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Wow, this is a thread of which I understand not a single word.
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Interesting idea here and I believe that you may have hit the nail on the head here. If there was a fresh copilot in the plane and he forgot to transfer the pressurization system over to engine bleed when he should have, then it would continue to work on the APU until it flamed out due to altitude. This would have left the plane with no heating and more important, no pressurization which keeps everyone alive in the plane. The masks would have come out at 10,000 or so and thats a good question why they did not descent at that time but who knows what happened inside the bird. The APU normally does not have any "mixture control" and as the plane gets higher in altitude the APU will finally flame out (die) as there is too much fuel for the little oxygen available in the atmosphere. Some of the newer models will keep going up to 30,000 feet but ours is good only until 20,000. Why the Captain was out of the cockpit is a good question but we may never know that with the short loop on the CVR. Our CVR is a newer version and is a 45 minute loop, but hear that they are working on newer models that are a 2 hour version. Makes sense if we forget that the crew should have seen it. I am with you and can feel it when the climb or descent is off by as much as 100-200 fpm in the cabin. Got this way from too many years flying Learjets and forgetting once or twice to put the cabin air switch on! JoeA |
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Sorry, am trying to keep this as 'civilian' as possible, but the technical keeps getting in the way. Michael. |
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Hopefully the Flight Data Recorder will shed some light on the cause of the decompress. I think the second most important part of the wreck will be that oxygen valve behind the FO's seat. Was it open or closed. It was said earlier that it is never just one thing that causes crashes. So true...thank God. That the checklists we use are written in someone else's blood. So true. Someone asked me in a PM why would Larnaca (the origination point) be the alternate for Athens? Funny reason again. An airline is responsible (with certain limitations listed in a Geneva Convention) for it's passengers from the moment of departure until the moment of arrival at the intended airport. Any diversion (especially to an airport that they don't normally serve) is a financial disaster. If they deliver the pax back to Larnaca for a divert, no prob, pax are on their own. Read that fine print on the back of your ticket someday. |
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Regarding the alternate... Other thing is that the airline delivers the pax back to home base and many of them live there, so no hotel rooms to pay for. The transit pax who do not live there would stay in hotel rooms that the airline gets "brother in law" pricing for, and if they did this at any other city at the last minute, pricing would be a lot more expensive. Lots of things working in the background here, and you are correct that reading the back of any ticket will have a lot of info. JoeA |
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When we intercept the inbound course it "goes green" (switches to the ILS for data) and shoots the approach. If we do not do anything it will then enter the hold, again totally auto and then continue in the holding pattern. It will not manage the altitude and thats why the -737 did all of the above but at altitude. The automatic systems in todays airplanes are very nice to work with IF, and only if you know how to "massage" them into doing what you want when there is a glitch. JoeA |
So the plane 'flew' the normal flight pattern, but at 30 some thousand feet?
...and it crashed because it ran out of fuel? What would have caused the huge fire? or maybe whoever was in the cockpit trying to fly the plane switched off the autopilot and it came down out of control? |
The fire that was seen in the post crash videos was a brush fire, no fuel was evident in the crash. Is why all the rescue and fire trucks were parked so close. This was scrub brush burning, could have been started by the crash impact itself.
It appeared that the efforts to 'regain control' were after the engine flameout and roll. That whoever it was in the cockpit was not even experienced enough to be able to talk on the radio. |
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I issued a memo to the pilots and flight attendants at my company a couple of days ago. I wanted the flight attendants to be shown how the pilot's oxygen masks work (in detail), how they are stored, and deployed. To assume the pilots was unconscious, and how to get the mask to flow 100% pressure breathing to get the pilot awake again hopefully.
Not that surprised that none of the FA's had ever been shown this. |
I am a big fan of "pinch-hitter" courses and videos for every nonpilot who might ever have the occasion to take the controls. Heaven forbid a big hunk of Peter Luger's steak breaks off and goes to my brain, I would want the passenger to know how to navigate to the nearest airport and land AND call for help on guard.
Certainly the technology exists for a "panic button" to be installed somewhere in the cockpit-- upon actuation, it could; 1) Check the nav database and locate the nearest suitable airport; 2) Check the fuel status and determine whether fuel remaining would be sufficient to make it to that airport and land; or whether the aircraft would be overweight; 3) Navigate to the final approach fix and land, applying auto-reverse and the brakes, coming to a stop on the runway centerline; 4) All the while squawking a special emergency code, broadcasting on 121.5 and sending ACARS messages to everybody and their dog that things had gone horribly awry and that the airplane was in "limp-home mode." Now obviously, there's no guarantee that the weather would allow this to happen, but it would be a decent shot. Seems to me that the cost of such a programming change and a minimal amount of hardware wouldn't be that great, although certification could be tough. If it saves one flight every few years, might it be worth it? |
John, along the lines of your post.....
More news from the German press (Der Spiegel) today. The captain was German, and the press there has taken a special interest in this crash. The intercept pilots report of 'someone trying to regain control' has been amplified. It now appears that someone (presumed to be one of the FA's who had a Private Pilot's License), had taken the captains' seat, and was flying the plane. The intercept pilots reported that the plane left the hold fix, descended out over the sea down to 800 meters, then turned back towards the airport. As it approached the coast, it had to climb to clear a low set of hills between them and the airport. The flight ran out of fuel as the engines spooled up to cross the ridgeline. |
Wouldn't that pi$$ you off...
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Wow, Michael. That's very interesting data.
I was initially very incredulous about the intercept pilots' report. The combination of thin air and cold temps would seem to preclude the idea that anyone would be able to take control. But if she had her mask on, and was able to enter the cockpit. . . |
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Better safe and trained now than needing it in a time of crisis. JoeA |
Even more info now. The FA that sat in the pilot's seat was a male, and his significant other, a woman was also a FA, was working aboard.
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Michael,
The more info that comes out, the worse it sounds. No one wants to see a bird go down but this strikes home... a lot. Will say another prayer for them tonight. Hope that they had a good and safe flight West... JoeA |
Amen to that.
"To fly west is a flight we all must take for a final check." |
How would the FA get through the locked cockpit door?
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