acarpe3448
Well-known member
- Joined
- Apr 16, 2002
- Posts
- 647
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yeah fatigue played no part, just blaim the dead and injured
Fatigue did not play a part! Both pilots had more than min rest. Having said that, I have been in LEX early morning, short taxi, F/O heads down the whole way. And me thinking, don't get on the wrong runway, don't get on the wrong runway! A little ground fog thrown in just for fun. I hope the F/O is recupperating well.
Well, gee. Maybe "min rest" isn't sufficient. 8 or 9 hours from brake set to boarding the next morning in between 16 hour duty days? Way to think like the feds., or the general public. I haven't decided which one is more dangerous yet...
Saying lack of sleep not being the problem might be inaccurate - it sounds like both pilots had plenty of off-duty "rest" but how much of it was actual sleep? The only way I'm not tired at an 0-dark thirty report is if I've been on an early schedule of waking up and going to bed for at least several days. I also 100% believe that company-induced stress helped reduce the crew's ability to get proper sleep. I know I certainly had a lot on my mind regarding my career during those days (didn't the accident happen like a week after Delta announced possibly reducing Comair's fleet by the equivalent of 700 pilot jobs?)
The min rest does no good if you had to commute from another time zone. Sometimes even 12-13 hrs isn't enough, especially if you were just working the other side of the clock before.
In 8000 hrs you still haven't learned that accidents are not the result of a single event, but rather a chain. Oh, I suppose you have an argument to negate all the NTSB and FAA research. Must be nice to be so perfect. Pray that no one pi$$es on your grave if you ball one.This was not a timezone or sleepissue! This was a using the wrong runway for takeoff issue!
How cry some more. Everybody is tired in this industry/profession
They were into LEX 1,000 times before. Like they didnt know the runway layout there. Pay more attention and quit talking about your pets in your crew brief. Look up the CVR tapes.
We have dealt with this every day at Delta since 911! How many planes did we park? How many of our pilots (myself included) lost our jobs? Downturns suck! This was poor procedures I think! Don't most crews confirm their headings with runway headings prior to departure?
I like jumpseating on ComAir, they help me out a lot, and the crews are very professional. But I was in the actual a couple weeks ago and noticed that they still made no runway callout or confirmation and had no checklist item regarding verifying the correct runway or heading either. My guess is their legal counsel is preventing them from changing their checklist and/or callouts for fear of that change being used as implicit evidence in favor of victims being rewarded damages in a lawsuit.
My company already (fortunately, due to iron and fuel farms in the ground in ORD) had a heading callout/checklist item and they changed it after the accident.
Actually, I believe one had 17 hours rest and the other 13. You'll have to look it up on the earlier threads, but it was well above the minimum. I am the last one to knock those guys! I just don't see rest as the driver of this. Mental fatigue from the CMR beat down maybe, but not lack of sleep on this one. Fatigue is a major issue in other accidents, and still needs to be addressed.
As others have said, fatigue has little to do with lack of sleep the night before. It is a cumulative process involving biorhythms, sleep cycles, scheduling patterns, outside distractions, etc.
The FO actually had closer to 26 hrs rest but that does not mean he was rested. Think about what 26 hrs rest means in this case:
The FO started work on Friday around 1200. Delays at JFK caused him to be rerouted and to work a 15.5 hr day. He got into LEX at around 0330 Saturday. As we know, that means he probably didn't get to sleep till at least 0500. At this point, he has been awake for at least 19 hrs, but being a commuter, probably 24+.
So now he gets his 26 hrs rest but probably can't sleep for more than a few hrs in the morning because it's light outside and he's trying to rest at exactly the time his body is used to waking up. Then he has trouble sleeping that night because he just got up at noon or so.
Now, he has an 0430 wake up on Sunday to go fly out of LEX with a new crew. He is beginning duty at the same time he released from duty the previous day and his body clock is telling him it's time to sleep.
Lots of rest, yes. Fatigue? Very possible. I don't remember the exact times anymore, but these are very close to what actually took place.
The heading bug is supposed to be set early on by the checklist, but I wish I had a fiver for every time I saw a guy reach up and center the heading bug as we lined up on the runway without checking the actual heading. Two years at Comair and it happened all the time.
The heading bug is supposed to be set at the gate and is to be checked during the RADIOS/NAVAIDS/PPAS portion of the BEFORE STARTING ENGINES checklist. This is in the Flight Standards Manual and hasn't changed since the accident.
Here is the simple oversight that killed 50 people.
All it takes is two callouts:
Line up on Rwy, PF "Heading is xxx degrees, bug set at xxx degrees."
PNF "Heading xxx degrees, bug set at xxx degrees."
Then, and only then, should power be applied.
Skid, if your statement is true, it would appear Comair is in serious need of shaking up their flight crews about adhearance to company SOP's. The accident flight's heading bug (if set at the gate) was about 50 degrees off the runway heading and the flight crew did not notice it, but simply centered the bug and advanced the power levers.
We all feel bad over what happened, but there is a lesson to be learned here.
I'm hoping the FO is recovering OK.