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4. Could they have mis-diagnosed the IDLE reading as being a failed engine?
Bottom line I hope they continue to be heros.
what's Bill O'Reilly's opinion?
Yes they did try relighting the engines.
Food for thought:
1. Where were the thrust levers?
2. What vertical mode were they as far as auto flight?
3. Could the AT have commanded IDLE while they were descending?
4. Could they have mis-diagnosed the IDLE reading as being a failed engine?
Bottom line I hope they continue to be heros.
That point was covered in another thread.
This is edited and copied from another Forum/Thread. I am not the Author. It does raise an interesting question.
“An opinion about the A320 from one unidentified pilot:
Don't be surprised if the Airbus fly by wire computers didn't put a perfectly good airplane in the water.
One of the things that computers do really well is compare data and can determine whether a sensor is lost or something has truly malfunctioned.
Point taken, however this is a very general statement from someone who obviously knows nothing about CFM's or the A-320. This incident has happened before, not on an Airbus but on a B737-800 in Europe. It appears that FADEC might have such "control" over these power-plants, that the possibility of pilot input/trouble shooting has been completely taken out of the equation. I will reiterate, this possible anomaly is not limited to the Airbus! All FADEC equipped engines might need to be re-evaluated.That point was covered in another thread.
This is edited and copied from another Forum/Thread. I am not the Author. It does raise an interesting question.
“An opinion about the A320 from one unidentified pilot:
Don't be surprised if the Airbus fly by wire computers didn't put a perfectly good airplane in the water. In an older generation airplane like the 727 or 737 300/400 the throttles are hooked to the fuel controllers on the engine by a steel throttle cable ... On the Airbus nothing in the cockpit is real. Everything is electronic.
In an older generation airplane when you hit birds the engines keep screaming or they blow up but they don't both roll back to idle simultaneously like happened to Flt. 1549. All it would take is for bird guts to plug a pressure sensor or knock the pitot probe off or plug it and the computers would roll the engines back to idle thinking they were over boosting because the computers were getting bad data. "