BobDDuck
Island Bus Driver
Which I can see the logic there to a fair degree....particular airport and airspace nuances and the like. That makes me wonder why more airlines don't apply that restriction.
They do. The "special airports" list is an FAA thing. There are certain requirements when you operate in to them--things like having seen the special airports "book" within the last year or either pilot having flown in there in the last 6 months. Also, both 121 companies I've worked for prohibit low time FOs from landing at a special quals airport unless they are flying with a checkairman. Some of the airports make sense to be restricted (goofy approaches, lots of terrain, typical strong gusty winds etc) and some don't.
I get plenty of realtime data about failures at my day job. Trust me, I can't draw conclusions about why or when things fail in real timeUsually involves looking at lots of other data
You'd be surprised just how quickly the engine and airframe manufacturers can distil down data coming off the plane in real time. Remember, EVERYTHING has a fault code so not only do you know that's it's broken, but often times you know WHY it's broken. When I was still flying a plane with GE engines, I once had a tech rep on board who should be an app on his ipad that showed, in real time, every engine in our fleet. You could bring up an amazing level of detail on each one. When one of the planes there had a high altitude stall and double engine flameout a few months ago, GE knew about it before the company did.