aobt14
Well-Known Member
The guy loves his family very much, that's all I gathered from the video.
Lol! And they're going to make an emergency landing in Tokyo.....
The guy loves his family very much, that's all I gathered from the video.
Is there really any excuse for not being belted in - it's not as is it was calm and then all of a sudden things got crazy.
After watching the video, I don't feel that the turbulence was that bad.
Yes, I watched it. It doesn't look like fun to me and there would likely be some yelling up front like "let's get lower/higher/somewhere else right meow!" were I there. I certainly wouldn't want to drive through that stuff unless I had to.Stuff was thrown everywhere, people were screaming, and IIRC 5 of the injured were crew. Call it whatever you want - smooth, light, mod, severe, extreme - I don't really care but to downplay the significance of the event isn't bright. People - our customers - are in general slightly afraid to fly as it is, this just makes it worse. They had a right to be scared, did you watch the video?
I've found on transoceanic flights that there is no way you're going to get a European to sit belted-in for any length of time come hell or high water. They're always standing around, blocking aisles, and just waiting to become flying cabin debris.
Stuff was thrown everywhere, people were screaming, and IIRC 5 of the injured were crew. Call it whatever you want - smooth, light, mod, severe, extreme - I don't really care but to downplay the significance of the event isn't bright. People - our customers - are in general slightly afraid to fly as it is, this just makes it worse. They had a right to be scared, did you watch the video?
Not meaning to be a jerk, (just trying to explain/clarify) but that's the thing.....he's not. Hence the thread title.presumably posted by a pilot
Not meaning to be a jerk, (just trying to explain/clarify) but that's the thing.....he's not. Hence the thread title.
Goes back to the old analogy...... light is when the coffee in your cup has the little ripples on it like when you are blowing on it to cool it off and make it drinkable, moderate is when the coffee will slop a little here and there over the side of the cup and you have to hold it out in front of you a bit to drink from it, severe is when the white caps form in your cup and you probably got some on your shirt and on your boys, extreme is when the coffee is all over the office, your F/O gives you "the look", and the FAs call up front threatening to beat your ass when you land.
The old analogy was just a shot of some brevity. No one is really downplaying the effects of severe or even moderate turbulence. In severe you aren't even able to clearly read your instruments and the likelihood of some type of damage to the aircraft is very real. Controlling the aircraft for a time is impossible. That is the worst feeling, along with the "sounds". For me those issues were far more disturbing than the shaking/shuddering or dropping. I have experienced moderate several times abroad and it was never a picnic, but nothing to be hysterical over either. That was my point. And no one ever wants/wishes any harm to come to their crew or the pax. This is the issue with typing something/reading something versus being able to speak/communicate and explain something in person, I think. I have only had one severe episode in my life and certainly wouldn't want to have another. So yes it is not that common, but it happens.I bet that most here have never experienced severe turbulence. I've experienced legit moderate that has put a scare in me, and had both of us worried about the FAs and pax. Severe is a loss of control of the aircraft, and somebody is most likely hurt. The instruments would be unreadable, and hopefully something doesn't break.
I'm certainly no expert, and consider myself a low time pilot at about 4600 hours. But I do regularly fly in and out of places like RNO, COS, ASE, JAC, COD, etc. I think I have a higher exposure to turbulence than most pilots, and would venture to guess that since I've never experienced severe, it is quite a rare phenomena for most.
That's the thing, though. I don't mean any disrespect, but it doesn't matter what a bunch of pilots think.
People get scared because they do not understand what's going on and they have zero control over what is happening to them. Their instincts are to do something, ANYTHING, to alleviate fear reactions and they can't.
Doesn't matter what we think. It matters that these folks were scared crapless.
The most notable case of "extreme" turbulence in an airliner I can think of off the top of my head did actually happen in Japan. BOAC flight 911 was a 707 that got ripped to shreds by a wave of extreme turbulence.
That's the thing, though. I don't mean any disrespect, but it doesn't matter what a bunch of pilots think.
People get scared because they do not understand what's going on and they have zero control over what is happening to them. Their instincts are to do something, ANYTHING, to alleviate fear reactions and they can't.
Doesn't matter what we think. It matters that these folks were scared crapless.