I can assure you that it's not a translation. There is only one final report released and it's in English. All of the aviation accident reports produced by the NTSC in recent times have been in English, even domestic accidents and incidents. Or .. if it's not a translation .. this mean that all the investigators and administrative personnel involved have english as mother language ... and this is practically impossible |
Originally Posted by jcjeant
(Post 7605001)
Hi,
Or .. if it's not a translation .. this mean that all the investigators and administrative personnel involved have english as mother language ... and this is practically impossible |
IF the pilot had taken the same route as he did in the morning IF they'd flown from Sukarno-hata and not Halim...... If the crew had a map of terrain they were flying over. There was a navigator aboard and he did not even bother to have an aeronautical chart of the area, makes you wonder what he was paid for. :\ |
plus the fact that they'd been in the same rough area earlier in the day - those volcanoes are BIG and can be seen in the morning fro well over 100 kms away
to go low level in cloudy conditions when you know there are big mountains around is pretty stupid |
I can assure you that it's not a translation. There is only one final report released and it's in English. |
to go low level in cloudy conditions when you know there are big mountains around is pretty stupid But if you read the CVR carefully , from 07:30 44 the Capt says " No problem with terrain at this moment " the guest replies : yeah , it is flat " could indicate the Capt knew there was terrain around. They only planned to fly 20NM around the VOR and there is indeed no problem in that area. What was not planned is the fact that the aircraft left the plannned orbit which was above flat ground unoticed by the crew.(demonstrating a Holding input on the FMC ) and headed towards teh mountain. The rest of the conversations show a crew confused as to which heading they should take to return to Halim , which ironically is also the location of the VOR they are tuned on ! Difficult to understand . |
Difficult to understand . Not at all. Can't maintain VFR? Pull up. |
Hetfield : You mean VMC surely. But it is irrelevant as they were flying IFR and never announced/requested to continue visually.
What I meant by "Difficult to understand" was in relation to my last sentence : Why they were confused as to where to go to get back and did not notice the aircraft flew the opposite direction they wanted to with a VOR tuned on the airfield. Why the accident occurred is obvious and easy to understand after reading the report |
"Once again my apologies, although, with respect, the grammar is somewhat wanting."
so is my Indonesian............. |
All times are GMT. The time now is 11:41. |
Copyright © 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.