RORO
Well-Known Member
Yup. The first point I brought up. Your motors are running fine and you aren’t smoke/fire. And when he called, they were already handflying through 1,500 ft. Why would you ask for a level off at 2,000 or 3,000? Especially when dealing with what you think is a control issue with AP off, away off, and TAT messages.
Because muscle memory would tell you it probably is 3000. Think about it, 90%+ of the time you brief a missed approach altitude or MSA, what is it? Its normally 3000 and the times it isn't is in an airport challenged by terrain or complex procedures where you're more inclined to pay attention to it. I know for sure I've spun 3000 as a missed approach altitude only for myself or the other pilot to realize it was incorrect and input the correct altitude (probably 2 or 4). Its an expectation bias.
Personally, I can 100% see this crew being in the position where they're tired and overloaded and say • it im going to what is most often a safe altitude. Is it correct? No. Does the entire conversation sound ridiculous for us watching it in hindsight at 0 mph? Yes. Would we have not made the same mistakes in their exact position? We very well could have. We're all very fallible. People have different limits and we really don't know what they were dealing with prior.
I've definitely made some dumb decisions fatigued, and I've accepted aircraft when I really shouldn't have because of external factors or my own poor self evaluation. I really don't think we should be so quick to hang this crew as we are as susceptible to fail in the same manner.