Any "Latest & Greatest" about Delta?
They were flying over the San Francisco bay.
I think we all know where that laser beam came from.

I think we all know where that laser beam came from.

Kudos to the CPSC. I had a no-notice family medical issue pop up. Called to see what my options were and they completely rearranged my x-days for the rest of the month so I get the time off I need and don't lose any pay. I couldn't have asked for a better response.
Is this Tweet valid data for the vast majority of citizens? NTSB @NTSB 7 Jul The throttles were advanced a few seconds prior to impact and the engines appear to respond normally. #Asiana 214
Is the appearance of an responding normally a factual data point?
Come on, man!
Is the appearance of an responding normally a factual data point?
Come on, man!
Sure that directs attention towards the flight deck but so what? On the flip side of the coin should the NTSB have a gag rule imposed such that the engines had not responded properly the NTSB would vow to say nothing pending the completion of a 12+ investigation? What if another 777 crashed in a week in a similar manner?
Put it this way, we now know a slide deployed inside the cabin. I bet every airline out there with a conscious might take a second look at their safety equipment soon. It's not a bad thing to know.
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Jul 2011
Posts: 273
Likes: 0
Well, it's actually good to know in the sense that it's not another loss of power on short final like the BA 777 in LHR.
Imagine if another 777 crashed in 3 weeks on short final and we found out the NTSB knew the previous crash was because of a power loss but decided to say nothing pending the completion of a year long investigation. I'm sure it wouldn't go over well.
So I think it's a good idea to put that out. Sure it directs ones attention to the flight deck but I bet every 777 operator, flight crew, Boeing and GE or RR don't mind knowing the airplane was working just fine.
Imagine if another 777 crashed in 3 weeks on short final and we found out the NTSB knew the previous crash was because of a power loss but decided to say nothing pending the completion of a year long investigation. I'm sure it wouldn't go over well.
So I think it's a good idea to put that out. Sure it directs ones attention to the flight deck but I bet every 777 operator, flight crew, Boeing and GE or RR don't mind knowing the airplane was working just fine.
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Jul 2011
Posts: 273
Likes: 0
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Jun 2008
Posts: 3,716
Likes: 0
Wonder if the aircraft was FOQA equipped?
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Jul 2011
Posts: 273
Likes: 0
Interesting fact that ICAO has mandated FOQA but the FAA has not.
The 777 does have Quick Access Recorder or QAR which may provide more information than the FDR if it wasnt damaged in the crash. The QAR was missing data in the BA crash the QAR but had data the FDR did not like the position of the Fuel Metering Valves. This is why I'm not a big fan of partial information. The QAR has data that the CVR and FDR do not.
The 777 does have Quick Access Recorder or QAR which may provide more information than the FDR if it wasnt damaged in the crash. The QAR was missing data in the BA crash the QAR but had data the FDR did not like the position of the Fuel Metering Valves. This is why I'm not a big fan of partial information. The QAR has data that the CVR and FDR do not.
Can't abide NAI
Joined: Jun 2007
Posts: 12,078
Likes: 15
From: Douglas Aerospace post production Flight Test & Work Around Engineering bulletin dissembler
Understood and agreed. You seem to have a greater than average understanding of the process and information.
Can you advise:
If you review the Board's work on the Gulfstream G650 accident, the Board went beyond the actions of the crew to the complete lack of a safety culture at Gulfstream. The Board was unusually critical of program management at the senior levels of the organization ... the Board, on the basis of objective data went beyond the "what" of the accident to the "why."
This Board, more so than in the past, is a friend of pilots. If the pilots were some how deficient, we should want to understand why, identify the patterns and seek corrective actions applied also.
Many industry insiders have opined the culture at these carriers undermines safety. Cheap, unqualified, pilots are promoted. Those who seek a higher standard are fired. Seems like ALPA would be all for shining a flashlight in this corner.
Can you advise:
- Are the pilots IFALPA, or affiliated some way to our association?
- Is ALPA a party to this investigation?
- What dog do we have in this?
If you review the Board's work on the Gulfstream G650 accident, the Board went beyond the actions of the crew to the complete lack of a safety culture at Gulfstream. The Board was unusually critical of program management at the senior levels of the organization ... the Board, on the basis of objective data went beyond the "what" of the accident to the "why."
This Board, more so than in the past, is a friend of pilots. If the pilots were some how deficient, we should want to understand why, identify the patterns and seek corrective actions applied also.
Many industry insiders have opined the culture at these carriers undermines safety. Cheap, unqualified, pilots are promoted. Those who seek a higher standard are fired. Seems like ALPA would be all for shining a flashlight in this corner.
Interesting fact: the ICAO cannot mandate anything. They can only set a SARP recommending contracting states make regulatory actions to mandate some action or equipment.
GF
GF
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post





