gkainz
Final Approach
Local news made the CO connection with Sully - AF Academy Grad; Post-grad degree from UNC
(waiting for Tony and the other glider goobers to ring in about how we ALL should be taking glider lessons)
well, it seems pretty obvious to me...
Local news made the CO connection with Sully - AF Academy Grad; Post-grad degree from UNC
Come on out here and set up Tony's Soaring Instruction and I'll take lessons.
Greg am I wrong here?
Also in the event the FO was flying the plane in the event of the emergency such as this one would the Captain automatically or usually take over the stick?
Wow can you imagine what folks in midtown manhatten must have thought when they saw a plane over the hudson river at a few hunderd feet AGL .
Hey, Greg and Matt, how often do you think Captain "Scully" practiced post-takeoff faliure out of LGA?
I'll bet he made that very water landing a hundred times ...in the simulator.
Of course, Bravo Zulu to him for the best execution possible.
and wondering if his career was over.
Sorry to disappoint you, but I will take that bet. We don't practice COMPLETE engine failures. Just one engine failures. Having a total loss of all engines just does not happen. Well yes, occasionally, but it isn't something we spend any time in the simulator doing.
Depends on where they do their sim sessions. My guess is probably not very often if at all.
Sorry to disappoint you, but I will take that bet. We don't practice COMPLETE engine failures. Just one engine failures. Having a total loss of all engines just does not happen. Well yes, occasionally, but it isn't something we spend any time in the simulator doing.
You will be from now on, I'll wager.
Yes he did and this is not an attempt to divert attention away from that fact.I like how the passengers are saying he was quiet and humble. I'm sure he had a lot of thoughts going through his head like a constant reply wondering if he did everything right and wondering if his career was over. He did everything right.
Well, we'll see. I think the massive publicity behind this accident may cause a change in the regimen.Bet not. We don't do deadstick landings in the sim and there have been a few of those too. We CANNOT train for every conceivable possibility. There just isn't enough time. And then there are the inconceivable.
Bet not. We don't do deadstick landings in the sim and there have been a few of those too. We CANNOT train for every conceivable possibility. There just isn't enough time. And then there are the inconceivable.
I agree. It's more important to instill the judgement necessary to manage the other situations. The one that always comes to mind is UA232/Sioux City.
Much worse than a poor ditching would be coming down anywhere over land. IT"S MANHATTAN! It would have hit lotsa people on the ground.Yes he did and this is not an attempt to divert attention away from that fact.
However, imagine how different the press treatment would have been if for any reason you can imagine the plane caught a wingtip, yawed violently, broke the fuselage open, and sank promptly? He would have been roundly excoriated in the press for not trying for TEB, LGA, Van Courtland Park, etc. etc. rather than risking all those lives in water fatally cold.
OK, I am laying it on a little thick here, but my point is that his humility might be fueled by the thoughts of how bad it could have been. The difference between success and failure was a narrow margin....
The problem with this thinking is you're applying it with reason and judgment, which isn't something that applies to "public sentiment".
The one that always comes to mind is UA232/Sioux City.
I agree. It's more important to instill the judgement necessary to manage the other situations. The one that always comes to mind is UA232/Sioux City.
Yeah but remember the legal vs. safe adage. Same applies to legal vs. stupid.That's why we have the kind of process we do for rulemaking. Slow and deliberative.
Hey, Greg and Matt, how often do you think Captain "Scully" practiced post-takeoff faliure out of LGA?
I'm thinking he was spring loaded to go for Teterboro or the Hudson depending on altitude so the decision was almost pre-made.
Same applies to legal vs. stupid.
Remember the success rate of crews put through that scenario in the sim?
. . . . and in view of his quiet humility I'd bet that he, as would most of us, was anxious to change his pants, if only psychologically. He's a cover shot for just about any major magazine.
HR
I would expect so, if his regular flying was out of LGA. I mean, don't you already know what your options are when departing each runway at your home field?
Speaking of "options at your home field", drop the nose sometime, when at 300-500' after departure, and see what's out front of you... my instructor did that--pulled power and had me get the nose down, and straight-ahead options appeared that I'd never seen before in the nose-high attitude--I'd only been aware of the options off to the side prior to that experience.
Speaking of "options at your home field", drop the nose sometime, when at 300-500' after departure, and see what's out front of you... my instructor did that--pulled power and had me get the nose down, and straight-ahead options appeared that I'd never seen before in the nose-high attitude--I'd only been aware of the options off to the side prior to that experience.
Heck it's really fun when the CFI-G pulls the tow release the first time at 200'. Until I did that for the first time I rarely gave a power failure on takeoff any second thought. Now I tend to be more aware of what is around me, and actively look for places to put down. In the glider I actively talk to myself about where I would go if the rope were to disconnect itself until I can make a normal pattern back to the RWY.
Not to take away anything from the US Air crew's exceptional performance, but maybe ingesting a couple of geese is better than a whole bunch of starlings:
http://dotlibrary1.specialcollection.net/scripts/ws.dll?browse&rn=715"
Trapper John
That link didn't take me straight to the article, but a search of the airline accident records for "starling" returned a 1960's crash of an Electra out of Boston... was that the article you were referencing??
We need to do something about these birds. They are a hazard to all! They need to be killed. Each and every one!!!!
BTW, I love how now the TV folk have a ready source of appropriate video: YouTube. They showed the two popular bird strike videos on the networks this morning: The F-16 punch out and the British airliner that lost one and went around.