fc2112 said:
ArmyAg2002 said:
Ags4DaWin said:
ArmyAg2002 said:
Aston04 said:
but in a situation where seconds count, that's an extremely unreasonable to expect the first officer (within seconds) to make a command, realize she won't follow it and take control and fix the situation. That's not reasonable. A reasonable person would expect his commands to be followed and not grab control immediately. Her lack of following commands made them unable to see the dire nature of the situation (ironically if she had followed commands, he could have seen the dire situation and would have likely taken control out of precaution.
At the instructor pilot course you are taught to assume that everyone you fly with is trying to kill you. There is what is known as the "IP ready position." You spend the majority of any flight shadowing the controls and when things get stressful or dangerous, you have your hands at the controls, ready to take them at any moment. In the briefs for all Army aircrews we talk about the two challenge rule and the no challenge rule. In two challenge I tell you twice about an obstacle/danger in no challenge I just take the controls because there is not time to tell you of danger.
You may consider this expectation to be unreasonable, but military aircrews operate in situations that people.would consider unreasonable on a regular basis.
Again, if you are in command, you are responsible for the aircraft and crew. It is no different than when the Navy relieves a ship's captian for the failures of his/her crew.
And in a politicized military just like any other job, men who have been told to sit down and let women **** it up may be punished for following those rules if the female in question makes a complaint after the man follows procedure.
The tricky part is that we will never know if there were extenuating circumstances that made this instructor reluctant to take over.
There is a chance there were none.
But based on the military has been operating lately there is just as good a chance that were some.
Not dying is all the circumstance he needed. Political BS goes out the door when faced with your own mortality.
But the political BS is why he hesitated, and it cost lives.
I do not believe for one moment he hesitated due to political BS. He is responsible for that aircraft, its crew and it's safe operation. His life is on the line as well as people he is responsible for. It is a heavy responsibility and whatever crap you have made up in your head does not change his responsibility or duty.
Maroon Dawn said:
Incredible to see people trying to blame the IP and defend this woman
She ignored his command and got everyone killed because of it
This was a tragic accident, no one kn that helicopter saw the CRJ. They were searching for it, but there is no evidence that the CRJ was seen.
Maroon Dawn said:
GAC06 said:
Maroon Dawn said:
GAC06 said:
I don't think anyone (at least in the last couple pages) is defending the female pilot, she clearly screwed up. It's also clear that neither pilot saw the CRJ. If he had, the IP wouldn't have been reminding her of the proper altitude and saying "I think they want us over that bank of the river", he would have been making directive statements or taking the controls. He failed to do that though, and the pilot in command is ultimately responsible even though the pilot flying put them there.
Because it sounds like you're doing everything possible to give her a pass and put the blame on the IP even though everyone would be alive if she had done as commanded
The aircraft commander is responsible for the aircraft and crew. If your copilot screws up or your crew does, you as the commander are responsible. He was reminding her calmly because he was trying to coach her into the right position.
And it still sounds like you're trying to give her a pass and blame the IP even though he commanded her to make the turn that would have saved everyone and she refused
But prove me wrong and complete this sentence:
The person who got everyone killed was: _______________
The aircraft commander is the answer.
bobbranco said:
GAC06 said:
Well I'm not sure how saying "she clearly screwed up" is giving her a pass. I haven't seen the transcript but the article says that at 15 seconds before the collision he stated that he thought ATC wanted them on the other side of the river. 15 seconds is a long time to not follow up with an actual command like "come left" or to take the controls.
That's what the maps indicated. Do pilots understand maps?
Reading what little is available. Nobody in the helo could locate the CRJ, nobody in the helo could read a simple map a laymen could understand, and nobody in the helo could accurately set an altimeter.
In summary, the helo pilots killed all people on the CRJ and their crewman.
Chaotic environments at night make it hard to read paper maps. There is no moving map or MFD in that model of Blackhawk. It is analog technology. Aircrews get task saturated. When your copilot gets task saturated you try to take up the slack and can become task saturated yourself. There is no auto pilot in the model they were flying, there is no HUD. You are listening to 3 or 4 radios, looking outside, trying to keep your copilot in the right position.
The two altimeters in the aircraft can be up to 150 feet off from each other and 75 feet off from the altitude they are set for individually.
akm91 said:
ArmyAg2002 said:
Aston04 said:
ArmyAg2002 said:
jeremiahjt said:
If I remember correctly, a lot of pilots spent a lot of time in this thread telling everybody how the fault lies with the male co-pilot because he was the instructor pilot. I wonder if they still believe that.
That is correct. As the aircraft commander he is ultimately responsible for anything that happens with that aircraft.
that is an absurd premise if she literally is ignoring his instructions. That'd be like blaming me (the parent) if my daughter (permit driver) drove into oncoming traffic and ignored my commands to correct. That's bull****
You have a right to your opinion. As the aircraft commander he is responsible for the aircraft and the actions of his crew.
Unlike your daughter's driving in the car both pilots have access to the flight controls.
What happens to the aircraft when the two are trying to control the craft in opposite directions?
The controls are connected. Army pilots are conditioned to immediately relinquish the controls upon hearing the words "I have the controls." That's all it would have taken. He did not feel that the danger had escalated to the point to need to take the controls.
bobbranco said:
TriAg2010 said:
Ellis Wyatt said:
Just arrogance and incompetence. Pretty much standard operating procedure for women who worked with Joe Biden.
Seesh.
A Captain, that's a brazen butthole, won't pull rank on a WO? Happens all the time.
Nope. Very rarley do commissioned officers ignore Warrant officers. Warrant officers are very experienced experts in their fields.
In Army Aviation commissioned officers do not ignore Warrant officers that are the aircraft commander or the mission commander. The Warrant is in their position due to their experience and expertise. The Warrant in command is responsible for the aircraft and the mission no matter who else is a part of the flight.
I have been an Army Aviator for 17 years, the last nine and a half flying Blackhawks, flown in Afghanistan, become an aircraft commander, air mission commander, aviation safety officer and instructor pilot.
I have learned that there are multiple experts on Texags far more knowledgeable than me on aviation in general and Army Aviation in particular so I will defer to their expert opinions.