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The Unsettler
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I had to go to CA last month, was up in the mountains, Yosemite area. Coming down the mountain its cold, hovering near freezing, raining, just miserable. The rental car was all over the place, felt almost like it was either hydroplaning or hitting patches of black ice, almost. Fought with it for an hour till I got to a lower altitude where it was warmer and dry but the thing is still driving the same way and finally the light bulb went off. Whenever I have the room I will use up the entire road, drive in two lanes, whatever is the natural line. Turns out the rental car had lane departure assist, if it detects you crossing the line it counter steers. No indication it had that feature and no indication it had been enabled. Despite 40 years of driving experience I spent a stressful hour fighting the car, which was only doing what it was supposed to be doing, because I was not aware it was supposed to be doing what it was doing. Found the toggle and turned that **** off.
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MCAS was designed to make the Max feel the same in its flight characteristics as the NG so there would be minimal differences in the aircraft handling qualities as far as the pilot was concerned specifically so there would not have to be type specific training.
To apply it to your lane departure case, the car would be activly trying to drive you off the road even though you are trained to drive in the center all the time. But you were trained how to disconnect the electric power steering in previous cars in case it acted up even though the previous did not have lane departure. It doesn't matter what system is causing the malfunction, the end result is you pull power to the control that is responsible for the movement.
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Brent The X15 was the only aircraft I flew where I was glad the engine quit. - Milt Thompson. "Don't get so caught up in your right to dissent that you forget your obligation to contribute." Mrs. James to her son Chappie. |
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Aside from that, the point I was trying to make, if there is a sensor mismatch would a warning light tell you what system to turn off?
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Brent The X15 was the only aircraft I flew where I was glad the engine quit. - Milt Thompson. "Don't get so caught up in your right to dissent that you forget your obligation to contribute." Mrs. James to her son Chappie. |
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The Unsettler
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With respect to the car, some indicator that a system was active would have helped. Cars with TCS indicate when it's enabled / disabled. Which I guess is the real point, not knowing it was there.
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https://rgl.faa.gov/Regulatory_and_Guidance_Library/rgad.nsf/0/83ec7f95f3e5bfbd8625833e0070a070/$FILE/2018-23-51_Emergency.pdf |
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Since the Ethiopian captain had not been in a 737 MAX sim, would he have known what to do had he those extra instruments?
Since there was so much news about the Lion Air crash, should he have not know to turn the electronic trim off? I think Boeing was stupid to rely on one sensor when there is already redundancy available. I think they should have mentioned the new planes had stability control, but the pilots should know how to turn off the stab trim regardless of which system is triggering the stab trim.
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Brent The X15 was the only aircraft I flew where I was glad the engine quit. - Milt Thompson. "Don't get so caught up in your right to dissent that you forget your obligation to contribute." Mrs. James to her son Chappie. |
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On thing keeps sticking in my head with the Ethiopian crash. The transponder cut off close to 9000' altitude.
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Brent The X15 was the only aircraft I flew where I was glad the engine quit. - Milt Thompson. "Don't get so caught up in your right to dissent that you forget your obligation to contribute." Mrs. James to her son Chappie. |
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Further, I would hope that ANY 737 driver would be an "observant pilot" and be able to deal with an issue for which the procedure is a mandated memory-item. Further still, The A320NEO has had it's own share of problems, including multiple in-flight engine failures. Not to mention serious additional maintenance issues that have resulted in a high "out of service" (grounding) rate. Ask Lufthansa how they are liking their recent NEOs deliveries... |
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Yeah, but you don't see Airbus pilots riding a stall into the water. Oh wait.
Anyone can allow a plane to crash if they panic. Some pilots are natural fliers, others know only how to deal with things based on rote memorization. If it falls outside the bounds of what they have memorized they fall apart. Remember the old adage about C students still becoming doctors? Pilots too.
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Brent The X15 was the only aircraft I flew where I was glad the engine quit. - Milt Thompson. "Don't get so caught up in your right to dissent that you forget your obligation to contribute." Mrs. James to her son Chappie. |
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Well that could explain it.
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Brent The X15 was the only aircraft I flew where I was glad the engine quit. - Milt Thompson. "Don't get so caught up in your right to dissent that you forget your obligation to contribute." Mrs. James to her son Chappie. |
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Interesting theory.
https://leehamnews.com/2019/03/22/bjorns-corner-the-ethiopian-airlines-flight-302-crash-part-2/
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Brent The X15 was the only aircraft I flew where I was glad the engine quit. - Milt Thompson. "Don't get so caught up in your right to dissent that you forget your obligation to contribute." Mrs. James to her son Chappie. |
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It is nice read but it is not like compressibility is new thing. it is a known factor on all airframes. The real question IMHO is how MCAS got certified in the first place.
This is also an interesting read (albeit a tad jingoistic here and there): https://drive.google.com/file/d/1249KS8xtIDKb5SxgpeFI6AD-PSC6nFA5/view
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canna change law physics
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I thought it was one out of one voting for MCAS. I think on some of the older 737 models they used the left side sensor for part of the systems and the right for others and only both for a limited number for some reason.
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Brent The X15 was the only aircraft I flew where I was glad the engine quit. - Milt Thompson. "Don't get so caught up in your right to dissent that you forget your obligation to contribute." Mrs. James to her son Chappie. |
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There are two AOA sensors on the Max 8, each feeds into a flight control computer on its side of the aircraft. The plane uses one at a time, which alternates with each successive flight.
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Not really related, but funny in a sad way:
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NAKED MAN ATTEMPTS TO BOARD FLIGHT AT MOSCOW AIRPORT, CLAIMS NUDITY MAKES HIM MORE 'AERODYNAMIC' https://www.foxnews.com/travel/naked-man-attempts-to-board-flight-at-moscow-airport-claims-nudity-makes-him-more-aerodynamic |
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It looks like one of the AOA sensors was damaged shortly after takeoff, possibly by a bird strike or other FOD.
https://komonews.com/news/local/sensor-damage-on-ethiopian-airlines-737-max-abc-news-reports A damaged angle-of-attack sensor may have erroneously triggered anti-stall MCAS software on board a doomed Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 737 Max jet. ABC News reports the sensor was damaged on takeoff from a bird or foreign object sending the plane downward and eventually crashing into the ground. ABC cites two aviation sources close to the investigation. It sounds like, with this information, they will be revisiting the Lion Air crash to determine if it may have suffered a similar fate. We do know, in their case, that they had recently performed some sort of service on the AOA sensors. It has been suspected that the service performed may have been substandard.
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It's been reported that the Ethiopian pilots flipped the switches to disable MCAS... which sort of indicates that at least one of them recognized the problem and knew how to handle it...
...but then they flipped them back on. |
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