Cherokee_Cruiser
Bronteroc
I still can't believe someone actually thought to start an airline out of Carlsbad 
Maybe this was addressed earlier and maybe I have things a bit backwards. I believe I read the autobrakes don't work if the spoilers aren't armed. So if the spoilers had to be manually deployed, would autobrakes then work?
Jesus christ. I'm super glad my mere observation in an NTSB report turned me into Superman. I especially love the part where I posted that I thought the crew did a terrible job (STUPID DELTOIDS!) and I laughed at them for accepting a runway braking report from another airplane (I mean what idiots....AMIRITE!?).
Maybe go back and read what I wrote before putting words in my mouth.
However if I was shooting an approach knowing the weather was right at 1/4 mi with wet snow falling all day and freezing precip/fog, breaking out and seeing all white wouldn't mean "oh hey there's a light dusting on the runway" to me.
I thought you CalPac guys only flew on beautiful VFR days.
According to what the NTSB has released so far, the way this went down was : Autospoilers were armed for landing. At touchdown, they don't deploy, therefore autobrakes don't work. Trusty F/O notices spoilers don't deploy and manually moves them (hopefully up-aft-up). One second after F/O moves them, the MAX autobrakes should kick in.
The autobrakes don't work until the spoilers deploy....this is true whether they deploy automatically after being armed or deployed manually. After they deploy, there is a one second delay when using MAX brakes and a 3 second delay when using MIN/MED brakes (nobody ever uses MIN and they aren't recommended). If the spoilers are armed for landing, they should deploy at either main wheel spin up or nosegear ground shift. While it's not an everyday occurence for the autospoilers not to deploy if armed for landing, it's also something that every maddog driver sees from time to time and we should be spring loaded to deploy them manually if the autospoilers don't work. The autospoilers are a fairly common MEL on the dog.
According to what the NTSB has released so far, the way this went down was : Autospoilers were armed for landing. At touchdown, they don't deploy, therefore autobrakes don't work. Trusty F/O notices spoilers don't deploy and manually moves them (hopefully up-aft-up). One second after F/O moves them, the MAX autobrakes should kick in.
. What do you mean by "up-aft-up"? I've had issues where when I went to manually deploy them after landing I had to hold the lever in place because the system logic was trying to auto stow it. Is there a way to lock them in deploy on the -80?
To deploy them manually on the ground, you have to pull the handle slightly up, then move the lever all the way aft, and lastly give them a second jerk up to lock them in place. If you don't do the second "UP" on the -88/90, the lever will just retract and move forward. I can't say if it's the same on the 717. It's a very different movement from simply using the handle inflight as a speedbrake, and they used to demo it in the simulator to allow folks to get the hang of it.
Because at the time of the incident the metar was calling snow/heavy snow and freezing fog. This wasn't going to be a nice light dusting. I've broken out on approach in places like ORD after a sudden snow squall came through and yes, there was a light dusting on the runway that blew away once you passed over it. However if I was shooting an approach knowing the weather was right at 1/4 mi with wet snow falling all day and freezing precip/fog, breaking out and seeing all white wouldn't mean "oh hey there's a light dusting on the runway" to me.
My balls are bigger and I don't chew, and I would have continued.I wood'a gone round too!
*spits chew, grabs junk*
Oh, and![]()
My balls are bigger and I don't chew, and I would have continued.![]()
Somewhere between 1% - 2% of unstable approaches end in a go-around, and those are probably the ones that are so ugly no one can justify continuing. So you'd be the guy who threw the BS flag and go-around even with a good braking report?
I call BS as a result of hindsight bias!
Edit- I just saw your post to JTrain, and his responses. I'm not putting words in your mouth either. I just think it's very easy to look back and say they made a mistake when I'm sure it wasn't so obvious at the time.
I was only making the observation in the report that one of the pilots reported a "white runway". I found it interesting and it stood out to me, that's it. I never said I'd go around. I never blamed the pilots. I never said I'd do it any different, just made an observation.Not sure why it's being blown out of proportion.
In MY experience, speaking for nobody else, landing on a white runway when heavy snow has been falling all day means the runway will be slick, and requires a careful rollout. AGAIN, not saying I'd do anything any different. If the guys ahead of me said braking was good then we're putting it down.
Reading about his balls made your dick move?Dick move. Don't steal my thunder.

They are, but on this one issue (and I mean this one issue, because we probably disagree on 99.95% of everything else), we concur.Dick move. Don't steal my thunder.
Yes and no.
You're not going to be comfortable and succeed. There were a lot of Comair pilots that were happy with what they had right up until the day they parked their jets.
Personally, I wasn't going to be happy until I at least matched the check with the side of the plane so I could worry about other things like instead of hustling from job to job.