Richard Anderson has a history of buying well used a/c, ie DC-10--30's, DC-9's, MD-90's. B-717's. He would buy it..
'd
Seems to be working out pretty good for him though, don't it.
(back off grammar Nazi's!)
Richard Anderson has a history of buying well used a/c, ie DC-10--30's, DC-9's, MD-90's. B-717's. He would buy it..
'd
Or the catering truck driver at SFO who destroyed a Gulfstream and ripped off his head in the process:
http://aviation-safety.net/wikibase/wiki.php?id=149272
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The plane sat on the Signature ramp in a corner for several months. It was ultimately scrapped right after the Asiana 777 fuselage in I think August 2013.
Or the catering truck driver at SFO who destroyed a Gulfstream and ripped off his head in the process:
http://aviation-safety.net/wikibase/wiki.php?id=149272
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The plane sat on the Signature ramp in a corner for several months. It was ultimately scrapped right after the Asiana 777 fuselage in I think August 2013.
Seems to be working out pretty good for him though, don't it.
I fixed it for you.(back off grammar Nazis!)
I studied this accident in class, not saying it is all the legacy pilots fault, but man they sure didn't help anything. The captain didn't know the systems, they turned off tcas, and they didn't talk to ATC for almost an hour, then tried to contact again but they were out of range. And they were at the wrong altitude then what was filed, and wrong altitude for their direction. ATC in Brazil did make plenty of errors but it was definitely not all one sided.Huh? I haven't read anything about that accident that would make me think the Legacy crew has any real blame in the collision, yes there was the accidental transponder issue(IIRC they either put it on standby or otherwise disabled the altitude read out with an inadvertent bump of the foot), but I wouldn't call them idiots because of it. I look at it as a tragic coincidence that was the last link in the chain, but hardly the cause. ATC dropped the ball on that one.
Other than recognizing that their transponder was on standby, how were the pilots to blame?I studied this accident in class, not saying it is all the legacy pilots fault, but man they sure didn't help anything. The captain didn't know the systems, they turned off tcas, and they didn't talk to ATC for almost an hour, then tried to contact again but they were out of range. And they were at the wrong altitude then what was filed, and wrong altitude for their direction. ATC in Brazil did make plenty of errors but it was definitely not all one sided.
With his foot. I'm sure it happened just about regularly and went unnoticed the rest of the flight without consequence. I mean if we're being real, they just got the airplane, ATC is being wonky, they're playing around learning about their new jet with the CA likely having no idea that his foot could tap the TCAS. Yes, they could have caught it, but it's hardly what caused the accident and I wouldn't say it puts any real blame on them.I studied this accident in class, not saying it is all the legacy pilots fault, but man they sure didn't help anything. The captain didn't know the systems, they turned off tcas
I'd like to know how common this is in that part of the world. I'd be surprised if it's not normal to be out of contact for an hour or two sometimes before a transmission. IIRC, ATC forgot to hand them off, right? Again, to what extent are they supposed to be baby sitting ATC on an IFR flightplan?and they didn't talk to ATC for almost an hour, then tried to contact again but they were out of range.
"When in Rome". You're flying in Brazil for most likely the first time, ATC assigns you an altitude, other frequencies don't complain, how likely are you to refuse it or demand an explanation?And they were at the wrong altitude then what was filed, and wrong altitude for their direction. ATC in Brazil did make plenty of errors but it was definitely not all one sided.
How did you get my family photos?Don't make me pull this damn car over! I'll come back there and really give you something to complain about!
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Maybe we should re-title the thread to "People UN-intentionally destroying perfectly good airplanes". Wait. That happens all the time. Here is a oldie but goodie:
That's pretty close, are you ok?These guys went to the flight school I did all my training at.
With his foot. I'm sure it happened just about regularly and went unnoticed the rest of the flight without consequence. I mean if we're being real, they just got the airplane, ATC is being wonky, they're playing around learning about their new jet with the CA likely having no idea that his foot could tap the TCAS. Yes, they could have caught it, but it's hardly what caused the accident and I wouldn't say it puts any real blame on them.
I'd like to know how common this is in that part of the world. I'd be surprised if it's not normal to be out of contact for an hour or two sometimes before a transmission. IIRC, ATC forgot to hand them off, right? Again, to what extent are they supposed to be baby sitting ATC on an IFR flightplan?
"When in Rome". You're flying in Brazil for most likely the first time, ATC assigns you an altitude, other frequencies don't complain, how likely are you to refuse it or demand an explanation?
Technically, yes, the crew could have helped to prevent this incident. But practically and realistically, I think they played a such a small role in the grand scheme of things that lead to this accident that I would never go as far to call them "idiots" or blame them for the crash.
Like I said, I am not blaming it all on the pilots, but a couple easy things they could've done and things would be different. I am sure in some parts of the world pilots don't talk to ATC for a while, but they were flying over Brasilia, not just nowhere over the ocean.
Yes ATC forgot to hand them off. And for when in Rome, all they had to say was "should we stay at FL370"? Not demanding or refusing it, just a one second question.
And should the CA really be learning a brand new aircraft in the air with pax in the back? They were supposed to spend more time in the aircraft flying it around but they ran out of time because wx and had to do the flight to the US. So they skipped a lot of it to stay with the time constraints set by the company.
Okay guys, I'm not throwing the pilots under the bus here. So we can all chill a little. I was just pointing out small things. I did plenty of research on it, but also my professor who walked us through it is an ATCer. He blamed the pilots more than most people should. I was just saying small things could have helped the situation. Yes my professor shaped my opinion a little, but I still don't blame the pilots.Actually you probably have better coverage and better communications over the middle of the ocean than most places in Brazil. Comes to ATC Brazil is a Third World country.
I fly the wrong way altitude all the time in the US, because I requested sometimes because ATC assigns it. Never have I felt the need to double check the altitude given.
You clearly need to do a lot more research. It was not a revenue-generating flight. Also both of the pilots were were PIC type rated in the 145, The legacy is just about the same plane even has the same type rating.