Richman
JC’s Resident Curmudgeon
“Feltch Me”
Heathen
“Feltch Me”
There is no Boeing procedure to ever set 0 in the MCP altitude selector. Any airline that does that is not following Boeing standard procedures from the FCOM or FCTM. It was never a procedure at Emirates.
Emirated did away with the Takeoff Review since I left (not sure why), but there are at least 3 times that the MCP altitude should be checked during pre-flight and before engine start. Why and how this crew missed all of that is a mystery that will come out in the eventual investigation. The old Takeoff Review would have caught the mistake for sure.
I know a bit more information, but I'll just say it will be interesting to see how some possible dynamics between the crew played into this incident or if that will even come out. Not sure how if any of these crew were newly returned from a layoff during Covid and how recent they were. That could be another factor.
The crew was terminated already correct? If so how does that play into the safety culture at Emirates?
Honestly this is the way it should be.
Top quality training, airline procedures from day one, heavy use of sims, and high standards. It must cost a fortune, which is why US based airlines will never go for it.
safety reporting oddly goes to zero….for some weird reason.
My point exactly. Since the US carriers won't pay for the needed level of high quality training, then we are left with the alternative of a large quantity of experience.
What safety culture? Can't lose something they never had.The crew was terminated already correct? If so how does that play into the safety culture at Emirates?
I would say the 1,500 hour rule will be dropped in the coming years but someone will rightfully point out that I said the same thing a few years ago.
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The 2013 FAA Rule That’s Being Blamed for Today’s Pilot Shortage
As travel rebounds from the pandemic, carriers big and small are scrambling to hire pilots. But some airline executives say a 2013 regulation is standing in the way, and they want the government to revisit the so-called 1,500-hour rule. WSJ’s Shelby Holliday explains. Photo: David Fang for WSJwww.wsj.com
The 1500 rule is an arbitrary number that made someone feel good.
Let us not forget the plane flew to IAD and back....
Really? What did they base it off off? Most Insurance companies say 1000 is the magic number.It isn’t an arbitrary number. There was a committee that spent months coming up with the metric.
The crew was terminated already correct? If so how does that play into the safety culture at Emirates?
Really? What did they base it off off? Most Insurance companies say 1000 is the magic number.
The problem from when I was there (anecdotally) is that the standards have dropped. I spent 8 years in the Emirates training department and wrote the two courses that brought the cadet pilots onto the B777 fleet. So I have some knowledge as to their level of training and what the graduation requirements were. We had no problem dropping pilots who were not performing to the expected standard, no matter what their nationality, and that was supported by training management.
Hot take here, but yes?
My buddy used to be an approach controller and he had a quote that always cracked me up. “There’s nothing more terrifying than a 400hr pilot in a jet that moves 400kts… I basically just keep everybody away from them and try not to think about the 250 below ten rules…”
Here's the thing. The military has ZERO PROBLEM washing out a candidate at any phase of training.
Civilian puppy mills that are being paid either by the client or the airline have historically pushed, and prodded, and helped, and squeezed to get the weakest link through. If they truly held candidates to the highest standard and washed them out if they failed to perform I'd be much more likely to accept such a program.
"Buh, buh, the military does it!". I would argue that it is NOT the same. Military life means you are under almost constant scrutiny, and if you eff up, you're out. More so, there is vastly more, let's call it, "peer to peer mentoring", so that losers, jackholes, slackers and others that can't cut it are quickly identified and marshalled out of the program. That's never going to happen in the civilian world, which is why a 2-3 year long period is so critical. If someone is a tool or unable, that will eventually show up in their job history, simply because these kinds of people either show themselves the door, or are identified by employers as problem children.
Man, I don't know if I'm a substandard hack of a pilot or not, but I've got a strong pass rate and I've sent some kids to the service academies and all of my students are still alive, …..
Come on, you are saying that if a 'local' was having problems you would have let them go without any issues?
Not my decision to let someone go, only if they were meeting the standard or not. But, yes management had no problem letting locals go who were not performing to the required standard in the training time alloted. The one time head of the cadet program (the first female captain at Royal Jordanian) did not suffer fools gladly and was a very harsh task master for the cadets. The current VP of the Emirates Training academy is also a very intelligent and experienced pilot and knows he can't let pilots through if they are not going to meet the required standard. Does that mean that some local pilots will not get a little preferential treatment? = no, it does happen but not to the extent that you seem to assume.