enigma said:
OK, now I get your perstpective. It's always the pilots fault. Sorry dude, I don't buy that, nor am I willing to let others take that position without a challenge.
I agree that pilots make mistakes. However, I want to know the underlying causes for those mistakes. Saying that the pilots screwed up just doesn't cut it for me. I know of times where I was not strong enough of an individual to stand up to a strong boss. I took chances because I was too scared to say no. I learned (I hope) and will not make those mistakes now. But back in the day, If I let the boss talk me into landing where I knew better, and I ended up in a pile of twisted metal, I believe that the boss would have been partially responsible. I know it makes a managers job easy to just blame the pilots, but it just aint that easy.
I think that the NTSB agrees with me, btw. I believe that human factors are a large part of any accident investigation. If the pilots screw up, the NTSB attempts to decipher why. The NTSB agrees that outside factors can influence pilots and lead to mistakes, why can't you?
enigma
I don't believe it's always the pilots fault. I believe the NTSB does a great job and absolutely; human factors contribute greatly to accidents as they determine by them, and in this day and age of reliabilty play a much larger role than equipment failures, etc. I believe that things like bad Mx, management, etc, can and do become factors in accidents. I think that sometimes mechanical things come unglued and have seen ATC screwing up to the point where blind luck prevented a disaster. The ALPA report I cited ran counter to these "human factor" findings of the NTSB, however, in order to exonerate their own.
If "back in the day" you got pressured to land somewhere you knew you shouldn't and ended up in a pile of metal, well that's your own fault, not your ignorant boss's. No matter what his emotional state at the time, you're being paid to act and decide things as the flying professional, not him. Flying is your venue, not his. I'm glad you got over your weakness, but you're wrong about him being partially responsible.
Whitewashing basic piloting errors and decisions we make by blaming everything else runs counterproductive to safety, and finding and studying contributing factors, for us, should serve to help us recognize when WE are prone to errors in judgement or skill, or recognize when we're in the middle of a chain of events (caused by us or someone else is irrelevant at that moment) leading to potential disaster.
Sometimes technology makes this problem of losing the big picture worse. In the Cali incident, before plugging in the wrong fix and long before relaizing they were lost, the flight crew accepting a direct routing off the airway (which didn't really mean a shortcut anyway) while at the same time beginning a descent into mountainous terrain below probably lowered their SA because on their FMS screen would have wiped out the routing on the flight plan which included the reporting point they got confused if they had passed or not. Raw data SA was obviously not there, and the snowball got bigger by accepting straight in approach meaning steeper descent, etc. etc. Charlie Foxtrot.
Loss of SA can happen to anyone for many reasons. Rarely, however, does it happen to BOTH pilots in a two-person crew without at least one of them realizing something is amiss, even if they don't know exactly what that something is. If it happens at altitude it's embarrasing and might cost you a beer or a violation or perhaps your job until things get sorted out...but everyone lives. If the loss of SA happens while descending, HUGE friggin' alarm bells should be going off in at least one person's head because it's usually fatal if things continue towards terra firma. The DOMAIN where these alarm bells go off, how easily they are vocalized, and how to respond to them is the pilot's, no matter what got you to that point.
We're paid to remember these basics, especially when workload is high or conditions not severe clear daytime. The reason there has been such an effort to counter CFIT accidents involving perfectly good airplanes in the recent years is because unlike things like rudder-hardovers, in many cases it's the basics that get us in trouble. Shooting approaches is basic to what we do. Unfortunately, it seems that we must re-learn them all the time and IMO things like an self-serving ALPA "official" findings that ignores these basics only creates and re-inforces the notion that nothing can ever be a pilot's fault even if they disregard them. Attitude, more than anything else, determines the level of safety of any flight.