Hacker15e
Who am I? Where are my pants?
Don't blaspheme and bring that word around here, else some may take huge offense and accuse you of being a cowboy!
Nowhere in the FOM, AOM, or QRH am I authorized to use airmanship.
Don't blaspheme and bring that word around here, else some may take huge offense and accuse you of being a cowboy!
Aircraft are all-attitude vehicles. If the flight environment were so predictable so as to always remain straight and level at 1G, we wouldn't even need pilots, much less instruments to indicate aircraft performance for pilots to interpret.
It is all well and good to say, "the aircraft shouldn't have been in that position in the first place," but the fact is, we live and operate in a chaotic world where things occasionally happen that are not ordinary, or even planned for. Sometimes we get into those situations because of lapses in SA or decisionmaking, despite high levels of training and experience. In these situations, we have to use airmanship and knowledge of the aircraft to get back to safety. In many cases, these involve being in unusual attitudes or near the edges of aircraft performance capability.
FWIW, it is generally people who have substantial time flying in aircraft with AOA gauges that are stridently for having them, and people who haven't flown with them who say they're not needed. Correlation or just coincidence?
Cao Boi stole my wallet in HCMC!
Instead, we primarily rely on speeds (directly to the contrary of what we learn right from the beginning)...how does that make any sense?
what bothers me most is the CA recognized the situation. He HAD the situational awareness the whole time to go *gee this isn't right,* but he never acted upon that until it was way too late. How they got through so much flight training, and so much experience and not know when it's time to call it quits pour the coals to the fire get some altitude and regroup and try again is beyond me...
This sounds like the name of a tranny stripper there in 'Nam...not that there's anything wrong with that. Story?
Because in nearly every normal flight regime, airspeed is a pretty good facsimile for AOA.
I agree, but we all have to realize that reading about the events in retrospect, at 1G and zero knots from the safety of the ground, is different than what those guys were experiencing real time.
The question of intervention is one of the core airmanship decisions that any one on a multi-pilot crew (including instructors teaching) have to determine for themselves -- how far are they willing to let another crewmember go before physically intervening.
When teaching primary flying (especially early on), it is a much easier process, as the instructor knows the other guy flying doesn't have much knowledge, experience, or airmanship. The further on down the line you go, though, the more difficult that point of intervention is to determine. When you have two qualified and experienced pilots (and the assumptions about perceptions, decisions, and performance that come with those quals and that experience), it is an even muddier line.
I've instructed at three different levels of the training pipeline (basic, advanced, and operational) and the size of my "donut", e.g. how far I'd let things go before I intervened, differed based on who I was flying with and what we were doing. The size of that donut changed the more experience I got as an instructor, too. Captains and FOs have to go through this same calculus and evolution, since they die at the same time as the other guy in the cockpit with them. Either way, those decisions aren't black and white.
Bottom line, you're right -- knowing what we know now, different decisions should have been made at many steps of the process, to include the Capt taking the controls and going around...but IMHO those are easy spears to throw from where we're sitting.
Again, the point is, why make derived data (e.g. stall speeds, green dots, PLIs, etc) the primary reference when the primary data is easy to obtain, easy to interpret, and 100% true?
AOA is true for every configuration, every weight, every speed, every G loading, every attitude.
The same is not true for derived or indirect indications of AOA.
Again, the point is, why make derived data (e.g. stall speeds, green dots, PLIs, etc) the primary reference when the primary data is easy to obtain, easy to interpret, and 100% true?
AOA is true for every configuration, every weight, every speed, every G loading, every attitude.
The same is not true for derived or indirect indications of AOA.
No amount of instrumentation will override bad decision making from the flight crew. You're creating a strawman argument here.
You are also assuming that AOA data is easy to interpret. It isn't, because up until very recently, this gauge wasn't introduced during primary training.
![]()
This doesn't look terribly easy to interpret to me.
No amount of instrumentation will override bad decision making from the flight crew. You're creating a strawman argument here. You are also assuming that AOA data is easy to interpret. It isn't, because up until very recently, this gauge wasn't introduced during primary training.
![]()
This doesn't look terribly easy to interpret to me.
AOA has nothing to do with this...
Everyone is firmly agreed that this was a judgment/decisionmaking issue, and not an aircraft instrumentation issue.
So other than mshunter how many of the people commenting here have flown for 135 operator? How many have flown for what they consider a "scumbag" 135 operator?
Because right now I am hearing a bunch of people talk about 135 operations who don't have that in their background.
AOA has nothing to do with this...
Is there even a single person in this thread that has stated that, much less actually believes that? Don't distort the discussion of one thing into being about another -- that's just patently untrue.
Everyone is firmly agreed that this was a judgment/decisionmaking issue, and not an aircraft instrumentation issue. The discussion of one, however, led to a discussion of the other.