Sol Rosenburg
Well-Known Member
Good video, all I think of the whole time is AAL965.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Airlines_Flight_965
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Airlines_Flight_965
One click to disconnect the autopilot, one click to silence the siren. On the throttles, it's the same. One click to disconnect the autothrottles, one more click to silence the beeper. Four clicks total.
Check out the other ones, advanced manouvers, unusual attitutes and terrain awareness if you can!
This one is also very good:
You'll find a couple of more of AA's training presentations with Captain VanderBurgh as well as some other good videos here:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-3uc_oilRopX03MDu_uTUA/videos
Cherokee_Cruiser said:His unusual attitude one belongs in an F4 Phanthom class. Not AA airliners.
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And I think you know what I think about all of this disparaging talk of automation.![]()
Fly_Unity said:I think its good. I teach in highly automated airplanes and I can tell you in my 3500 hours of dual given, automation is a major problem. Today my student, who was having troubles prioritizing tasks, benefited from this clip. I wish a few of the pilots on some of the recent crashes in the ocean watched this video.
Don't you teach GA?
The problem is a lack of understanding of the automation, not an over reliance on it.
Fly_Unity said:I do teach GA. I know this video is for 121. But I think in the single pilot world, this becomes even a bigger issue. I see students who are very familiar with automation, but yet still get overloaded when trying to fly the airplane. I see it time and time again, ATC gives out five instructions at once and first priority for many is to program the FMS while totally oblivious to their current heading and altitude.
GA is a different world than 121 with different concerns. The issues you have with automation may be legit with the average GA pilot flying something like a Cirrus, but I completely disagree with the conventional wisdom that there is an over reliance on automation in airliner cockpits.
Take what you need, whatever you find helpfull.His unusual attitude one belongs in an F4 Phanthom class. Not AA airliners.
Take what you need, whatever you find helpfull.
You don't flip over unless you're in a Cessna or light business turboprop/light jet. Commercial narrowbody and widebody jetliners like AA has? No way would you enter anything close to a 90 degree bank for wake.
I bet you didn't tear off the tail with overly aggressive rudder movements.I beg to differ. I got rolled 103 degrees (as pulled from the FDR) taking off behind a 330 on 9L in PHL one night long ago in a CRJ.
I bet you didn't tear off the tail with overly aggressive rudder movements.
Nope. But for about 3 seconds, as I watched the lights of the Old Philadelphia Navy Yard disappear out the BOTTOM of the window, I considered rolling all the way around.
My comment was more about the fact that Part 25, 121 Aircraft can most certainly get rolled hard.