All the beer you can drink and dog you can eat.
I think mikecweb and I graduated Riddle the same year, so it came down to who had the best spikey hair-do that day.
No I'm honestly trying to understand. The only real argument I could find from you was
I pointed out Pinnacle 3701, Colgan 3407, and how about Comair 5191 also? I want to see how you would categorize those? Would you say they were due to a lack of a high level training environment or a lack of safety culture? If so, how are they better than a foreign airline?
I couldn't agree more with the enlarged sections that I've highlighted. Measured media releases, regardless of the need to calm the public; which I think is an overrated worry anyway by many politicos.
I really can't say much about Comair. Not as familiar with that accident as I am the others.
Excuse me. Markings were perfect. Controller had no responsibility to watch takeoff. Lights off on the closed runway (centerline lights out on open runway). Check out the CVR, their heads were not in the game. One issue not addressed in accident report was that captain had flown out of LEX a number of times and the FO knew that. FO probably deferred to captain's knowledge and zoned out during taxi. I'm not exactly unbiased. The controller was a relative and I lost a couple of friends in the crash.My sense of the Comair crash was that it was, well, if not "excusable", certainly more "understandable". Early show, poor markings, asleep-at-the-switch controller. Now, they did fail to verify their heading before blasting off, which is, at least in my cockpit, kind of a no-no. But it's a lot easier to understand (for me, anyway), than being unable to fly a visual approach to a monster runway in perfect weather without crashing. *shrug*
My sense of the Comair crash was that it was, well, if not "excusable", certainly more "understandable". Early show, poor markings, asleep-at-the-switch controller. Now, they did fail to verify their heading before blasting off, which is, at least in my cockpit, kind of a no-no. But it's a lot easier to understand (for me, anyway), than being unable to fly a visual approach to a monster runway in perfect weather without crashing. *shrug*
I will say.. That cluster at the end of 22 in LEX was confusing as all get out. Can still be a little awkward if you haven't been there in a while.Excuse me. Markings were perfect. Controller had no responsibility to watch takeoff. Lights off on the closed runway (centerline lights out on open runway). Check out the CVR, their heads were not in the game. One issue not addressed in accident report was that captain had flown out of LEX a number of times and the FO knew that. FO probably deferred to captain's knowledge and zoned out during taxi. I'm not exactly unbiased. The controller was a relative and I lost a couple of friends in the crash.
One other thing I was thinking about. I would like to see if the flying pilot came off the Airbus 330 to the Boeing 777 or if he went Boeing to Boeing.
On the Airbus, the thurst levers don't move when in autothrust. They are in detents and stay there until the plane calls you a bad name. On the Boeing, the throttle levers move when the autothrottles are engaged. Could be a human factor issue.
I read he was on the 747 prior
The markings were correct. Signs were well illuminated. I found nothing confusing about it.I will say.. That cluster at the end of 22 in LEX was confusing as all get out. Can still be a little awkward if you haven't been there in a while.
Some footage from a walk around
Nothing to add because it is very sad/sobering but I do find it, ironic maybe, that the only airplane seen flying in the background is another Asiana plane.