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The last major accident (Colgan) was also a stall. Fatigue and airspeed decay are common threads. We got the rest reg. Now look for a major push for stall training, maybe even a recurrent at your local FBO in a C-172. Level flight stall, right descending, left descending, idle approach stall. Once a year, paid for by employer.
Will mandate greater use of automation for all approaches, such as, you shall not turn off autopilot until 1000' even on a VFR day and shall not turn off auto throttle until 50'. Boeing will develop software that will override pilots if out parameters below 1000'.
I hope you're right because we know this is the problem. However the bottom line is what the airlines obsess over, not safety, and safety is expensive. The FAA will only mandate money-costing changes under great pressure. It took a literal act of Congress to change the rest rules.Other way around. The FAA has finally realized the problems with over automation and this crash is a perfect example of the eventual results of over automation and the degradation of actual piloting skills associated with it.
In a nutshell, "safety's not my job, it's the FAA's."Why don't they require the Major airlines to be accountable and liable for the screw-ups of any carrier in their codeshare or alliance. Fine...if you want Turkish Air or Asiana in your codeshare...go for it. But if I buy a ticket on United or American and some idiot kills a planefull of pax...let the major take the blame. They will change their ways quickly.
10,000 doing trans pac ops equals 1000 landings/2= 500 personal landings. The average EMB120 F/O will log that many landings in less than a year. Hours do not always provide equal experience.The gentleman at the controls had just under 10,000 hours.