NTSB report is out for the Falcon at MYF and it is a doozy

This work from garbage needs to end pronto - and it will. Just watch. Only the jobs from home pre-pandemic will continue.

Probably not. Employers have to make the decision, do we pay more money to get someone willing to come into an office everyday? Since they don't want to do that, they end up make the job remote in the end if they have trouble filling it. I don't see that changing. Thanks to the pandemic, both the employer and the employees know that most roles can be done just fine remotely.
 
Probably not. Employers have to make the decision, do we pay more money to get someone willing to come into an office everyday? Since they don't want to do that, they end up make the job remote in the end if they have trouble filling it. I don't see that changing. Thanks to the pandemic, both the employer and the employees know that most roles can be done just fine remotely.
Hybrid work is awesome, and I think it's the Way.
 
OMG Captain Bueno’s story got out!!

I only flew with him once but it was an epic 3 day reposition, and I’m trying to remember if those were under 91 or not. Because I, uh, don’t want to math too hard about how old he probably was at the time.
 
*tries to make a point*


*used non American countries, at least one of which is a crap hole*



Fail

Once again, reading comprehension has failed you. I already mentioned an example of this in the U.S. but since it didn't touch on your disdain of work from home, stock market, or whatever else you're spring loaded to be angry at, you ignored it.
 
Yes, because fake licensing or lying about experience never happens in the airlines.





cough Atlas cough.
 
Somehow someone let these two clowns get ahold of a Falcon 900EX EASy.

https://data.ntsb.gov/carol-repgen/api/ ... 102629/pdf

The flight crew was conducting a flight with two passengers and one flight attendant onboard the multiengine jet airplane. The flight crew later stated that at rotation speed, the captain applied back pressure to the control yoke; however, the nose did not rotate to a takeoff attitude. The captain attempted to rotate the airplane once more by relaxing the yoke then pulling it back again, and, with no change in the airplane’s attitude, he made the decision to reject the takeoff by retarding the thrust levers and applying maximum braking. The airplane overran the end of the runway onto a gravel pad where the landing gear collapsed.

Continuity was confirmed from the flight controls to the control surfaces. No mechanical anomalies with the engines or airplane systems were noted during the investigation that would have precluded normal operation. A review of performance data indicated that the flight crew attempted to takeoff with the airplane 2,975 lbs over the maximum takeoff weight (MTOW), a center of gravity (CG) close to the most forward limit, and an incorrect stabilizer trim setting. The digital flight data recorder (DFDR) data indicated that the captain attempted takeoff at a rotation speed 23 knots (kts) slower than the calculated rotation speed for the airplane at maximum weight. Takeoff performance showed the departure runway was 575 ft shorter than the distance required for takeoff at the airplane’s weight.

The captain, who was the pilot flying, did not hold any valid pilot certificates at the time of the accident because they had been revoked 2 years prior due to his falsification of logbook entries and records. Additionally, he had never held a type rating for the accident airplane and had started, but not completed, training in the accident airplane model before the accident. The first officer had accumulated about 16 hours of flight experience in the make and model of the airplane and was not authorized to operate as pilot-in-command.

The airplane’s flight management system (FMS) data were not recovered; therefore, it could not be determined what data the flight crew entered into the FMS that allowed the airspeed numbers to be generated. The investigation revealed that had the actual performance numbers been entered, a “FIELD LIMITED” amber message would have illuminated warning the crew that the MTOW was exceeded, and airspeed numbers would not have been generated. Therefore, it is likely that the crew entered incorrect data into the FMS either by manually entering a longer runway length and/or decreased the weight of the fuel, passengers, and/or cargo.
How lovely that THIS federal government report arrives on the same day our Dear Orange Leader was federally indicted for putting the entire world at great risk. At least this ass-clown pilot ... er, left seat occupant put only a few rich schlubbs at risk.

"The captain, who was the pilot flying, did not hold any valid pilot certificates at the time of the accident* because they had been revoked 2 years prior due to his falsification of logbook entries and records."

Same BS... different venue. Culture and honor and integrity matter.

*Just BTW, neither of these existential disasters were "accidents".
 
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Once again, reading comprehension has failed you. I already mentioned an example of this in the U.S. but since it didn't touch on your disdain of work from home, stock market, or whatever else you're spring loaded to be angry at, you ignored it.

Oh please. A one off story at best. Corpie land, this is far more common. Reading comprehension didn’t fail me; you sat down on a computer using google to look up pilots without licenses and posted the random links you found. Unfortunately for you, the vast overwhelming majority were overseas.


Pilots have ego. PRIA works only when a guy is honest. Now we’re switching to a system where once you work at a 121airline, you can’t hide that from future airline interviews. This was a needed change due to Colgan and Atlas. Corpie land? Nothing gonna happen. It’s still the Buddy system. The guy ends up flying the plane cause he knew someone who knew someone, could very well be the owner/operator.
 
How lovely that THIS federal government report arrives on the same day our Dear Orange Leader was federally indicted for putting the entire world at great risk. At least this ass-clown pilot ... er, left seat occupant put only a few rich schlubbs at risk.

"The captain, who was the pilot flying, did not hold any valid pilot certificates at the time of the accident* because they had been revoked 2 years prior due to his falsification of logbook entries and records."

Same BS... different venue. Culture and honor and integrity matter.

*Just BTW, neither of these existential disasters were "accidents".


Ah yes, if there’s one thing missing in this was a Trump rant.
 
Oh please. A one off story at best. Corpie land, this is far more common. Reading comprehension didn’t fail me; you sat down on a computer using google to look up pilots without licenses and posted the random links you found. Unfortunately for you, the vast overwhelming majority were overseas.


Pilots have ego. PRIA works only when a guy is honest. Now we’re switching to a system where once you work at a 121airline, you can’t hide that from future airline interviews. This was a needed change due to Colgan and Atlas. Corpie land? Nothing gonna happen. It’s still the Buddy system. The guy ends up flying the plane cause he knew someone who knew someone, could very well be the owner/operator.
Explain PRIA, I ask because I'm not sure you know how it works.
 
How lovely that THIS federal government report arrives on the same day our Dear Orange Leader was federally indicted for putting the entire world at great risk. At least this ass-clown pilot ... er, left seat occupant put only a few rich schlubbs at risk.

"The captain, who was the pilot flying, did not hold any valid pilot certificates at the time of the accident* because they had been revoked 2 years prior due to his falsification of logbook entries and records."

Same BS... different venue. Culture and honor and integrity matter.

*Just BTW, neither of these existential disasters were "accidents".
EVERYTHING EXPLAINED By Richie Lengel...
 
Nose down trim trying to take off in a heavy airplane from a short field is not a great plan. I recall a thread here about this accident with videos and photos. Just imagine if they did set the trim correctly and pulled it off, they'd still be doing it today.
 
Imagine this being how you find out why you showed up for day one of sim and the dude who was supposed to be your sim partner had just vanished.

Also like….was there zero accountability from the owner/airplane manager for sending this dude off to what’s gotta be a $30k+ initial and he just….spends the 2 weeks that he’s supposed to be in sim • around in Dallas on the company dime?

Well to his defense....he had no certificate to have the type added onto. It had already been revoked at that point. My theory is that he knew the FAA would have noticed that a pilot it a revoked certificate had just gotten a new type and he was trying to avoid getting caught.
 
Explain PRIA, I ask because I'm not sure you know how it works.

A pilot has to accurately disclose his work history for airlines. The airline would send PRIA requests to those airlines they see in the application. So if you fail to disclose you worked at Mesa and failed upgrade there twice, Atlas wouldn’t know about it.
 
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