Ntsb. Flight Crew Failures, Tallahassee
NTSB PRESS RELEASE.
National Transportation Safety Board Washington, DC 20594 June 8, 2004 SB-04-16 NTSB SAYS FLIGHT CREW FAILURES LED TO FEDEX LANDING CRASH IN TALLAHASSEE WASHINGTON, D.C. - A FedEx Boeing 727 crashed on landing in Tallahassee, Florida in 2002 because of flight crew performance failures, the National Transportation Safety Board has found. On July 26, 2002, FedEx flight 1478, a Boeing 727-232F (N497FE) struck trees on final approach to Tallahassee Regional Airport at 5:37 a.m. The flight had originated in Memphis, Tennessee. The captain, first officer and flight engineer were seriously injured, and the airplane was destroyed by impact and resulting fire. In its final report adopted today, the Safety Board said that the probable cause of the accident was the failure of the captain and first officer to establish and maintain a proper glidepath during the night visual approach to landing. Contributing to the accident was a combination of the captain's and first officer's fatigue and failure to adhere to company flight procedures, the captain's and flight engineer's failure to monitor the approach, and the first officer's color vision deficiency. Although runway 09 did not have an Instrument Landing System, it was equipped with a Precision Approach Path Indicator, a series of lights that aid flight crews in determining if they are on a proper glide slope to the runway, too high or too low. The Board found that the first officer, who was the flying pilot, had a history of color vision deficiency, for which he had a waiver from the Federal Aviation Administration. Extensive post-crash evaluation of the first officer's color vision concluded that this deficiency would likely have interfered with his ability to discern the differences between the white and red lights that give the pilots their altitude clues. The Board noted that the current process of color vision screening required for pilots will not detect certain severe color vision deficiencies. The two recommendations the Board issued in this report ask the FAA to determine the operational effectiveness of each of the color vision test protocols it currently allows and, then, establish a standard battery of color vision tests to be administered to all commercial pilots. The Board's report cites a series of performance deficiencies exhibited by the flight crew during the approach, including continuing their unstabilized approach below 500 feet rather than executing a go-around, and errors by the captain that suggest he was not fully alert. The captain indicated after the accident that he had not slept well the two nights before the accident due to responsibilities at home, and the first officer reported that he had been having difficulty adjusting his sleep cycle to the reserve-duty schedule that he had recently been placed on. This is the latest Safety Board investigation in which it has cited fatigue as a factor. Fatigue in transportation operations has been on the NTSB's list of most wanted safety recommendations since the inception of the list in 1990. Since that time, little progress has been made to revise the hours-of-service regulations that would incorporate the results of the latest research on fatigue and sleep issues. The Board's latest recommendations to the FAA on this subject are classified "Open - Unacceptable Response." A summary of the accident investigation report, including the findings, probable cause and safety recommendations, can be found on the Publications page of the Board's web site, www.ntsb.gov. The complete report will be available in about a month. |
Perhaps they were fatigued!
Sorry yes they were fatigued. So whats going on. All aircrew and controllers are complaining about the working hours. But nobody is doing anything about it. Therefore more accidents are occurring. I don\'t know why the authorities ignore these posts and stick their heads in the sand. I hope somebody from the media picks up all the information which has been posted lately such as:- Extended flight crew rostering. Extended cabin crew rostering. ATCO\'s always breaking their maximum permitted hours. Sickness policies. This is now a very unsafe business we are working in due to financial/commercial pressures on our employers. I am sad to say that I would rather lose my job rather than make a descision to take a day off sick due to fatigue or illness. In the end the Airlines and Airport Companies will pay the price of having fatigued and unfit people working for them. Look at Linate. ILS 119.5 |
It is often said that a successful landing follows a successful approach, so...if the crew were indeed fatigued, why did they not request an ILS approach to a different runway, for safety considerations?
Pressure from management perhaps, ie; on time...every time? 'Tis the COMMANDERS responsibility to assure safe and proper operation of the aircraft, ie; the buck stops with HIM (or her), not others. And, it will always remain thus. So, act accordingly....period.:( Rocket science it ain't.:ooh: |
Good ol' 411A, as black and white as ever.
Surely one of the symptoms of fatigue is poor decision making QED. Sorry yes they were fatigued. So whats going on. All aircrew and controllers are complaining about the working hours. But nobody is doing anything about it |
'why did they not request an ILS approach to a different runway, for safety considerations?'
