Killtron2000
Well-Known Member
Re: Buffalo Crash Sparks Debate Over Use of Cockpit Recordin
I think the sterile cockpit rule is a good idea and if there was some way of enforcing it the comair crash may not have happened. Right now its just a suggestion. I would agree a CVR alone is not the best tool for what they want to do although when I fly with another pilot I usually verablly tell them what I'm doing and why or what I think they should do.
The only negative thing I could think of coming from this is pilots being worried about talking about a situation and having a CRM problem.
Whether the effort is worth it or not would be a managment desicion. They might be getting some kind of insurance discount for it but I really don't know. If they were to take some action based on this the proper thing to do would be to have the cheif pilot look at what happened and the pilot would have a chance to explain. You're right the details of each report will be different depending on who wrote it but I think you would be able to tell if certain crews keep having the same problem reported.
I'm going to withhold making any statements like that until at least a final report is published.
But, you do touch on an important point. How many times in any given month do crews allow airspeed to decay below Vref, continue approaches that should have been abandoned, or otherwise come close to bending metal or injuring people. I don't think those are questions that can be answered with any statistical merit by reviewing CVR recordings. Unfortunately, I think listening to tapes will result in answering only a very specific question ("Is the sterile cockpit rule being observed?"), with lots of manpower expended for little lasting benefit.
I think the sterile cockpit rule is a good idea and if there was some way of enforcing it the comair crash may not have happened. Right now its just a suggestion. I would agree a CVR alone is not the best tool for what they want to do although when I fly with another pilot I usually verablly tell them what I'm doing and why or what I think they should do.
The only negative thing I could think of coming from this is pilots being worried about talking about a situation and having a CRM problem.
What are they even going to do to normalize a review of one tape with another? Think about ASAP. The intake comes from reports written by a group of people with a wide variety of observational and narrative abilities. ASAP programs have spent lots of time developing a taxonomy for classifying conditions, events and causes in an attempt to catalog that "data" and start producing correlations and occurrence rates. Is a program that reviews CVRs going to develop a similar analysis rubric for flight deck recordings where there is only raw data (no narrative)? Does doing that even make sense when you are also routinely ignoring data from a well-instrumented FDR?
Whether the effort is worth it or not would be a managment desicion. They might be getting some kind of insurance discount for it but I really don't know. If they were to take some action based on this the proper thing to do would be to have the cheif pilot look at what happened and the pilot would have a chance to explain. You're right the details of each report will be different depending on who wrote it but I think you would be able to tell if certain crews keep having the same problem reported.