Originally posted by Arturo Bassick
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Reply to: More on Air France
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Previously on "More on Air France"
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Originally posted by zeitghostYup.
You can't fight back when you're dead.
Look how long it's taken to get some minor justice for the pilots who died in the Chinook crash in Scotland back in the 90s.
It is about public confidence.
The public will accept pilot error and keep flying as the same pilot can not make that error again.
If there was a hint that one type of aircraft might not be safe then people might not fly.
A recall and check of all those aircraft to allay public fears would cost a fortune.
Easier to blame the pilot and do the checks or part replacement during routine maintenance and hope it doesn't happen again. In this case those extreme circumstances are highly unlikely to happen again.
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Originally posted by zeitghostYup.
You can't fight back when you're dead.
Look how long it's taken to get some minor justice for the pilots who died in the Chinook crash in Scotland back in the 90s.
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Its still the safest way to travel, when you look at the amount of people that fly every year, thankfully accidents are very rare its just when they do happen its a large amount of people in one go, they may blame the pilots but its the engineers that have to live with themselves afterwards which is why checks are so stringent
Clarkson summed it up on one of his other programmes when he said "x amount of millions of people have flown this year and not a single one of them died"
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Originally posted by wim121 View PostIt wasnt intelligent at all. <snip>
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everything WIM says is (sort of) true. It is his conclusion that I would question. These pilots will have been well trained and were experienced. Yet they still crashed.
The airline industry has a habit of laying it on the pilots because that is the easiest option.
There is more to come with this story.
Currently working on Airbus A350 and talk about this subject with some very senior people.
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Originally posted by wim121 View PostIt wasnt intelligent at all. It was just a blatent insult with no point at all. Im still waiting for you to explain why you dont believe it is common knowledge on the symptoms and indicators of a stall and the recovery steps needed.
Just because you lack the intelligence to understand it, doesnt mean the rest of the passengers do.
Highlighting the section about my inexperience, actually helped prove my point and made you out to be the fool.
My entire point was, even members of the public who arent pilots, are aware that a pilot should listen and respond to what the aircraft is telling the pilot above and before instruments.
It is extremely basic training for all pilots, to be taught the signs of a stall and to ignore the inclination to pitch the nose up and instead, increase speed while pitching the nose lower to recover from the stall. Very basic checks, such as looking at the throttle position would have indicated that they did not have enough thrust to maintain level flight. Pilots are taught how to prioritise in an emergency situation when multiple problems arise and the first step is to maintain level flight before troubleshooting lesser concerns.
Before addressing any instrument concerns, a pilot must always ensure that physical concerns such as the plane staying in the air, is dealt with first.
So feel free to counter those facts if you like, but even I know it and the majority of the passengers knew it. Everyone apart from the arrogant french pilots and yourself know it.
You're doing more to prove you're a cock than I could
Congratulations, in spite of the ever strong competition, you are Village idiot of the Week.
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Originally posted by sasguru View PostWhy don't you re-read your post and work out why my post is intelligent.
If you can.
Moron.
Just because you lack the intelligence to understand it, doesnt mean the rest of the passengers do.
Highlighting the section about my inexperience, actually helped prove my point and made you out to be the fool.
My entire point was, even members of the public who arent pilots, are aware that a pilot should listen and respond to what the aircraft is telling the pilot above and before instruments.
It is extremely basic training for all pilots, to be taught the signs of a stall and to ignore the inclination to pitch the nose up and instead, increase speed while pitching the nose lower to recover from the stall. Very basic checks, such as looking at the throttle position would have indicated that they did not have enough thrust to maintain level flight. Pilots are taught how to prioritise in an emergency situation when multiple problems arise and the first step is to maintain level flight before troubleshooting lesser concerns.
Before addressing any instrument concerns, a pilot must always ensure that physical concerns such as the plane staying in the air, is dealt with first.
So feel free to counter those facts if you like, but even I know it and the majority of the passengers knew it. Everyone apart from the arrogant french pilots and yourself know it.
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Originally posted by wim121 View PostRather than having a hissy fit and breaking the rules of the site, why dont you actually come back with an intelligent response, that is, if you're capable of doing so?
If you can.
Moron.
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Originally posted by sasguru View PostYou really are an ignorant, judgemental cock aren't you?
Fook, words fail me about what an absolute tosser you are.
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Originally posted by wim121 View PostThat's the french for you! Bunch of morons the lot of them ....
Goodness knows how qualified pilots could ever make such an error.
Ive never made that error and I havent even got my private license, just a bit of holding the stick in real life and flight simulators. I thought it was common knowledge even to retards, that if you enter a stall, you pitch your nose lower, remove flaps and increase power to increase airflow around the wing, hence increasing lift and halting the stall.
Honestly, what kind of brain dead moron would ever pull their nose up while stalling? Isnt as if he didnt have enough room either. Over the atlantic at 4,000? Even dropping fast, that is more than enough height to recover.
Air france has quite a bad safety record and I cant say im too keen on them. Not too keen on modern planes like the airbus either (although, at least I would get on one, would NEVER step foot on a dc9/dc10). The problem isnt so much the planes, but ground staff and pilots being stuck decades in the past and not familiar enough with the modern systems.
Fook, words fail me about what an absolute tosser you are.
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Originally posted by wim121 View PostAll they had to do when the stick did a shake indicating a stall is increase their throttle, even if their instinct is to incorrectly pitch up. The instruments may not indicate a stall but the throttle position and stick shake would point out otherwise. There is no excuse for that.
I would imagine that the conditions that caused the accident will be incorporated into training scenarios, not just the cockpit management and flying but the human factors as well. Hopefully such a situation will never arise again.
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Originally posted by Cliphead View PostPartial instrumentation failure, no visual cues, inexperience and conflicting interpretation of what the instruments were reading could all contribute to such a mistake.
Without being trained for instrument flying try wearing a hood next time you get some stick time, shockingly easy to lose the plot when your inner ear is telling you one thing and the instruments another.
However, pilots go through rigorous training to ignore misleading cues, such as instruments in some circumstances.
All they had to do when the stick did a shake indicating a stall is increase their throttle, even if their instinct is to incorrectly pitch up. The instruments may not indicate a stall but the throttle position and stick shake would point out otherwise. There is no excuse for that.
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