FlyChicaga
Well-known member
- Joined
- Mar 23, 2002
- Posts
- 862
rptrain said:Might I suggest Redefining Airmanship, by Tony Kern, USAF. I read it as a fledgling aviator, and it affected my entire career in a positive sense.
Agreed. I second this.
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rptrain said:Might I suggest Redefining Airmanship, by Tony Kern, USAF. I read it as a fledgling aviator, and it affected my entire career in a positive sense.
Ron Mexico said:a few days ago I was watching the ABC news and they had a 1 minute blurb on the crash. It started something like "are Regional pilots too inexperienced" I kind of cringed at the potiental public outcry!!!! the media Is having a field day with this!!!!!
flyer172r said:The only problem with your suggestion (and I don't know if this is a real problem or not) would be how accurate the sim is in these kinds of conditions. If nobody operates these planes at 410, how well can the sim reproduce what actually happens at those altitudes?
It could easily end up being that since the airplane is certified for those altitudes, the sim would fly up there without too many problems, giving the crew a false sense of security.
Bandit60 said:I understand what you are saying, and dont disagree. But if the sims are not behaving like the actual airplane then the sim should not and wont be certified.
As far as your point about nobody flying at these altitudes how can they reproduce what actually happens. Do you think they stall test the airplane at every atlitude while flight testing? They know what the airplane will do at those altitudes. The airplane knew what it was going to do according to the horns and whistles going off.
If these guys had gone to fl410 in the sim, maybe they would have thought twice into going up there for real.
enigma said:Simulators are nothing more than computer controlled devices. As such, they can be programmed to reproduce whatever flight situation the programmer desires to reproduce. What is needed is some sense of urgency within training departments to actually use the sim for something other than a cockpit procedures and instrument trainer. Every six months, I get stuck in a box for four hours and don't do much more in it than I can do with MSflitesim.
Regional4life said:You are extremely mis-informed on simulators. Yes, simulators are computer controlled devices, however, a programmer can't just "reproduce whatever flight situation he desires".
A programmer takes flight data information from test flights and programs the simulator based on those numbers. For example, the programmer MUST know how many pounds of force it takes to roll the airplane left at a thirty degree roll rate. If the airplane has never been in that phase of flight, the sim programmers are strictly guessing at how the aircraft will react. Here's a classic example. Remember the American Airlines crash in New York after the wake turbulence encounter. The crew went full deflection on the rudder (which is fine and certified for) and then went full deflection back the other way (which it is not certified for). The problem with this is that this is what they where taught to do in the simulator to recover from roll upset. (Okay, I always realize that's never "officially" came out from the airline, but many American pilots have suggested that's how they trained.) When we start training in the simulator outside of the aircraft's proven and demonstrated flight regime, (for example, taking the airplane inverted during unusual attitude training), it's purely guessing how the aircraft will actually handle and has the danger of leading pilots down the wrong road. Be careful with that suggestion.
enigma said:yes he can, and you're about to prove it.
I just didn't expand my point enough. I'll guarantee you that the engineers can accurately predict the effect of attempting to maintain FL410 at only 180KIAS. They may not be able to duplicate the stall after it occurs, but it would be no problem to duplicate the fact that a stall will occur. If the engineers don't have the data about CRJ high altitude stalls before, they do now.
enigma
kamikaize said:The gov trust's 25yr olds with the worlds fastest and most expensive a/c everyday and nobody knocks them when they crash or drop bombs on the wrong buildings. I
acaTerry said:What you fail to understand is the selection criteria between airlines and the military:
Military: College degree, severe academic aptitude testing, personality testing, very rigid physical exams, pshycological profile testing and boot camp/OCS as well as 1.5 to 2 year FLIGHT SCHOOL with DEEP subject matter and testing.
Airline: 1000 hrs (often less), pulse, fill out an application (often with the grammar and spelling of a 7th grader), and memorize the gouge from the internet.
See the idea?
jimcav said:Not all but a majority of responders to this post who were offended were low timers. I imagine most 20 or 30 something. Ironically at 35 and not much older than this capt. I was not the least bit offended by these remarks. Hell, this could apply to me as I once was a 20 something freight and commuter capt and was only 32 when I checked out in the 717.However it is not really the chronological age in question but the maturity level as evidenced by the tapes.If Im not mistaken this capt had 200 hrs in type before they gave him the keys. Totally insufficient background to be in command of that s$$t hot jet, regardless of tt in props. Many of those posting replies are in the 1000-2500 hr range and If you think your REALLY ready to be capt in that shiny jet when your SENIORITY NUMBER dictates ,your wrong. I know the few airlines who upgrade these people with no experience and there is no way my family is flyin on them. A 2500 hour pilot who went from a 1000 hr cfi to rj fo to 2500 hr capt is not ideal, neither is a 5000 hr tprop guy with 200 hrs of jet time. No offense to the youngsters ( hell I'm one myself ) but a majority of responders really fit a certain profile, or else you wouldn't be so offended by these remarks. Also, enough already about how you saved the day and the world in general when flying with the old incompetent capt. There is a reason why there is more than 1 of us up there. By the way congrats on the valiant effort. Make sure you tell the story at your retirement party.
skydan said:Simple explanation. Lack of maturity, experience and brains. When your young you'll never die. Only maturity give you the experience to make proper decision in aviation. Been there done that and survived! Just glad I was not a captain of a jet at 31 with 3000 of flight time.
I have several thoughts. I'll begin with this one. Speaking only for myself I can say that you’re just plain wrong about my comments. Perhaps I didn’t articulate clearly enough what I’ve been trying to say but here’s the essence of it: Believe it or not, age IS a factor in assessing the probable maturity level of any particular individual.DC8 Flyer said:Jim,
I think you may have missed what a lot of us "low timers" are trying to say. People aka "high timers" are placing the sole cause of this accident and any accident in regionnal flying on age and total time. While the cause of any accident in the big leagues is either fatigue, lack of recency of experience, weather, or any other factor OTHER than the pilots themselves.
What about UAL 173 - the DC-8 in Portland that resulted from the attitude of the captain and fathered CRM training as a mandate?DC8 Flyer said:While the cause of any accident in the big leagues is either fatigue, lack of recency of experience, weather, or any other factor OTHER than the pilots themselves.
By “gee whiz” I HOPE you’re not referring to a Gulfstream pilot per se (that’s usually what people mean when they say “gee whiz,” you know). And what does 1500 hours have to do with it, anyway?DC8 Flyer said:…but it does irk me when some high time gee whiz (couldn't cut it when he/she had 1500 hours) pilot starts spouting off about how all "kids" are unsafe to be flying these airplanes.
There you go! You’ve hit the nail on the head here. I would just say that if you’re longevity in the business is high, you’ll be ready to be the CA In that thing sooner than a guy with twice your time in it and a lucky connection that got him the job at age 25. You’ve just thought the business of being off the ground over more times, more completely, and more effectively than he has.DC8 Flyer said:He!! I'm a low timer with a type in a DC8 but there is no way on this green mud ball that I would want or am even close to being ready to being a captain in it. I recognize my limitations and most others out there do too.