Contract Thread II....
#62
Line Holder
Joined: Nov 2010
Posts: 274
Likes: 3
It is the poor or lack of training out of DTK that is the problem. Training by Bulletin or Newsletter just isn't cutting it.
The love affair with the FLCH button is a UAL thing and our FSAP stats puts us at the bottom of the industry. The other operators other than Asiana seem to have got VNAV figured out.
Let's not even have the discussion of the UAL embarrassments at LHR.
Fly Safe
The love affair with the FLCH button is a UAL thing and our FSAP stats puts us at the bottom of the industry. The other operators other than Asiana seem to have got VNAV figured out.
Let's not even have the discussion of the UAL embarrassments at LHR.
Fly Safe
What’s with LHR? You leave the hold and VS it down there. Never seen a problem with that. The Speed issue to 4 DME on the other hand...🙄
#63
#64
VNAV is pretty much the same on all the planes I have flown. Sketchy. But I have not flown the 787 or the latest guppies. It's usually OK, but it's not absolute and there are plenty of times when it's more hassle than its worth.
Today I watched it meander back and forth in both pitch and power while it tried to decide what it wanted to get the job done. DRAG REQUIRED, then thrust added, etc over and over. We were below 18K so I used V/S to fix that. Last week it was clearly going to miss a crossing. I won't let it violate me. I use it, but I have little faith in it. And once we're within 50 miles, it can quickly become more of a distraction than a benefit.
You can create a pretty good power off descent with just a little cranial activity prior to initiating the descent. We did it for decades prior to VNAV.
Today I watched it meander back and forth in both pitch and power while it tried to decide what it wanted to get the job done. DRAG REQUIRED, then thrust added, etc over and over. We were below 18K so I used V/S to fix that. Last week it was clearly going to miss a crossing. I won't let it violate me. I use it, but I have little faith in it. And once we're within 50 miles, it can quickly become more of a distraction than a benefit.
You can create a pretty good power off descent with just a little cranial activity prior to initiating the descent. We did it for decades prior to VNAV.
#65
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Nov 2009
Posts: 5,510
Likes: 109
VNAV is pretty much the same on all the planes I have flown. Sketchy. But I have not flown the 787 or the latest guppies. It's usually OK, but it's not absolute and there are plenty of times when it's more hassle than its worth.
Today I watched it meander back and forth in both pitch and power while it tried to decide what it wanted to get the job done. DRAG REQUIRED, then thrust added, etc over and over. We were below 18K so I used V/S to fix that. Last week it was clearly going to miss a crossing. I won't let it violate me. I use it, but I have little faith in it. And once we're within 50 miles, it can quickly become more of a distraction than a benefit.
You can create a pretty good power off descent with just a little cranial activity prior to initiating the descent. We did it for decades prior to VNAV.
Today I watched it meander back and forth in both pitch and power while it tried to decide what it wanted to get the job done. DRAG REQUIRED, then thrust added, etc over and over. We were below 18K so I used V/S to fix that. Last week it was clearly going to miss a crossing. I won't let it violate me. I use it, but I have little faith in it. And once we're within 50 miles, it can quickly become more of a distraction than a benefit.
You can create a pretty good power off descent with just a little cranial activity prior to initiating the descent. We did it for decades prior to VNAV.
#68
It is the poor or lack of training out of DTK that is the problem. Training by Bulletin or Newsletter just isn't cutting it.
The love affair with the FLCH button is a UAL thing and our FSAP stats puts us at the bottom of the industry. The other operators other than Asiana seem to have got VNAV figured out.
Let's not even have the discussion of the UAL embarrassments at LHR.
Fly Safe
The love affair with the FLCH button is a UAL thing and our FSAP stats puts us at the bottom of the industry. The other operators other than Asiana seem to have got VNAV figured out.
Let's not even have the discussion of the UAL embarrassments at LHR.
Fly Safe
#69
Line Holder
Joined: Apr 2013
Posts: 65
Likes: 0
I've flown the Bus, 737 and 777. They all require some monitoring and ALL require help (via the speedbrake) to keep you on the path.
The biggest problem with the Bus is that if you have a speed restriction, the bus only gives you five knots extra to stay on the path. If you have a 280KT restriction it could increase to 285kts and then it just stays at 285 while you drift off the path. The FMA keeps saying DES while the Boeing will go to about 20 kts fast and then give up, but at least your FMA changes from VNAV PTH to VNAV SPEED.
The biggest benefit of the BUS is that after the first idle descent, the path is drawn as a straight line between the fixes as opposed to ALL idle descents on the Boeings. During an RNAV arrival you can change your speed via managed/selected speed and the path doesn't change. The Boeing would draw a new path based on your programmed speed. Doing a 300kt descent and being told to slow to 250 = no problem in the BUS and in the Boeing it means asking the controller if they want the speed or the crossing restriction.
Its sometimes comical to watch someone try to get the airplane back on the path by changing to FLCH/LVL CHNG and not increasing the speed and expect it to somehow get back on the path without any drag.
It's far easier to just drag the speedbrake and leave it in VNAV/DES. Just my opinion.
The biggest problem with the Bus is that if you have a speed restriction, the bus only gives you five knots extra to stay on the path. If you have a 280KT restriction it could increase to 285kts and then it just stays at 285 while you drift off the path. The FMA keeps saying DES while the Boeing will go to about 20 kts fast and then give up, but at least your FMA changes from VNAV PTH to VNAV SPEED.
The biggest benefit of the BUS is that after the first idle descent, the path is drawn as a straight line between the fixes as opposed to ALL idle descents on the Boeings. During an RNAV arrival you can change your speed via managed/selected speed and the path doesn't change. The Boeing would draw a new path based on your programmed speed. Doing a 300kt descent and being told to slow to 250 = no problem in the BUS and in the Boeing it means asking the controller if they want the speed or the crossing restriction.
Its sometimes comical to watch someone try to get the airplane back on the path by changing to FLCH/LVL CHNG and not increasing the speed and expect it to somehow get back on the path without any drag.
It's far easier to just drag the speedbrake and leave it in VNAV/DES. Just my opinion.
#70
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Mar 2008
Posts: 1,083
Likes: 0
While it usually works as advertised (sort of, after the FMC SPEED power addition on the FMA, soon followed by DRAG REQUIRED on the FMC scratch pad) it'll occasionally attempt to leave you hundreds of feet high at a hard altitude or fly you through an altitude on an arrival when it sees it can't make both of the next two restrictions. TK will probably tell you that can't happen, just leave it in VNAV PATH. As has been said, "trust but verify" in VNAV.
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