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I can't say at Pinnacle, but at ASA, yes the teach us. Not that it takes a brain surgeon to figure it out. The airplane basically tells you its limits. But for us a basic fact is if you drop below 250 in the climb then you are asking for trouble.voteno said:Do they teach you buffet margins in the CRJ. It is a big deal in a boeing. THE -737-700-800-900 are all certified to FL410, but, only at certain weights and certain speeds and whether it is turbulent or not. I flew at a regional airline (E145) while furloughed and these things were never even disgussed in ground school as they were at the major airline I was furloughed from. When we brought this up in ground schhol at the regional airline, the instructor had never even heard of buffet speeds, he thought that you could go straight to FL370 no matter what.....I am not at all trying to assume what happened. I was only concerned with the way the E145 was flown where I worked at.
No. In fact the role of the low speed cue ant 1.27 Vs indicator are frquently misunderstood and not adressed operationally in training.Do they teach you buffet margins in the CRJ. It is a big deal in a boeing.
Indeed. Or the role of PFT/no P during T as an HR and recruitment policy attracting candidates whose aviation acumen may not be on par with their financial.It makes me wonder if their (in my estimations) lack of time in the CRJ might come into play in the NTSB final report
And that's the problem--ground school taught by a ramper and a former KC-135 boom operator. Sim taught by professional sim instructors. IOE check airman--some outstanding pros, some Express Airlines cowboys with anti-authority streaks and "a better way" of doing things. Maybe the mantra of "you'll get it on the line" doesn't cut it anymore.I am not at all trying to assume what happened. I was only concerned with the way the E145 was flown where I worked at
At PCL? Well--there is the jet upset training they bought from AMR--you know, the one discredited by the NTSB.Jets don't stall without disregard for perfomance considerations. I've heard how good the captain was supposed to be, but I wonder if he had ANY formal jet aerodynamics/performance training whatsoever.
Never trained for a double engine flame out at altitude as part of the syllabus. Got "ahead" on LOFT and did it "extra". Had to REALLY push that nose over to get speed to 300 KIAS. Hard to do--especially when you're used to a "Best Glide: 76 knots" mentality.According to the emergency checklist for a dual engine failure,
there are two ways to restart or relight the engines. One option is
to use a windmill restart, which requires at least 300 knots
indicated airspeed and the core of the engine to be either 12
percent rpm above 15,000 feet or 9 percent rpm below 15,000 feet.
The FDR data show that the computed airspeed did not get above 300
knots and that there was no measured rotation of the engine
core.
Double Engine Failure in Flight procedure calls for thrust levers to remain at SHUTOFF until 12% N2 and restart is not to be attempted above FL210 due to insufficient mass airflow. The FL210 note is kind of hard to read the way the checklist is written (hello--human factors anyone?). If airflow, core rotation, and speed are not acheived and maintained prior to moving thrust levers to IDLE, DC electric boost pumps will supply fuel as scheduled by the FCU as a result of low main ejector pressure sensed by the fuel computer. This can have the result of fouling the ignition, making subsequent restart attempts in effective without cessation of fuel flow and mass airflow to clear the burner cans. And there is the problem.The bigger question is why were they unable to start the engines on the APU?
Incorrect. He spent nearly a year on line as an FO prior to upgrade. He had just recently completed upgrade OE and at the time of the accident, the type rating was not yet recorded in the FAA registry.Street Capt,6700tt been at 9E less than 2 yrs most likely his first Jet job been sitting Reserve for a year and a half might have 700-1000hr in the CRJ
So,,, By that rational, shouldn't Skywest, Mesa or AWAC had an RJ fall outta the sky??? They also hire people right off the street into RJ's. They also upgrade turbo-prop pilots to RJ's!! I fail to see the logic there!!I wonder why did the Captain not recognize the peril they were flying into. Jets don't stall without disregard for perfomance considerations. I've heard how good the captain was supposed to be, but I wonder if he had ANY formal jet aerodynamics/performance training whatsoever.
flying4food said:So,,, By that rational, shouldn't Skywest, Mesa or AWAC had an RJ fall outta the sky??? They also hire people right off the street into RJ's. They also upgrade turbo-prop pilots to RJ's!! I fail to see the logic there!!
One should be careful how they hurl stones!!!
This aircraft doesn't have an AOA indicator. It's got this P.O.S. "1.27 VSO green line" indicator that is technically only accurate in the landing configuration and the "snake", a low-speed cue tied into (I believe) 1.13 VS1 (stall speed for whatever configuration you're in, changes with flap settings, speed/pitch (AOA) changes, etc).JetCapt69 said:Does anyone monitor the airspeed indicator & AOA? A friend of mine flew the CRJ at Pinnacle. He took it up to FL410 and got the shaker, but not the pusher.