Cherokee_Cruiser
Bronteroc
Eek. Several negative rate of climbs, 2 below 1,000AGL. Kinda all over the place in terms of VSI.
Good job to that crew, nicely done CRM wise.
Good job to that crew, nicely done CRM wise.
I think it just depends on the situation and that the system is more or less designed correctly. Immediate action items should be done as long as you’re in a good place for it. Those should take care of anything time critical. If it doesn’t put the fire out, then maybe it’s time to think about a really quick return.We had the Italian thing out on here maybe a decade ago. I still have stigmata from the Safety Police who insisted *in no uncertain terms* that the only acceptable answer was to go flying off in to the wild blue with a burning engine (and who knows what else) rather than go berserk and land.
FWIW, my airline does hand flown traffic patterns in qual and recurrent training. Nobody I’ve flown with has been shocked or ruffled by them.Agreed. There has to be an inate flexibility to understand when the script isn’t working, whether by the given situation or whether self induced, and know how to flex properly to effect a positive outcome. In fact, the Capt had used this previously, and had been chastised for doing so (improperly, in my opinion). And that’s one of the drawbacks of 121: everything is taught as “the script”, which is fine and is the 99% solution for normal ops, but for abnormal ops, the script doesn’t and won’t cover everything, and crews aren’t taught to use flexibility……as seen by being chastised when they do use it.
121 training is great and all, but it’s been my experience and observation that they take a few of the simplest of things, and turn them into these complex monstrosities. The number of 121 pilots I’ve run into who find a go around, or a traffic pattern, or a go around to a traffic pattern, or even something like a touch and go landing, to be some sort of near-emergency of a maneuver, is perplexing.
I often wonder if the pilots we have today, could successfully manage another UA232 situation, if one wants to get into true no-script land.
They correct engine was initially identified. But due to various distractions or situational stress, was forgotten as both throttles had been brought back for level off. Personally, both throttles should’ve been being flown, so to speak, until the checklist steps of ID and securing of the bad engine are completed. Because these weren’t completed, both throttles should continue to have been manipulated so the good engine won’t be sitting at low EPR, while the bad one is overtemping
Since when is a simple traffic pattern considered a shooting from the hip maneuver? A traffic pattern is one of the most basic of basic aviation maneuvers. Far less complex and time consuming than running a checklist while heading out to sea at low altitude in the dark. If you can take an air emergency and safely turn it into a ground emergency in fairly short order, that’s a good thing. It’s not like these guys would be trying to fly a traffic pattern in Aspen or Jackson Hole. They had all kinds of maneuvering room. And had the Capt not been chastised from before, it’s highly likely this jet would’ve been safely rolling out on landing on the runway following this incident, even with the bad engine being forgotten.
Slightly unorthodox but this Italian captain handles a 767 engine fire and immediate return really well. Great CRM too.
Accident Boeing 767-3G5ER EI-CXO, Friday 16 July 2004
4 kts before V1 the right engine exploded. The F/O was flying. The Captain elected to continue the take-off and, after completing the emergency actions, the fire was still uncontained. Th...aviation-safety.net
I’m glad it worked out, but I have questions about terrain and chugging around at 1000 for so long.
Engine fail:
Prior to v1: “ABORTIHAVETHEAIRCRAFT”
After V1: Rotate/400’ confirm or select a path/1000’ altitude hold, clean up, after takeoff checklist, declare, engine failure checklist
Super easy.
HOWEVER, I’ve seen more people get boogered up during engine failures in the initial climb. Do you climb? Do you stop climbing? When do you declare? Is it really an engine failure? Etc
What kind of airplane? What stage of flight? I recall reading somewhere in a Gulfstream book to descend, depressurize and toss the offending piece out of the baggage door. Are we carrying a Tesla or an ornery MacBook? Do you not carry those mitts and bags for out of control PED's?Ok guys and gals. Let's run an excercise. You have been made aware of a lithium battery fire back in the cabin/cargo area that has gotten out of control. The FA's (for you passenger carrying dudes/dudettes) are fighting the fire the best they can. But it has become uncontained. Do you run the checklist as written by your company/aircraft manufacturer or do you turn direct the airport to land ASAP?
This doesn't need to be a zero sum deal.Ok guys and gals. Let's run an excercise. You have been made aware of a lithium battery fire back in the cabin/cargo area that has gotten out of control. The FA's (for you passenger carrying dudes/dudettes) are fighting the fire the best they can. But it has become uncontained. Do you run the checklist as written by your company/aircraft manufacturer or do you turn direct the airport to land ASAP?
This doesn't need to be a zero sum deal.
"You have the airplane, I'm going to run the checklist, tell ATC and get us vectors towards (airport)". At bare minimum anyone in the right seat of a 121 aircraft should be able to aviate, navigate, and communicate, while the other person fixes the problem.
That's fair. I feel like some of the discussion became about how 121 is apparently fly around and try to fix the problem first, but I've never really been anywhere that that's the case. The checklists may be a little more lengthy, but there's always been a distinction of "someone fly the airplane, someone fix the airplane, and is this a time vs. no time" thing.Definitely not zero sum. I'm just curious on how everyone would handle it. Dialogue and such...
That's fair. I feel like some of the discussion became about how 121 is apparently fly around and try to fix the problem first, but I've never really been anywhere that that's the case. The checklists may be a little more lengthy, but there's always been a distinction of "someone fly the airplane, someone fix the airplane, and is this a time vs. no time" thing.
You'll all be unsurprised to learn that my opinion is basically "if it works, it's not stupid".I’m glad it worked out, but I have questions about terrain and chugging around at 1000 for so long.
Seeing US trained 121 pilots praise that Italian video is strange.
Ok guys and gals. Let's run an excercise. You have been made aware of a lithium battery fire back in the cabin/cargo area that has gotten out of control. The FA's (for you passenger carrying dudes/dudettes) are fighting the fire the best they can. But it has become uncontained. Do you run the checklist as written by your company/aircraft manufacturer or do you turn direct the airport to land ASAP?