That surely is the point! Fatigue affects the ability to make rational decisions as well as causing physiological problems. |
Nineiron,
Yes, fatigue surely does cause poor decisions. But pilots, generally being the superior folks that we are :rolleyes:, generally make up for this by engaging the automatics, or at least request the best approach, under the circumstances. At least that surely is what they are paid the rather big bucks for...:} And, if not, maybe the beancounters are right after all.:{ |
The fact is 411A, that according to studies produced by several reliable scientific sources, the symptoms of fatigue are quite like the symptoms of inebriation, and are just as insidious. Your level of performance goes down at the same time your ability to self monitor and critique does.
You do not recognise that you are doing sh*te, on the contrary you feel that things are all hunky dory, hence no need to change the plan, all is "looking good" until the crunch. |
Everything is soooo easy in hindsight isn't it.:hmm:
'At least that surely is what they are paid the rather big bucks for... ' So why are managers paid big bucks then ? Is it to make decisions like employing F/O's with a colour deficiencies ? Or perhaps it is to squeeze every last drop of hours out of the legal system until there's an accident like this. I bet the word's "but it is legal" were mentioned at some stage or another. Perhaps they should have refused to fly due to fatigue - then they could have been said to have made a professional decision to justify there 'rather big bucks', of-course I'm sure they would have been totally supported by the management for making this decision - Right ? :yuk: |
It's with examples like this that all EU Pilots should be sending letters to "our" representatives in European Parlament. I believe that we are on one side of the fence and the beancounters on the other. It's up to us that they don't have a matchpoint.
Cheers.:ok: |
I am currently on the FDX three-holer, and this may be interesting: following TLH, stable requirements on final were raised to 1000 AGL; also, if operating into an uncontrolled field (as TLH was), crews are required to use instrument approaches, if available. Yep, the barn door's closed after the horse is out, but at least this one won't happen again....
|
Yep, the barn door's closed after the horse is out, but at least this one won't happen again.... PHX |
Fatigue,
Well if the Simpson proposals are adopted in Europe, We will all be Fatigued! However Don't Worry chaps My member of Parliment says that the proposals are only the maximum above which pilots may not work. Crewing will not roster to that of course (NOT!) For those who have not seen the draft proposal, it would seem that a double crew can be on duty in excess of 20 hrs at night! Before anyone says well you have bunks. Wrong! sit in the cabin with the pax it means.:mad: |
interesting ?
I would sure like to go on a CRM course with 411A , now that would be interesting !.
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You can be sure, A and C, that those that have gone to a CRM course with yours truly have received an earfull.
Take 'fatigue' for example. I have personally done nearly as much short haul as long haul flying over the last 35 years, and can tell you for a fact that the guys I have flown with (with very few exceptions) who claimed 'fatigue' had simply not been properly rested prior to duty. And whose fault is this? Well, it sure as hell ain't 'management', especially when adequate hours off duty have been provided, and the crew member has not used them to the best advantage. IF crew don't use the 'rest' hours to actually rest, they have absolutely no one else to blame but themselves...period. |
411A
You really are a pompous ass. Obviously one of those odd types who can adapt to ever changing patterns and sleep on demand. Most of us are not like that, and trying to fit what is, after all, our real lives away from work causes fatigue if working routines are in constant upheval. I'd sure hate to sit next to you unless my ear defenders were bloody effective!:yuk: |
411A,
"IF crew don't use the 'rest' hours to actually rest, they have absolutely no one else to blame but themselves...period." If you really feel that it shows your 35yrs of experience hasn't been in the commercial world that I've spent 30yrs in. A comment like that shows absolutely no understanding of physiology or rostering practices, you'd fail the JAA licence on CRM but you would get a job in crewing! |
BusyB,
Adequate rest? A certain asian airline that regularly flies to NRT, crew members proping up the bar at the Truck until 1am, with a 7:30am transport, is hardly making use of 'adequate rest'. Sound familiar? If crew members want management to listen, they had better be prepared to show cause just why their off duty time at nightstops is not put to better use. |
411A,
A specific incident with a specific crew hardly entitles you to make broad generalisations about all crews. |
Oh, come now, BusyB.:rolleyes:
Not simply one crew either, as i'm sure you well know. Yes, crew do get fatigued, and mistakes are made, but I still maintain that some crew do not put the nightstop hours to proper use, ie: the use for which they were intended. |
Whilst 411A is undoubtedly correct about what some pilots consider to be 'restful activities', the blunt facts are that crew rostering practices are run by a soulless computer which will aim to squeeze every last minute out of them which it legally can.
And yes, the perception of one's performance does indeed go rapidly downhill with the insidious onset of fatigue. Mind you, 411A, there are also those wet-pants who whine about 'human factors' or 'CRM factors' whenever they're criticised or given direct analysis of their failings - whereas in actual fact they were just cr@p! |
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