If you're falling out of the sky at a high rate of speed, and you're not in a nose dive, lower the nose and add power. I can't think of a situation other than a microburst (which isn't exactly applicable to the AF447 accident) where that wouldn't be applicable. The hell with the warnings and bells, because in every plane those will lie to you, they
should have had a decent idea of what their groundspeed would be and they should be able to reference that off of INS, or GPS, etc (not sure if the Bus Guys can even look at that, don't know anything about their systems other than the most basic basics). If your normal cruise speed is 400kts groundspeed, and you're getting a high sink rate, all sorts of goofy warnings,
and its showing 100kts when you should be booking it? Now, its easy to monday morning quarterback this sort of thing, however, if one thing doesn't work, do something else.
This is from wiki.
10 seconds later, the plane's recorded airspeed dropped sharply from 275 knots to 60 knots. The plane's
angle of attack increased, and the plane started to climb. The left-side instruments then recorded a sharp rise in airspeed to 215 knots.
A "sharp rise" in anything is cause to start comparing information from alternate sources. Airspeed sources that don't compare, or don't match with groundspeed readouts and erradic autopilot action require thought.
...Stuff...
From there until the end of the flight, the angle of attack never dropped below 35 degrees. During the last minutes, the thrust levers were in the "
idle" detent position. The engines were always working, and responsive to commands.
The recordings stopped at 4 hours 14 minutes and 28 seconds absolute time (02:14:28 UTC), or 3 hours 45 minutes after takeoff. At that point, the plane's ground speed was 107 knots, and it was descending at 10,912 feet per minute, with the engines' N1's at 55%. Its pitch was 16.2 degrees (nose up), with a roll angle of 5.3 degrees left. During its descent, the plane had turned more than 180 degrees to the right to a compass heading of 270 degrees. The plane was stalled during its entire 3 minute 30 second descent from 38,000 feet.
Airspeed that doesn't make sense, ground speed was 107kts,
and they were descending at 10,000+ fpm,
and the engines were at idle,
and the pitch attitude was 16.2 degrees nose up and the airplane was in a descending turn? They had 3 minutes and 30 seconds to recognize the stall. Ample time to recognize and safe the day, at 10,000fpm, the radar altimeter should have come on, they had so many warnings. When things aren't working to elliviate a situation, do something different.