TUCKnTRUCK
That guy
Re: Plane Down in Buffalo - Colgan Continental Flight 3407
OK... again. I highly doubt that Icing was a direct cause to this accident. Maybe a contributing factor.
Aloft, I very much know what tail plane stalls are like, and none that I have seen involve a pitch up attitude, With the wings "flying" they normally don't tend to snap back and forth like that. I think i said it before somewhere, but a tail stall in the Q400 would mirror in scary closeness, an extraneous stick pusher activation.
This is not speculation. If an event were to happen causing a sudden HUGE pitch up movement at low airspeeds, the shaker/pusher activation are almost instantaneous. When I saw that in the Sim, my initial reaction was that something "broke" It does not help having a yellow Disengage light on the stick pusher come on. Combine that with Icing, night time, long delays, late day etc, and I'm not sure myself how i would have dealt with that situation.
From what it sounds like from the NTSB, flaps 15 were called for, at or around flaps 10, a very large pitch deviation occurred, the shaker/pusher activated, kicked off the auto pilot, and nosed the airplane over. Thats a LOT of noise, light and stuff going on very quickly. You have the red light/tone for auto pilot, yellow pusher light, yoke vibrating, nose falling etc. I don't know what caused this, but I do know what it looks like in the cockpit. In my Sim situation, it was a stuck elevator actuator, on AP that caused everything to happen in close similarity.
I truly have the deepest sympathy for all involved. We all hope that never happens to us, and I hope we all learn from this. It was a horrid event. This makes me reevaluate my self as a pilot, and determine my reactions, but it has not shaken my confidence in this airplane in the winter operations. I may be wrong, but until then I will continue to do my job to the best of my abilities.
OK... again. I highly doubt that Icing was a direct cause to this accident. Maybe a contributing factor.
Aloft, I very much know what tail plane stalls are like, and none that I have seen involve a pitch up attitude, With the wings "flying" they normally don't tend to snap back and forth like that. I think i said it before somewhere, but a tail stall in the Q400 would mirror in scary closeness, an extraneous stick pusher activation.
This is not speculation. If an event were to happen causing a sudden HUGE pitch up movement at low airspeeds, the shaker/pusher activation are almost instantaneous. When I saw that in the Sim, my initial reaction was that something "broke" It does not help having a yellow Disengage light on the stick pusher come on. Combine that with Icing, night time, long delays, late day etc, and I'm not sure myself how i would have dealt with that situation.
From what it sounds like from the NTSB, flaps 15 were called for, at or around flaps 10, a very large pitch deviation occurred, the shaker/pusher activated, kicked off the auto pilot, and nosed the airplane over. Thats a LOT of noise, light and stuff going on very quickly. You have the red light/tone for auto pilot, yellow pusher light, yoke vibrating, nose falling etc. I don't know what caused this, but I do know what it looks like in the cockpit. In my Sim situation, it was a stuck elevator actuator, on AP that caused everything to happen in close similarity.
I truly have the deepest sympathy for all involved. We all hope that never happens to us, and I hope we all learn from this. It was a horrid event. This makes me reevaluate my self as a pilot, and determine my reactions, but it has not shaken my confidence in this airplane in the winter operations. I may be wrong, but until then I will continue to do my job to the best of my abilities.