Ærlig talt dette er en skremmende uttalelse. Flygere er siste barriere mellom en hendelse og en ulykke. Har du denne holdningen så bør en finne en annen jobb.
Pilot decries autopilot: 'We're a piece of luggage'
The National Transportation Safety Board is poised to
hold an investigative hearing on pilots' use of autopilot - a commonplace
occurrence that now leave the drivers of craft feeling more like baggage than
highly trained operators.
"Once you see you're not needed, you tune out,"
said Michael Barr, a former Air Force pilot and accident investigator who now
teaches flight safety at the University of Southern California, The Associated
Press reported. "As long as everything goes okay, we're along for the ride.
We're a piece of luggage."
That's not necessarily a bad situation,
however. But it can turn dangerous when the autopilot encounters troubles,
calling for the pilot to step in - but the pilot has zoned out or worse, lost
confidence in the ability to manually fly the craft.
For instance, the
NTSB's hearing on Dec. 10 to Dec. 11 will look at an Asiana Airlines jet crash
that occurred last July at San Francisco International Airport. The pilot had
been attempting to land the craft without autopilot assistance, when it hit a
seawall near the runway. Investigators later said it had been flying too low.
Three were killed, several injured, and the question to be determined at the
hearing remains, AP reported: What was the level of "pilot awareness in [this]
highly automated aircraft?"
Just a few weeks later, a United Parcel
Service cargo plane went down near Birmingham, Ala., killing both pilots
aboard.
The hearing will focus on "pilot awareness in a highly automated
aircraft," the board said. NTSB officials want to specifically know why three
experienced pilots allowed the plane to lose so much speed that the craft was
about to stall, just seconds before it crashed, AP reported.
Federal
Aviation Administration officials fault failing pilot "mode awareness," and the
overreliance on autopilot that has left those who are supposed to oversee the
cockpit in a somewhat inattentive state, AP reported. Even on autopilot, pilots
are supposed to continually track their flights, the FAA said.
Abonner på:
Legg inn kommentarer (Atom)
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.