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The real blame...the crew failed at basic airmanship.
MJ42 said:Boiler Up, your post #12 concerns me. As stated in post #32, there were no signs of a tail stall. Hopefully, your post was not implying that it may have been a tail stall, albeit the crew may have reacted as if it was.
Why would you be concerned by a statement of fact?
Given the crew's actions, its not unreasonable to deduce that the crew was distracted and as such might have mistakenly believed they were in a tail stall situation once the shaker went off (even though shakers don't account for tail stalls) and they responded accordingly to the wrong diagnosis.
Obviously they were not in a tail stall and their reactions didn't save the aircraft...
I may have misread your post, but it sounded as if you were implying they were in a tail stall...sorry for reading too much into your statement.
The real blame...the crew failed at basic airmanship.