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Old 6th Jul 2012, 01:55
  #63 (permalink)  
Oakape
 
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Western Pacific
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How many recent accidents have been caused by problems with the AFCS, whether it be failure, reversion or simply the pilot being unable to engage it in the first place?

I can immediately think of four - Kenyan, Ethiopian, Turkish & Air France. There may be more.

There seems to be a growing number of pilots these days who can't actually fly & when the autopilot decides to have a rest they are left in control of a large aluminium tube full of unsuspecting & trusting people, with no idea of what to do next. Is the licencing scandal in India not exclusive to that country & more widespread than people think?

Airline flying is supposed to be the pinnacle of aviation, only reached after many years of study, training, experience & perseverance. This does not seem to be the case anymore. People obviously believe that as little as 250 hours is enough.

Some of the comments here indicate that they believe that all airline pilots are created more or less equal. I have sat beside & behind enough of them to know that that is not the case. Some airline flight decks are populated by people who have no business being there. But they are cheap - just ask the accountants who put them there!

Some comments also indicate that people believe that the answer is more automation or a refinement in the current automation. I'm sorry, but I don't agree. If you can't tell when the automation is behaving incorrectly, or you have to rely totally on the aircraft to tell you what to do next with some verbal warning or instruction, then you have no place in an airline flight deck. Does anybody remember having to look 'through' the flight director on occasions & simply fly the aircraft?

The cost cutting mantra of modern business that has flowed into the airline industry is taking it's toll. I have seen a drop in both quantity & quality of training in recent years. Reducing T & C's is possibly reducing the quality of peolpe coming into the industry as well. Arguably we are no longer getting the brightest & best any more. The question is - is cost cutting winding back all the gains that have been made in aviation safety over the last 2 or 3 decades? Are we seeing the beginning of another era of increasing accident rates?

IMHO, the reaction by the PF on this flight to a loss of airspeed indication, followed by the A/P dropping out, is inexcusable. The decision by the more experienced PM to continue to let him fly after his initial reaction of excessively pitching up at that altitude in also inexcusable.

If we have a generation of pilots in flight decks who can't actually fly, then it is going to get a whole lot worse before it gets better.
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