Dornier 335
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2005
- Posts
- 1,089
Sorry, that's a bunch of bs. What do you know about AF training and standards? How can you state the NWA and QF A330 incident were identical with AF447? Where they flying through the ITCZ? Late at night? No accident is identical. Looking at other "respected" operators, it seems they have issues landing in crosswinds or landing an MD11. Sometimes, Mr. Murphy stays with you all the way to touchdown.Can anybody remember a respected operator that has crashed one due to pilot error ? No, Air France is not a respected operator in terms of their flight crews and training.
A Qantas A330 and a Northwest A330 had exactly the same problem as the Air France A330. In both cases the problem was solved with little fuss and certainly not a hull loss.
Hey Mr. "Real" Airplane, besides making dumb comments about an airplane you never flew, and obviously don't know much about, what about Aeroperu flight 603 (B757)? Seems like "real" airplanes fall out of the sky as well, with some or full blockage of the pitot-static system.But, as Marie Antoinette said...." Let them eat cake."
The real issure as previously mentioned IS pilot training (vs. automation), here and the rest of the world. Pilots being used as system monitors, and being assured that the automation can do a better job. Add long haul flying to this, and you'll end up with pilots logging very little stick time/skill per 1000 hours of flying.
That's why I will never, ever, ever be supportive of ab-initio training. In any country. People need years of hand-flying experience before they need to be flying airliners around, especially since they're so automated and stick skills suffer anyway. If you don't have them to begin with, the deterioration of what little skill they have is only going to be that much more pronounced.
I still practice hand-flying the airplane (including disconnecting the a/t) up to cruise and out of 18,0 in the descent on the arrival if the weather is decent, just to keep my skills at least half-a$$ decent. I don't care if it's accepted standard practice or not. Might save my own butt someday. YMMV
I agree, Lear, my observation flying in Europe was exactly that. Unfortunately, the aviation authorities and the industry don't seem convinced enough. Browsing through pprune, you'll read a lot of posts why you should NOT be handflying, and focus more on proper R/T (sigh) etc.
If you compare both "flying cultures" (if you can call that), you'll see that the accident rate between Europe and the US is about the same.
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