knot4u
Repeat Offender
I've never made a penny flying a jet but I have rolled them around on the ground under their own power, that is to say I've ran and taxied a few during the course of my job. They don't let just anyone fly these things and they don't let just anyone try to autocross them either. Point is, regardless of the jet, someone that's allowed to taxi a hooptie around has been trained about what the switches and levers in the cockpit do, especially the fuel cutoffs. Most mechanics don't taxi a whole lot but what we often do is run engines when the pilots delicate heads are either sleeping or getting their feet massaged (by whom? I don't know and don't care) but the point is everyone and anyone who's been signed off to run engines knows exactly what that lever or switch does because if it isn't routine leak checks you might be testing a repair (there's a reason why we try it before we release the airplane) and if things start going sideways (temps and runaways, always temps and runaways) we have to know how to end the debacle before the airplane burns down or runs into a hangar (don't laugh, look it up, both have happened. Look up what happened to the very last LR60). Pretending a pilot just after rotation inadvertently reached over and shut down both engines seems incongruous to me. If there's a problem with the 787 that they're hiding (highly doubtful) there'd be some action on Boeings side to all of their customers, I guess we'll all have to wait for the report. And yes, I have seen a runaway. It was on a TFE731 on a Lear and it went from start to T/O in less than 10 seconds and it was immediately shut down using the fuel cut off. We'd just changed both engines and were confounded with our obvious ineptitude so we started making phone calls, in the end we were completely innocent of either negligence nor ignorance. The DEEC controlling that engine had just chosen that moment to want to go back to the mothership at Honeywell. Which oddly worked out, we were in Scottsdale and Honeywell was just down the road in Phoenix so a swap was made and everyone lived happily ever after.