Soverytired
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 30, 2006
- Posts
- 1,572
Also... inability to call fatigue... and the choice to not use GS out minima.
In other words... Unprofessional!!!
The NSTB and NASA studies have conclusively proven that there are cases where pilots are fatigued and don't even know it.
Clearly, their "choice" to use GS out minima and poor crew coordination was heavily influenced by fatigue. Remember, some levels of fatigue are as bad or worse than being intoxicated.
I'm not picking a fight here. The fact is that failing to call "fatigue" is not necessarily a lack of character, guts or unprofessionalism.
There are valid reasons that the FAA has established bottle-to-throttle time rules and max blood alcohol limits. By following these rules, it's impossible for a pilot to arrive on the job intoxicated.
The comparable FAA duty time/rest requirement rules do NOT guarantee the lack of fatigue for pilots . . . far from it. NASA, the NTSB, ALPA, and most pilots know this, but the FAA fails to re-write rules that could virtually eliminate this elusive yet very real safety hazard.
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If fatigued and you know it, certainly call in "fatigued." But what do you do when you've taken off "ok" but are "fatigued" en-route . . . due to your 8-hr reduced rest overnight the night before and are into your 5th leg of a 12 hour day?
Your stance seems to suggest you have never been in this situation. You are quite fortunate. Maybe you could cut a little slack to those who have, eh?
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