Children of the Magenta

Robert Szego

New member
The subject of over-automation has come up before, and in the spirit of Club-fomented safety education, I post this very interesting, lively video. Since this applies mainly to Viking drivers, it is posted here: http://vimeo.com/64502012

I know I will hear from a Cruisair owner with FMS installed ;-)

Comments?
 
I was at one of his talks. The guy's name is Vandenberg. He was involved in the training department of the airline I work for. After a series of incidents and accidents, he did a travelling road show to all of our bases discussing the operational issues pertinent to sophisticated airplanes and an erosion of basic flying skills when the airplane is operated near the edge of its envelope. His talk is no longer part of our current training program.

If any of you non-airline types have buddies that fly any Boeing equipment, ask if you can see what Boeing has to say about rudder usage on large transport category aircraft in the operating manual. I shake my head every time I read it.
 
I too, attended Capt. Vanderburg's [I think the correct spelling] briefing and thought he had some good points. I think the A300 accident out of JFK in 2001 caused the company to reconsider the rudder philosophy....even though it was apparently improperly applied in this case.
Dan
 
Thanks for posting this, Robert.

a couple of years ago I took a new friend for a ride in my Cruisemaster after he told me he'd never flown a plane without glass. Turns out he'd decided on a flying career while in college and at that point, had never flown a plane. He goes to a national flight school, enrolls in a private/ifr combo program (I had never heard of that) and flew one of the restart Cessnas with an all-glass panel. Went all the way to atp in newish planes with glass, flew charter stuff with glass, and was then flying for some airline (cant recall which one now) that had a tech panel. Sure, he'd done partial panel stuff and had to demo hand flying for checks and all that, but although he'd heard the "just fly the plane" mantra many times he later admitted that it was just something they did during training and never really embraced it as fundamental practice. Our flight was interesting....
To his credit, he realized his pilot skills could be improved and bought into a partnership in a non-glass no A/P Skylane - not even an HSI.
When this kid makes Captain, he'll be awesome.
 
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