To borrow this from pilot and author Patrick Smith:
Lastly, we're hearing murmurs already about the fact that Asiana Airlines hails from South Korea, a country with a checkered past when it comes to air safety. Let's nip this storyline in the bud. In the 1980s and 1990s, that country's largest carrier, Korean Air, suffered a spate of fatal accidents, culminating with the crash of Flight 801 in Guam in 1997. The airline was faulted for poor training standards and a rigid, authoritarian cockpit culture. The carrier was ostracized by many in the global aviation community, including its airline code-share partners. But South Korean aviation is very different today, following a systemic and very expensive overhaul of the nation's civil aviation system. A 2008 assessment by ICAO, the civil aviation branch of the United Nations, ranked South Korea's aviation safety standards, including its pilot training standards, as nothing less than the highest in the world, beating out more than 100 other countries. As they should be, South Koreans are immensely proud of this turnaround, and Asiana Airlines, the nation's No. 2 carrier, had maintained an impeccable record of both customer satisfaction and safety.
Whatever happened on final approach into SFO, I highly doubt that it was anything related to the culture of South Korean air safety in 2013. Plane crashes are increasingly rare the world over. But they will continue to happen from time to time, and no airline or country is 100 percent immune.
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South Korea of the 80s and 90s is not the South Koera of today 2013. It is far better, far safer, with better CRM than in the 80s and 90s. Would you like to compare air safety in the USA in the 70s, 80s, and 90s compared to today? It is also better and safer. I wouldn't use this as red herring and say OMG! Cabotism! This proves it is dangerous!
As he started out his article saying, let's not jump to conclusions. Maybe culture didn't have anything to do with, maybe it did. I certainly wouldn't take it off the table, and I know the NTSB won't either. I've lived in Asian countries (China and Indonesia) for 7 years and though they are not S. Korea, Asian culture has lots of similarities just as western cultures have many similarities. For someone whose thesis of his whole article was, "Don't jump to conclusions in what you're reading in the media" to then conclude "culture didn't have anything to do with this accident" is pretty hypocritical.
CC has been vying mightily for most-laughed-at clown-troll on the internet for years. I wouldn't let it bother you, and I certainly wouldn't take the smelly, week-old bait.
I've done probably 30-40 actual spins, which for some pilots is not even worth mentioning, but the majority of "new" commercial pilots in the USA, it's 30-40 more then they've done.
If anything it makes you respect letting the airplane get too slow, a lot more than just stall training.
Your proof Seggy? Hard evidence? Or just colloquial stories/buddy stories?
Re-read. Patrick Smith is a good author.
"Whatever happened on final approach into SFO, I highly doubt that it was anything related to the culture of South Korean air safety in 2013. "
Highly doubt. Not a "conclusion that culture didn't have anything to do with it."
Who has flown with Korean pilots here? In a crew type setting?
Who has flown with Korean pilots here? In a crew type setting?
It should count for brownie points, I mean we're else are you PIC, CFI, and English instructor while getting a whole $5 per flight hour extra to baby sit I mean " mentor".I have, but AMF doesn't count as real 2 crew, with the exception of maybe the Bro.
It should count for brownie points, I mean we're else are you PIC, CFI, and English instructor while getting a whole $5 per flight hour extra to baby sit I mean " mentor".
They do train to be "2" crew similar to the airlines as far as I could tell.I have, but AMF doesn't count as real 2 crew, with the exception of maybe the Bro.
You really want to play this game?
Still a pretty bold statement for something that is VERY much on the table. You could say, "I highly doubt there was a fuel starvation issue" or "I highly doubt it was wake turbulence." Things like culture, fatigue, CRM, etc. are much more complex so that's a pretty bold statement to make for someone who isn't even part of the investigation.