The crash of an Emirates B777 during an attempted go-around in Dubai last
Wednesday was always an accident waiting to
happen.
It was not the fault of the pilots, the
airline or Boeing, because this accident could have happened to any pilot in any
airline flying any modern glass cockpit airliner — Airbus, Boeing or Bombardier
— or a large corporate jet with
autothrottle.
It is the result of the imperfect
interaction of the pilots with supposedly failsafe automatics, which pilots are
rigorously trained to trust, which in this case failed
them.
First, let us be clear about the effect
of hot weather on the day. All twin-engine jet aircraft are certified at maximum
takeoff weight to climb away on one engine after engine failure on takeoff at
the maximum flight envelope operating temperature — 50 degrees C in the case of
a B777 — to reach a regulatory climb gradient minimum of 2.4 per
cent.
The Emirates B777-300 was operating on
two engines and at a lower landing weight, so climb performance should not have
been a problem. I have operated for years out of Dubai in summer, where the
temperature is often in the high 40s, in both widebody Airbus and Boeing B777
aircraft.
Secondly, a pilot colleague observed
exactly what happened as he was there, waiting in his aircraft to cross runway
12L. The B777 bounced and began a go-around. The aircraft reached about 150 feet
(45 metres) with its landing gear retracting, then began to sink to the
runway.
This suggests that the pilots had
initiated a go-around as they had been trained to do and had practised hundreds
of times in simulators, but the engines failed to respond in time to the
pilot-commanded thrust. Why?
Bounces are not
uncommon. They happen to all pilots occasionally. What was different with the
Emirates B777 bounce was that the pilot elected to go around. This should not
have been a problem as pilots are trained to apply power, pitch up (raise the
nose) and climb away. However pilots are not really trained for go-arounds after
a bounce; we practise go-arounds from a low approach
attitude.
Modern jets have autothrottles as
part of the autoflight system. They have small TOGA (take off/go-around)
switches on the throttle levers they click to command autothrottles to control
the engines, to deliver the required thrust. Pilots do not physically push up
the levers by themselves but trust the autothrottles to do that, although it is
common to rest your hand on the top of the levers. So, on a go-around, all the
pilot does is click the TOGA switches, pull back on the control column to raise
the nose and — when the other pilot, after observing positive climb, announces
it — calls “gear up” and away we go!
But in the
Dubai case, because the wheels had touched the runway, the landing gear sensors
told the autoflight system computers that the aircraft was landed. So when the
pilot clicked TOGA, the computers — without him initially realising it —
inhibited TOGA as part of their design protocols and refused to spool up the
engines as the pilot commanded.
Imagine the
situation. One pilot, exactly as he has been trained, clicks TOGA and
concentrates momentarily on his pilot’s flying display (PFD) to raise the nose
of the aircraft to the required go-around attitude — not realising his command
for TOGA thrust has been ignored. The other pilot is concentrating on his PFD
altimeter to confirm that the aircraft is climbing due to the aircraft momentum.
Both suddenly realise the engines are still at idle, as they had been since the
autothrottles retarded them at approximately 30 feet during the landing flare.
There is a shock of realisation and frantic manual pushing of levers to override
the autothrottle pressure.
But too late. The
big engines take seconds to deliver the required thrust before and before that
is achieved the aircraft sinks to the
runway.
It could have happened to any pilot
caught out by an unusual, time-critical event, for which rigorous simulator
training had not prepared him.
Automation
problems leading to pilot confusion are not uncommon; but the designers of the
autoflight system protocols should have anticipated this one. Perhaps an audible
warning like “manual override required” to alert the pilots immediately of the
“automation disconnect”.
My feeling is the
pilots were deceived initially by the autothrottle refusal to spool up the
engines, due to the landing inhibits, and a very high standard of simulator
training by which pilots are almost brainwashed to totally rely on the
automatics as the correct thing.
Byron Bailey
is a commercial pilot with more than 45 years’ experience and 26,000 flying
hours, and a former RAAF fighter pilot. He was a senior captain with Emirates
for 15 years.
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