rb1957
Aerospace
- Apr 15, 2005
- 15,905
from Flight ... "Aircraft designs must better account for pilot responses: US law"
It's worth a read. Sure Boeing could have done things better. But now (maybe this is just public-speak ?) ...
1) "The law also requires that manufactures take steps to ensure their designs are safe even when pilots respond to failures in unanticipated ways." "unanticipated" ways ... surely if we're proving the airplane safe after some pilot response, it's not "unanticipated" ?? can we prove the airplane safe for "any" pilot input ?
2) "Additionally, within two years, new aircraft types must have improved flight crew alerting systems. Specifically, aircraft will need an alerting system that “displays and differentiates among warnings, cautions and advisories, and includes functions to assist the flight crew in prioritising corrective actions and responding to systems failures”." WTF? red for warning, amber for caution. I get what they mean ... the cockpit warnings can be a headache ... particularly if your next headache is going to be caused by the ground hitting you at a couple hundred knots. It was interesting to see the QF72 accident and how the 1st officer had his hands full with warnings and problems and had to resolve them all.
I know this (the '37 Max) is the biggest thread in Eng-Tips history (over on the "Engineering Disasters" forum) but I'm sure a big part of those accidents was pilot training. Ok, the Boeing training for the Max may have been wanting but it is also reasonably "adequate". how many safe take-offs were there ? how often did the MCAS system malfunction but the plane didn't crash ?
I wonder if the new rule will be retroactive ? Else it won't impact designs and working airplanes for another 10 years.
I feel the real issue with the '37 is that it's basically a '60s design, operating way past any reasonable lifetime. The real issue is "grandfathering". I thin a TC should have a life of 20 years, and the design should be updated to the latest standard to continue production beyond that time.
another day in paradise, or is paradise one day closer ?
It's worth a read. Sure Boeing could have done things better. But now (maybe this is just public-speak ?) ...
1) "The law also requires that manufactures take steps to ensure their designs are safe even when pilots respond to failures in unanticipated ways." "unanticipated" ways ... surely if we're proving the airplane safe after some pilot response, it's not "unanticipated" ?? can we prove the airplane safe for "any" pilot input ?
2) "Additionally, within two years, new aircraft types must have improved flight crew alerting systems. Specifically, aircraft will need an alerting system that “displays and differentiates among warnings, cautions and advisories, and includes functions to assist the flight crew in prioritising corrective actions and responding to systems failures”." WTF? red for warning, amber for caution. I get what they mean ... the cockpit warnings can be a headache ... particularly if your next headache is going to be caused by the ground hitting you at a couple hundred knots. It was interesting to see the QF72 accident and how the 1st officer had his hands full with warnings and problems and had to resolve them all.
I know this (the '37 Max) is the biggest thread in Eng-Tips history (over on the "Engineering Disasters" forum) but I'm sure a big part of those accidents was pilot training. Ok, the Boeing training for the Max may have been wanting but it is also reasonably "adequate". how many safe take-offs were there ? how often did the MCAS system malfunction but the plane didn't crash ?
I wonder if the new rule will be retroactive ? Else it won't impact designs and working airplanes for another 10 years.
I feel the real issue with the '37 is that it's basically a '60s design, operating way past any reasonable lifetime. The real issue is "grandfathering". I thin a TC should have a life of 20 years, and the design should be updated to the latest standard to continue production beyond that time.
another day in paradise, or is paradise one day closer ?