A Squared
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 26, 2001
- Posts
- 3,006
Fewer flights into terrain?, sure ... fewer taxiway takeoffs? I doubt it. In the case of terrain avoidance, the newer technology gives you tools that allow you to do something you can't do without it. In the case of taxiway takeoffs, you alreay have the tools in the form of paper runway diagrams, compasses/heading indicators, and runway/taxiway edge lights. If the pilots involved didin't check the color of the edge lights to make sure they were white instead of blue, or check that the heading indicator matches the runway heading (in the case of the China Airlines airbus) what makes you think they'd look at a gee whiz moving map display to check if thye were on the corect runway? It wasn't a case of the pilots being unsure, and not having any means of checking, it was a case of the pilots being sure (but wrong) and not cross checking with the simple, low tech, foolproof tools *already* at thier disposal.mtrv said:Sure, they'll still make mistakes. But I'd never dismiss high tech. With large moving map displays for terrain, terrain warnings, and the airport diagrams; perhaps we'll see fewer flights into terrain, and less takeoffs on the taxiways.
Remember how your instrument instructor told you to always check your compass and DG against the runway heading before adding power? (or maybe he didn't) that's one of the reasons, so you don't take off on a taxiway that is 80 degrees off from your runway.