smaller - push forward - houses get bigger" experience. No seat of the pants.
Read and place yourself in the cockpit with the understanding that the level of warnings that contradict each other in a case like this can be overwhelming...unless you go back to pitch, power settings appropriate for the weight and altitude...and then stop and ignore the warnings and start working through them one at a time.
http://www.vanityfair.com/business/2014/10/air-france-flight-447-crash
1. Airbus levels of automation are designed to keep the pilot out of the loop. Example...the side stick controllers do not, for lack of a better term, crossfeed inputs so that one pilot can see and feel what the other is doing. The auto throttles do not move the throttles so you do not have a visual sense that they are doing something other than the instruments.
2. Air France "Babies". Their program of training a pilot from day one and they do not have much experience beyond take off and landing...the majority of their time is en-route on AP. Other airlines do this also. To paraphrase...they don't have that "pull back - houses get smaller - push forward - houses get bigger" experience. No seat of the pants.
Read and place yourself in the cockpit with the understanding that the level of warnings that contradict each other in a case like this can be overwhelming...unless you go back to pitch, power settings appropriate for the weight and altitude...and then stop and ignore the warnings and start working through them one at a time.
http://www.vanityfair.com/business/2014/10/air-france-flight-447-crash
Last edited: