I'll start off with the NTSB's animation from the Flight 3407 crash in Buffalo. Things start to go really wrong around the 2:05 mark.It is going to be hard for Colgan Air to justify this pairing in the cockpit. The Buffalo News has a pretty good article on the last part of the flight: http://www.buffalonews.com/home/story/668975.html ]
5/12/2009 11:11:59 PM
Nobody else post here, k?
5/12/2009 11:43:42 PM
5/13/2009 6:03:27 AM
From what I understand, regional carriers usually want somewhere between 500 and 1,000 hours. But the fact is that the regional pilots get paid crap salaries and have a high turn-over, so they may have just been trying to fill a seat. The problem is putting two people with such low experience in the same cockpit, one of which had busted 4 previous check-rides, doesn't strike me as prudent. I know there are some airline pilots on TWW, so I'll let them comment further.
5/13/2009 8:32:37 AM
I a complete aviation junkie. I'm interested in anything that flies.
5/13/2009 11:20:12 AM
You're up at Redstone right?
5/13/2009 11:24:33 AM
What in the hell was wrong with this pilot? 600 hours or whatever he had (just barely skimmed the article) isn't that much, but by about his 5th flying lesson, he shouldn't known that pulling back hard on the yoke is the WORST thing he could've done in an airplane about to stall. If he'd just pushed forward, they probably would've been fine.
5/13/2009 5:54:51 PM
stall + yaw = spin
5/14/2009 1:38:34 AM
I saw that in the paper this morning. One of the first things that any pilot is taught is to nose down when the stall warning goes off. By the time that you solo it should almost be common sense.
5/14/2009 1:51:29 AM
5/14/2009 2:05:30 AM
If you're entering a stall, is it standard to raise the flaps? Wouldn't the lowered flaps also change the amount that ailerons affected the flight too, making the plane a bit stabler?[Edited on May 14, 2009 at 2:31 AM. Reason : ^Dad was talking about pilots should have been required to complete a stall recovery for their lic.]
5/14/2009 2:30:11 AM
/threadIf you know what this then you know how cool it is.
5/14/2009 2:45:03 AM
^ Pretty much everyone knows what that is.
5/14/2009 8:35:35 AM
5/14/2009 9:24:59 AM
Well your stall speed is lower when you have your flaps down, but dropping the flaps is gonna make you slow down quickly. But yeah it is pretty much common sense to nose down when you hear the stall warning... even a basic student pilot knows to keep an eye on the airspeed and stay well away from stall speed.
5/14/2009 11:57:03 AM
I've never stalled an airplane when I didn't intend to so I guess I have to give him the benefit of the doubt. However, it's incomprehensible to me how he pulled back with the shaker and stall indicator blaring
5/14/2009 1:09:58 PM
5/14/2009 1:40:16 PM
MAYBE HE HAD RHEE RHEE SONHE WASN'T TUFF SON
5/14/2009 2:51:58 PM
jesus, those poor people. wow, that is not something i would want to be a part of.
5/14/2009 5:17:35 PM
5/14/2009 7:30:27 PM
We have 2 female aviators in our squadron (well, one is in the squadron, the other got banished to the group HQ because she sucks so badly in the jet, but she still flies with us some).One of them is heinously, awfully, terribly ugly, and fairly competent. The other is absolutely SMOKING hot...and completely incompetent (and will admit straight-up that she's used her looks to make it at times).
5/14/2009 8:51:03 PM
do it on the tarmac
5/14/2009 11:43:20 PM
In other news, one of the women running the ultra-marathon in Namibia this weekend was also the first woman to circumnavigate the globe in a helicopter.What surprised me; she did it in a Robinson R44, which I'm not sure I'd want to fly around the world.
5/17/2009 10:16:36 AM
^How many times would that need to be serviced to circumnavigate the globe? I mean that can't have that long of a time between overhauls.
5/17/2009 11:28:13 AM
^^ at the Cherry Point airshow yesterday, there was a New Bern-based helo flight school with one of those. I talked to them about doing a helo license add-on, but found that they charge $265/hour, whether dual instruction or solo, and that after getting my license, there aren't really any helos to rent except for their school bird...again, at $265/hour.
5/17/2009 11:39:03 AM
NC Rotor and Wing has R22 and R44. I'm learning to fly the wing part now and wouldn't mind learning a rotor in the future. I like flying a lot, it's not as boring as I had thought (I've been skydiving now for 10 years which is generally constant excitement). Landing is a lot of fun too.Jesus that animation is a clusterfuck, I can't imagine what the passengers felt. [Edited on May 17, 2009 at 11:56 AM. Reason : a]
5/17/2009 11:43:56 AM
P-8A: When the Airplane you're flying is OLD and BUSTED ignore it, and wait on the new one!!
5/17/2009 2:10:09 PM
Do you guys think that commercial airplane crash survival rates will always be basically 0 like they are now, or will they finally figure out a way to improve survival rates like they do for some smaller single engine planes like deploy a parachute if installed?
5/17/2009 2:29:30 PM
5/17/2009 2:32:56 PM
^^Airplane crashes happen, most of the times I've seen, in situations where parachutes wouldn't make a difference. Close to the ground turning onto final or the like. Adding the extra complexity of a parachute would probably increase the accident rate.
5/17/2009 6:37:49 PM
Flew on a Colgan q400 this weekend RDU->Newark. My wife was scared as hell.
5/18/2009 12:38:34 AM
^x7 Video from the 2009 MCAS Cherry Point Air Show:http://tinyurl.com/ownuhaI was born in New Bern. We used to go to Cherry Point almost every time they had a show. I don't want to mislead you, though. I am fascinated with aircraft and flight in general, but I don't fly--I gave it up completely when I left the Army in 1989.
5/18/2009 4:16:32 AM
5/18/2009 11:30:43 AM
^ Um. . .SO TUFF? Why was that ?
5/18/2009 11:55:17 AM
So anyway, I was flyin dat Bombardier CRJ 700 the other day son. Goin from KIAH to KCLT and cruising at 29,000 feet son. Flight Sim X son, filled with some beautiful glitches my sons, beautiful glitches.Dem free shaft turbines are da heat btw son.
5/18/2009 11:58:47 AM
didnt the pilot like fail his last few check rides or something. He had no place in the cockpit if he was deemed unfit
5/18/2009 1:22:24 PM
As someone who flies Bombardiers for shit pay , and has three friends at Colgan, I'll throw in my two cents. First I just want to clarify that the captain did not have 625 hours at the time of the accident. ATP requirements (for captaincy of a 121 airline) requires at minimum 1,500 hours. He likely had twice that, but I digress.The Duke already put it simply. I'll just elaborate on how badly they fucked up from evidence in the video.The problems start when the gear is lowered and the condition levers are increased. No power is added to counteract the drag, and consequently the airspeed dwindles. Somehow, both of them do not notice the airspeed dropping towards the low speed cue. The captain calls for flaps 15 with the speed already bordering stall speed. Impending stall: the stick shaker kicks into action. The captain pulls back on the yoke and adds power when he should have set max thrust and, if anything, pushed forward on the yoke to reduce the angle of attack. Now with an increasing angle of attack and the aircraft stalling, he slams on the right rudder aggravating the stall, almost spinning the thing. ALL THE WHILE STILL PULLING BACK ON THE YOKE?!?!?!??! I used to do that for fun in a Cessna to see how long I could keep the thing in a stall. The first officer puts the flaps up, which should never be done until stall recovery at a designated speed, which is above V2. She does it at about 82 knots, which sort of makes it a moot point, since I don't think that at that time the condition was recoverable.I mean from the outside it looks like a whack job. Who knows what they may have thought in the cockpit. We'll never know that much. I fly a jet so I can't comment too much on their aircraft specific procedures, but for what it's worth I didn't even know you could combat the stick pusher on my Bombardier CR9.
5/19/2009 12:10:46 AM
^ Yes, I agree with this evaluation of the situation. It seems to me that they didn't notice the airspeed going down because the Autopilot was handling shit. Not that this is an excuse, but I mean they were obviously preoccupied with some other task or something. I believe that if they had been flying the aircraft manually, they'd have immediately noticed that they were having to pull back more and more on the yoke in order to maintain the same altitude and they would have most likely added power.It's hard to watch them drop a few more degrees of flaps right as the aircraft is on the verge of stalling. Of course, they again fail to add any more power. The rudder application you pointed out was very interesting indeed. I guess they'd never done any aerobatics or spin training before, and even so, most pilots are aware that applying very much rudder during a stall is simply inviting a spin. It seems to me that they managed to put the aircraft into a spin for at least 1/2 of a rotation and that was the end of it really. Perhaps better pilots could have managed to recover, but in all honestly, better pilots probably wouldn't have put the aircraft in that situation to begin with.I'm still amazed that nobody added power as they kept increasing drag by extending the gear and flaps. It seems like such a simple concept for two people who has already made it that far in their aviation career. It seems that two very low quality pilots (Perhaps due to low intelligence, poor training or both) were at the controls on this flight. ]
5/19/2009 9:44:48 AM
The Dash doesn't have an autothrottle, so even with the autopilot on, they should have been vigilant of airspeed/power settings, especially during a configuration change, but you may have a point about noticing having to substitute pitch correction for dwindling airspeed with the autopilot off. Maybe the captain was falling asleep. Maybe he was checking out the first officer's rack. There must have been some external factor in play, which still doesn't explain to me their attempt at stall recovery. If this guy failed multiple 121 proficiency checks he probably shouldn't have still been at the airlines, much less awarded the captain seat.
5/19/2009 12:12:08 PM
Hey Duke you were at Cherry Point Saturday? Wish I had known that. I got some pretty nice pics at the show. Uploading them now.
5/19/2009 12:45:47 PM
My new ride...[Edited on May 19, 2009 at 2:34 PM. Reason : .]
5/19/2009 2:34:18 PM
Nice son...Nice.
5/19/2009 2:48:50 PM
Just wanted to say hey to the thread. Still down here in Savannah flying around on Gulfstream's!
5/19/2009 3:22:58 PM
I'll post my two cents. I have no doubt both of these pilots knew how to recover from a stall. I simply dont believe that both of them didnt have to recover from power on/off stalls in their traning at multiple points.From what I thought I remember from reading the news, they were in IFR conditions. There are numerous things that could have happened that put them in a state of panic to do things they were trained not to do. They probably were both in a disoriented state on approach in the soap and simply didnt react correctly or quickly enough.I think emergency situations are best handled by military pilots (neither of these were). They train to react on muscle memory and checklists they have put to memory and recite as soon as someone wakes them up from sleep. This type of training isnt stressed in the civilian world, and can really lead to problems if you have to make the correct decision in the first 5 seconds of a problem to give you a shot to survive.For example, if you lost an engine on take-off, I can promise you a military pilot with 200 hours in the left seat will handle it better in most cases than a seasoned pilot with many more hours. Just a different type of training for emergency situations. Im not saying there are exceptions to the rule, but I think my theory would hold up quite well in practice or statistics.Im not a military pilot, but my boss was and we talked a lot about it. Duke can correct me if he thinks otherwise.[Edited on May 19, 2009 at 4:27 PM. Reason : .]
5/19/2009 4:23:48 PM
5/19/2009 7:17:37 PM
Anyone know where to fly an RV4 or 8 local?
5/19/2009 8:42:11 PM
can an experimental be in commercial service? you might just have to know someone.my roommate is buying an RV-6 in 2 weeks, though. I flew an RV-4 once...it was sweet.
5/19/2009 8:55:06 PM
[Edited on May 19, 2009 at 10:54 PM. Reason : ]
5/19/2009 10:49:59 PM
any other AF pilots here?
5/19/2009 11:04:29 PM
5/20/2009 12:22:03 AM