jtrain609
Antisocial Monster
Sounds like the French investigators, who I'm assuming at the equivalent of the NTSB, say that the Air France first officers who were up front when their plane crashed into the Atlantic didn't have, and didn't know how to recover from a high altitude stall.
http://www.bea.aero/fr/enquetes/vol.af.447/note29juillet2011.en.pdf
To a lot of folks, a lack of training on high altitude stall recovery has been a glaring problem with training programs in the states, and I'm willing to bet that our old stall recovery techniques would have resulted in the same condition that these Air France guys found themselves in. The new stall recovery techniques should get the nose down far enough to fly out of it, but before, the technique was to lose as little altitude as possible and power out of the stall, which is obviously impossible at higher altitudes, and tenuous at best at lower altitudes.
http://www.bea.aero/fr/enquetes/vol.af.447/note29juillet2011.en.pdf
To a lot of folks, a lack of training on high altitude stall recovery has been a glaring problem with training programs in the states, and I'm willing to bet that our old stall recovery techniques would have resulted in the same condition that these Air France guys found themselves in. The new stall recovery techniques should get the nose down far enough to fly out of it, but before, the technique was to lose as little altitude as possible and power out of the stall, which is obviously impossible at higher altitudes, and tenuous at best at lower altitudes.