habubuaza said:
Actually, the accidents you're talking about is FedEx in EWR, and FedEx in SWF. The SWF accident was hazmat, the EWR accident was pilot error.
No, actually klhoard knows what he's talking about, it's 321 busdriver who doesn't. Huck initially brought up the issue of older corporate pilots, specifically an over-70 pilot in the King Air crash - - the one that was going to pick up Lou Holtz.
Rather than address that point, 321 busdriver chose to raise a red herring about a FedEx accident, but couldn't be bothered with facts. He stated "DC-10," "EWR," and "3 sub-sixty guys." Those three facts do not fit any accident or incident, but don't let that stop him. The only FedEx DC-10 involved in an accident around ten years ago was the DC-10 that landed at Stewart (Newburg) with a cargo fire which subsequently consumed the airplane. As klhoard pointed out, the ages of the crewmembers had nothing to do with that accident; the problem was undeclared Haz.
Still oblivious to the fact he might have gotten some facts wrong, 321 busdriver proceeded to tell klhoard he must have been thinking about ValuJet. Puzzled that 321 busdriver would persist with this line of "reasoning," klhoard reminded 321 busdriver that age has nothing to do with undeclared Haz. Then 321 busdriver had the nerve to admonish us to Google the EWR accident, still ignorant to the difference between a DC-10 and an MD-11. It was 321 busdriver, after all, who declared the accident involved "3 qualified sub-sixty guys." Apparently his Google ain't workin' that well.
Of course, it was at this point that 321 busdriver had the audacity to call someone else a "smartass." (Thank you, Echopapa, for applying the proper label to the proper person.)
You'd think 321 busdriver could see the light and return to the discussion (Age 60) at hand, but no. He adds
lie to illogic when he says, "I did originally say that it was a DC-10. I have since corrected myself." Wrong! Not only did he NOT correct himself, he tried to correct everyone else.
Now... let's examine the point (and counterpoint) of all this...
Point: Huck -
I flew with several over 60 guys in the corporate world - including one King Aire guy in his seventies. You really gotta see it to believe it. I still have nightmares.
Read the report on the King Aire crash that was going to pick up Lou Holtz....
Counterpoint: 321 busdriver -
I also remember the DC-10 FedEX accident in EWR some 10 years ago, flown by 3 qualified sub-sixty guys. You should be ashamed of yourself!
What did
any FedEx accident have to do with the King Aire crash, or the Age 60 rule?
321 busdriver -
I was simply responding to the post that blamed some over 60 pilots as being responsible for an accident.
So, basically, he was just throwing dirt in the hope it would obscure the facts. By citing an accident that was not caused by over-sixty pilots, he could somehow excuse an accident that had as a contributing factor the progressive age of a pilot.
I must ask 321 driver - - have you looked at the case of the King Air crash yet? Do you have something useful to contribute to the subject, or do you just want to remind us of FedEx accidents that involved sub-sixty crews? If that's your course of action, let me know. I can provide dates, aircraft types, number of crewmembers, and actual locations so you can look like less of a total and complete idiot.
By the way, habubuaza, the cause of the EWR error was materiel failure. Wings are not supposed to fall off before the landing gear. Ask FedEx where they hid the wing (airplane parts could not be examined by the NTSB because they mysteriously "disappeared"). I know the NTSB says pilot error, so I'm not condemning you for repeating their finding. However, I would be remiss if I didn't take the opportunity to defend the pilot.