Well never having flown a Hawker I didn't want to say much...but yeah those guys did not sound on top of it.Well, it was like reading a 500 hour FO talking to a 200 hour CA. Really disturbing to read. Did either of them know WTF was going on in that airplane?
Well never having flown a Hawker I didn't want to say much...but yeah those guys did not sound on top of it.
Sounds like the CA was doing an awful lot of "mentoring." The transcript almost reads like a CFII instructing an instrument student. The CA should have probably taken the jet from the FO. The FO was ten years older than the CA. I wonder if that dynamic was an issue in this situation.
Also, I've read other articles that say that the FO was fired from his previous job due to training problems.
Tragic and avoidable.![]()
Also, I've read other articles that say that the FO was fired from his previous job due to training problems.
So this raised my eyebrows a couple of notches.
After reading your comment I went back to the NTSB docket and did some more browsing.
They were BOTH fired from their previous employers - the captain for missing training and the FO for missing training/extreme deficiencies in meeting standards. Also, the CA was written up in 2014 for not complying with ATC instructions.
http://dms.ntsb.gov/pubdms/search/h...aed3b2bbe-092E1FC0-D6A4-CC0D-85F7D475A54EB400
The real tragedy here is the loss of the passenger's lives. RIP
If you're in the flying business for more than a year, think we can all state that we either know or have flown with pilots just like these two. They slip through the cracks and no one steps in until it's way to late. I'm not a big fan of lawsuits but Execuflight has a lot to explain in this one; shoddy background checks, no follow up with previous employers, no PRIA check, lame training, etc.
I've flown with this FO, well not this EXACT FO but one with the same mental capacity, maturity, etc. Although he has a certificate, he just "didn't get it". The shame of it is that ALL of his issues (including falsification of his pilot log book) were presented to the company president and all were swept under the rug. I guess my only hope is that he dies alone in the crash and doesn't take anyone with him. However, within my lifetime, I fully expect to read that he has killed himself or others while operating as a pilot
You of all people know that is anecdotal.Bigger picture, I think there's something to be said about trusting your gut regarding pilots and operators. I went to get my multi with a company in Central Florida. Flew two hours and quit. Called my wife and said that I just didn't feel safe - there were a lot of red flags with the plane, the operation, individual people, the training standards (or lack thereof).
A couple years later the plane crashed into a warehouse killing both a student and a pilot from the school.
You of all people know that is anecdotal.
People look at some operations and call them reckless, i.e. Air shows or Bush flying, yet are safer than some of the 121 operations I've seen. (Brand new FO's on IOE who should not have passed training...)
Even if you're not sure (which is nuts in itself), just fly a stable approach and if you don't see the runway environment when you're supposed to then go missed. Its not that hard ( yes I know, hindsight and oversimplification). This crew was flying from the tail.I stopped reading after the confusion over how cloud bases are reported. Jesus christ.
You mean the captain.Even if you're not sure (which is nuts in itself), just fly a stable approach and if you don't see the runway environment when you're supposed to then go missed. Its not that hard ( yes I know, hindsight and oversimplification). This crew was flying from the tail.
PS you should keep reading, it gets to a point where they are arguing about the speed of the aircraft. The CAPTAIN actually says "I don't want to stall "
The real tragedy here is the loss of the passenger's lives. RIP
If you're in the flying business for more than a year, think we can all state that we either know or have flown with pilots just like these two. They slip through the cracks and no one steps in until it's way to late. I'm not a big fan of lawsuits but Execuflight has a lot to explain in this one; shoddy background checks, no follow up with previous employers, no PRIA check, lame training, etc.
I've flown with this FO, well not this EXACT FO but one with the same mental capacity, maturity, etc. Although he has a certificate, he just "didn't get it". The shame of it is that ALL of his issues (including falsification of his pilot log book) were presented to the company president and all were swept under the rug. I guess my only hope is that he dies alone in the crash and doesn't take anyone with him. However, within my lifetime, I fully expect to read that he has killed himself or others while operating as a pilot
dumb question I'm sure, but are there jets out there (this one included) that do not have AoA indicators? Seems like a pretty simple solution to the Vref question.
dumb question I'm sure, but are there jets out there (this one included) that do not have AoA indicators? Seems like a pretty simple solution to the Vref question.
If my memory is correct, AoA indicators are a requirement for part 25 aircraft.