DC8 Flyer
It's SO BIG!
- Joined
- Feb 11, 2005
- Posts
- 426
FR8mastr said:Just a question for the lower time guys out there. this is not flame bait! Do any of you think you might learn anything in the next 10K or so hours during your carreer? The reason I ask such a stupid question is there are many posts on this and other threads where the general response seems to be I went to x school I learned all I need to know. Yes there are very good 1500 hour pilots out there, and there are poor 20,000 hours guys as well. But even that really good 1500 hour pilot will get better as he does the job more and more. The point I am trying to make is just acknowledge that there might be a thing or two to learn after you have been doing this for a few decades. The origonal way this used to work was the new guy flew with the old grizzled guy and learned stuff. This does not happen as much as it used to. The point is that the pinnacle thing probably would have not happened if one of the two was an old grizzled type.
Anyone who answers no to your question should turn their certs back into the FAA. Every flight should be a learning experience (change in behavior through experiences).
TIS said:Slow down a minute. I think age does indeed have something to do with it - in this case. You point out that you know of no statistical relationship between age and aviation accident rates and I don't mean to suggest that a direct link exists. However, two facts loom large here. First, this is a specific accident and thus, statistical analysis does not apply. Only the specifics of this case are relevant. Second, youth translates directly, in many cases, as basic inexperience at all things in life.
TIS
TIS, you bring up good points but I gotta disagree with you about Little Rock and this being any different. Sure fatigue was a factor in Little Rock, but how is having a lack of recent experience, ie low experience, different from a low time Capt or FO. I dont see any. The simple fact is whenever the big boys screw up its always someone or something elses fault, when the regionals screw up its low time, low experience, PFT, take your pick at the flavor of the week.
The simple fact, and I pick on the Little Rock accident cause it is the one brought up, is that both crews showed blatant disregard for procedure and basic airmanship. Be it not climbing at the proper profile, not doing a proper cockpit briefing, flying too slow too high, or trying to land in the wake of a severe thunderstorm. All bad decisions, all turned out badly and ALL had an error chain that was so easily broken its sad.
I agree youth does in most cases equal inexperienced, but inexperience simply means you havent had a chance yet to use your training, common sense and your wits. It is not always a bad thing, and its not always a good thing, but it is definately not something to hang all accidents by regional airlines on.
Training does have to take some blame in this. Not all airplanes are the same and those subtle differences and small details that can get you killed need to be stressed in training. IE, the DC8 not good to get on the breaks until 100 -90 knots or you might not have any at the end of the roll out, a nice detail to know if you are coming out of something that isnt picky about break usage. But what does common airmanship say, when landing USE THE BREAKS.
These guys screwed up, leave it at that, learn from it and it should never happen again.