ZapBrannigan
If it ain’t a Boeing, I’m not going. No choice.
A colleague recently showed me a month-to-month transition schedule that included a high time four day trip, one day off, followed by another high time four day trip. 8 of 9 working days that were clearly going to be fatiguing. It's allowed by both FAR and the contract which means that deciding whether he is fatigued is solely up to the pilot with no safety policy or procedure in place to keep it from getting that far.
What's sad is that it is widely accepted that human beings are poor judges of our own fatigue. It is insidious.
By the time we realize we are fatigued (micro sleeps etc) our cognitive abilities are already compromised. Rather than putting safeguards in place to mitigate fatigue, the airlines rely on a flawed system. They ask mission oriented individuals to throw the flag and call fatigued.
Physiology and mission mentality - That's a lot working against safety in my view.
What's sad is that it is widely accepted that human beings are poor judges of our own fatigue. It is insidious.
By the time we realize we are fatigued (micro sleeps etc) our cognitive abilities are already compromised. Rather than putting safeguards in place to mitigate fatigue, the airlines rely on a flawed system. They ask mission oriented individuals to throw the flag and call fatigued.
Physiology and mission mentality - That's a lot working against safety in my view.