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Thanks for your input, Ty, but sorry; I DO think he was flaming, because the specific examples he used were complete crap.
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I'm not sure why you're so defensive, Bubba, no one is accusing you of anything. But the fact remains that four incidents of the same type in less than 13 years is not random chance. And that's not even including the tail-strike incident since it was a relatively minor incident. You say we've analyzed each incident and made changes, yet the same incidents keep happening. How long do we want to tempt fate?
You can try to explain it away by blaming the airport or thrust levers being "slightly" out of idle, but the bottom line is that we, as a group, seem to have issues with putting an airplane down safely on the runway. We've broken three airplanes and narrowly averted a disaster in another. As Southwest pilots, we either look at what we're doing and fix it, or we're going to hurt someone. It's not about which airline has the safest pilots, it's about being professionals, and professionals don't blame thrust levers being slightly out of idle for overrunning a runway.
I'm claiming the only way to evaluate safety practices is to analyze the data about how each airlines practices mitigate accidents.
I'm not sure why you're so defensive, Bubba, no one is accusing you of anything. But the fact remains that four incidents of the same type in less than 13 years is not random chance. And that's not even including the tail-strike incident since it was a relatively minor incident. You say we've analyzed each incident and made changes, yet the same incidents keep happening. How long do we want to tempt fate?
You can try to explain it away by blaming the airport or thrust levers being "slightly" out of idle, but the bottom line is that we, as a group, seem to have issues with putting an airplane down safely on the runway. We've broken three airplanes and narrowly averted a disaster in another. As Southwest pilots, we either look at what we're doing and fix it, or we're going to hurt someone. It's not about which airline has the safest pilots, it's about being professionals, and professionals don't blame thrust levers being slightly out of idle for overrunning a runway.
And yet, the landing incidents continue.
But hey, let's just blame it on the airport like Bubba and hope we stay lucky.
It would appear that your idea of corrective actions after an incident is to lash out at anyone who suggests we did something wrong. It doesn't seem to occur to you that a better idea is to step back and ask ourselves what it is we're doing that keeps setting good pilots up for these incidents. Why do our pilots keep trying to salvage bad approaches instead of going around? Why do they push landing performance to the limit, assuming nothing will go wrong with equipment or weather conditions, even when other flights are diverting or going around?
Honestly, Bubba, there is a better way than sticking your head in the sand and pretending that none of these things are happening. It doesn't make us worse pilots or a bad company to ask these questions.
Let's take the MDW crash, for example. The crew calculated their landing performance and determined that they had just enough runway to be legal and assumed that the braking action reports were still accurate, that the performance numbers in their computer was perfectly accurate despite the changing conditions, and assumed that nothing would go wrong with the equipment like, say, taking 18 seconds to get the thrust reversers deployed. Some flights diverted, this flight continued.
What are we doing that made them push it to the edge like that? Don't tell me that "corrective" actions were taken and it won't happen again, because it does keep happening.
"Seriously? You think they should have diverted "just in case" several other, unrelated causal factors happened to occur? Why do we bother to even run the data? We should just ask you if you think it's "safe."
Bubba