good idea. the 737 flies great on one engine, just select flaps 15, power up the one you're keeping, start lever to cutoff on the one you're putting to bed, and bam; 20 gallons saved.
then again, maybe not.
It is all about risk management. Every time we fly there is a risk associated with that flight, if we deem the risk too great, we don't go. I'm sure an argument could be made that any type of malfunction should require an inflight abort to the nearest suitable field. Your map light stops working? Hmm, that might be the beginnings of a major electrical shutdown, better be safe and put this bad boy on the ground. What if your #2 radio goes out? A bleed trip off that resets?
Obviously there are innumerable situations, and conveniently enough our company is kind enough to provide us with a QRH that covers the big ones. Either it says land at the nearest suitable field, and we do; or it doesn't and we use some of that judgement they pay us the big bucks for.
My point being that saying they should have landed because it is the safe thing to do is a copout. Each situation that falls outside the explicit guidance of the QRH needs to be analyzed by the pilots in the cockpit at the time.
Unless you know FOR SURE--100%, you land at the nearest suitable airport and find out. And you don't have to do an emergency evac. to do that, either.
AA717driver
I would counter that you never know FOR SURE--100%, you have a good idea and you work off of that. Generally, I agree that if you doubt the integrity of your aircraft you need to land but I don't see the need to assume that a pressurization failure automatically equals a divert. Assuming it is a cracked pressure hull seems to be the extreme when a bad press controller or blown seal on a cabin door is more likely.
Also, agree that without all the facts we can't make a determinative answer and I, for one, trust the guys that did make the decision. But I think discussing it is fine, the "never monday mornning quaterback" contingent seems to be against people learning from the mistakes of the past. And if we always wait for the NTSB report, the same thing could've happened 3 more times. Besides, in a case like this, there likely will be no report and the newspapers aren't likely to print the 'corrected' story 3 weeks from now either. We know what we think we know, and we pontificate from there.