(Reuters) - The captain of the AirAsia jet that crashed into the sea in December was out of his seat conducting an unorthodox procedure when his co-pilot apparently lost control, and by the time he returned it was too late to save the plane, two people familiar with the investigation said.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2015...dType=RSS&feedName=topNews&utm_source=twitter
My little brain is smoking.
-think the word unusual might be fairer than unorthodox!
-Like I have said this stuff becomes fascinating as we learn what second by second is going on the cockpit.
-When Airbus launched fly by wire (computer in lot more control) there were basically, from flight crews, two teams for lack of a better description. There were guys that remained loyal to Boeing, and I I want to be in control of my aircraft and folks that thought the glass cockpit was a good idea.
- I will try to find out, but logically it seemed the more seasoned folks used to flying by the seat of their pants preferred Boeing basic sentiment in design, while younger more tech age flight crew folks found Airbus stuff neat
Remember that Airbus aircraft are flown by a little joystick, just like video games, the wheel is totally gone. It makes sense that those of us used to steering wheels for 15 years would really not feel all that conformable driving a car by a little joystick, while younger folks would not find that as bag a change.
My reason for going here, is, IMO, it makes sense that the military (important here) captain, in all likelihood, in what was becoming a treacherous situation, might feel very comfortable in pulling the system as the aircraft is approaching very threatening, non es capable weather activity.
Add in the fact that apparently this system, on this aircraft, had been having problems, makes IMO his decision to cut it understandable and could have been wise.
If you car heater had been problematic recently and it was acting up as you drove on it might make some sense to kill it in order to reducer likelihood of it being added to your growing problems.
My biggest question at this moment in time I would like to know the amount of turbulence the aircraft was experiencing in 10 minutes BEFORE the requested deviation. Was it getting real bad, to where this captain he was going to need to be able to do some seat of your pants flying in the near future because they had no way out of weather?
UT, on the other hand, the stem was out, so we cant say the system did any flight inputs which means one of two things. Either the copilot instated the nose high pull back (I have always voted intense updraft)
But there are oddities here. The notion that captrain got back to his seat, when the aircraft is climbing like an F-16 seems a bit of an impossibility, no? So there must have been some time between killing the system and the steep ascent.
Pusshingan aircraft past design tolerances can result in some structural failures, and it shall be interesting to learn if the steep assent did impact some control surfaces, further complicating everything or actually being the primary cause of inability to regain control after the stall.
Deep stalls also stress the heck out of structures, so this poor bird was getting quite beat up during the accident sequence. The real clues here are going to come from what was going on
before the requested derision, and what there on board radar was painting.
I promised ya all fascinating stuff huh and as you see, it is, and much more nuance has to be coming because we must learn, what was influencing captains decision to completely kill the system.
But the way it was written, it struck me like they were trying to bad pilot it when in fact if they system had been doing some naughty things on earlier segments, it makes sense to try and remove one more element of what was obviously becoming a flight from hell..........