Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Ok tuff guy... I'm guessing you're one of the tens of thousands.
Everyone makes mistakes. It's a human factor of the equation. If your "cockpit discipline" inclines you to believe you can't or won't please advertise your avatar on the PA prior to departure on the odd chance I'm onboard so I can head for the exit. You want hit that captain in the mouth? I'd have loved to see that one. The guy fukked up royal but didn't slide off the end. It could have been way worse. I've been flying a long time but have not yet met the guy who walks on water.[/
this is an issue with two extreme different views. Never said you can't make mistakes. I preach and practice CRM. But this one and Marvin renslows in buffalo. Are the unpardonable ones. Death was just a few yards away
This was an epic failure of cockpit discipline just like Asiana. Air. No free get out of jail cards. No pats on the back. And don't try to put every airline pilot in the same boat . This is as egregious as the comair Lexington disaster .
Tough cookies. It's my opinion. I could never fly passengers again knowing I almost killed 124 . It's over. Find a new career.
This is an opinion only .
I think you stole this directly out of my brain. Exactly what I was thinking. We battle complacency everyday. Events like this are a wake up call. Every flight we make to Podunk Illinois has consequences if we let complacency win. Watching that sole survivor show gave me chills because that comair flight couldn't happen to anyone. Half awake climbing into the cockpit at 4am . Operating on cruise control, going through the motions doing the same flight you've done a thousand times before. Then there you are screaming down the runway and it hits you. That comair crew ruined the lives of hundreds of people and that fo lives in a place worse than hell. I don't know how he carries on. That southwest flight could have killed a lot of people. The crew must answer to that. The battle against complacency is ongoing and is not easy. Some days are worse than others were all guilty of it. I fly with some people and they're playing the lottery every day. Just waiting for that day when the swiss cheese lines up right. This flight , the comair flight , the psa flight in Charleston , good examples to think about every time you push back from the gate.
Looks like it.Can a 737 with min fuel, min crew & no pax or cargo get back in the air w/ 3700 feet of runway?
Quote:
Originally Posted by freightdogfred
Ok tuff guy... I'm guessing you're one of the tens of thousands.
The guy fukked up royal but didn't slide off the end. It could have been way worse. I've been flying a long time but have not yet met the guy who walks on water.[/]
I always find it odd when people (and mostly media) say 'it could've been a lot worse'. Things always could be a lot worse.
I think it's a corporate speak for a non-normal to get itself out of the news cycle.What exactly is an "emergency takeoff"?
What exactly is an "emergency takeoff"?
Bubba
Maybe it's because the FAA had to approve it. Maybe the news media just has no idea what it's talking about like every time someone taxis onto the grass the plane "went off the runway OMG there were no injuries."What exactly is an "emergency takeoff"?
My thoughts exactly freight dog
Most of these superiority complex bitches are a pain in the ass to fly with. Smug but can't fly out of a paper bag.
Aviation history is written in blood fellas. Your "discipline" comes from mistakes like these. Your energy is better spent humbly learning from what they did than walking around smug that it'll never happen to you.
You're exactly the one it will happen to.
As for no visuals inside the marker?
C'mon-
That violates every part of my turboprop background-
There's nothing unsafe about visuals and sidesteps- just back things up-
Now, if you need the time- go ahead and take it and feel good about that- but maybe some of these guys that can't work the fms without an insane amount of time and energy devoted to it, should practice more and get proficient with an integral part of the airplane-
We had the opposite discussion when Asiana happened.
For our 5-figure salaries and to respect the profession and be really good at ALL aspects of flying. Where you're weak, be humble and wise enough to get to work on it- whether it's hand-flying or quick programming an fms -
I'm not throwing our training under the bus for the "heads down" issues- they are in fact issues- the solution then is to get pilots more familiar with the fms and train them on it until they are proficient.
Ever take a check ride with a capt who doesn't program much in that role and just let go of any knowledge they ever had on it- when they have to quick re-program it can take forever and this scenario is probably why that's a problem.
What's funny is they're the ones who will tell you not to go heads down-
It's like "man, this doesn't equate to a distraction for me, just bc it's one for you- and I like my needles and info going to the same spot"
Who is the approach facility and was Bransons tower open?
Quote:
Originally Posted by freightdogfred
Ok tuff guy... I'm guessing you're one of the tens of thousands.
The guy fukked up royal but didn't slide off the end. It could have been way worse. I've been flying a long time but have not yet met the guy who walks on water.[/]
I always find it odd when people (and mostly media) say 'it could've been a lot worse'. Things always could be a lot worse.
I find it amazing you and others want to dismiss the severity. There is no superiority complex, I take my command serious. If I don't see the airport or know for certain it is the right one I will go around or hold until I'm ready. This is much larger than SWA. It's about a coming to work with your A game every time.
If you think a certain number of mistakes as a captain are OK, please tell me which ones are? I'm dying to know as I'm sure others are. You're attitude comes from thinking this is an attack on SWA. It couldn't Be farther from the truth. This is about airmanship...
As for being heads down, if you can't change a landing runway in any FMS in 15 seconds during flight, than you should not be flying the airplane that FMS is attached to. And if you can't find 15 seconds on approach to dedicate to that change, then you should not be flying that approach.