denverpilot
Tied Down
... and they still do this.
I agree with that. But I think this is a good example of confirmation bias. They were cleared on to the runway so they expected a clearance for takeoff. When they heard the words "cleared for takeoff", the rest of the transmission became white noise to them.I agree just listening to the calls signs it is not obvious which plane was cleared for takeoff, but twice the controller said "cleared for takeoff 31C," so shouldn't that have been the DL's clue the clearance was not for them?
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You spend enough time in the cockpit, and eventually you screw up...you just hope it doesn't make POA.
Likely due to the LiveATC feed. It should have been clear to the aircraft.Listen again without looking at the text at the 1:07 mark. I can't make out any callsign.
AIM 4-2-4 a. 5. Air carriers and commuter air carriers having FAA authorized call signs should identify themselves by stating the complete call sign (using group form for the numbers) and the word "super" or "heavy" if appropriate. EXAMPLE-- 1. United twenty-Five Heavy. 2. Midwest Commuter Seven Eleven.I always call my tail number as “one two three alpha bravo,” for example, not “one twenty-three.”
Exactly. Confirmation/Expectation bias. Also, there are a lot of things going on in a takeoff clearance. Callsign, departure instructions, runway, (often) winds, and the cockpit procedures of lights, clocks, fuel, heading bug set/LNAV confirmation, and control transfer (of F/Os leg). It's easy to miss an item.But I think this is a good example of confirmation bias.