HIGHLY RESPECTED AVIATION EXPERTS CRITICAL OF LION AIR PILOTS AND CRASH
REPORT
Photo: Lion Air
Former NTSB crash
investigator is highly critical of the Indonesian NTSC report and the primary
conclusion that the MCAS software caused the crash of LionAir Flight 610 in
October last year.
Well known, former NTSB crash investigator and air
safety expert Greg Feith, says the Indonesian NTSC 322-page report, issued last
month, into the LionAir 737MAX tragedy presents an in-depth account of the
"factual" information developed during the course of the
investigation.
However, Feith says of the report, "there are so many
flaws in logic, failures to properly analyze the facts, and failures to hold
persons or organizations accountable and much more. They (NTSC) obviously
reverse-engineered the "facts" to support their preconceived conclusions that
the airplane and MCAS are to blame," said Mr Feith.
"The NTSC stated the pilots, especially the First
Officer, had significant training deficiencies and lacked basic flying skills.
These same deficiencies occurred during the accident flight. These two pilots
had no business being in the cockpit and the airplane should not have been
operated because of all the maintenance issues that began at the beginning of
October, and were not corrected, making the airplane unairworthy."
Feith
questions the NTSC's silence regarding "the oversight by the Indonesian DGCA and
the accountability of LionAir, especially after the airline had several serious
incidents and accidents in the past 6 years.
Mr Feith's views are
supported by a well-respected Airbus training captain, who told
AirlineRatings.com the first officer "could not fly".
"The report on the
FO is an eye-opener as he is constantly very poor in all phases of operating an
aircraft," the training captain said.
"The report indicates a lot of
additional training in standard operating procedures and emergencies and this
was repeated on almost every subsequent training session but the problems were
never resolved.
"There is a continual mention of a very poor instrument
scan which was also never resolved. Even more deeply troubling was that,
according to the pilot reports, the first officer didn't understand and had
difficulty handling aerodynamic stalls, a fundamental of flying."
"That
FO could not fly and I wonder why the Lion Air trainers didn't cull him as his
performance at proficiency checks are all fail items."
That assessment is
supported by one of the world's leading flight crew trainers, who told Airline
Ratings.com "it would appear that much had been overlooked in order to keep the
FO operational".
He said the captain had his issues, too, and asks why
the two margin pilots were put together. "While there are 'green-on-green'
restrictions for the pairing of flight crew with respect to time on type (of
plane), this accident makes a compelling case against pairing marginal
performing pilots together as well," he said.
Both the captain and first
officer acted as the pilot flying on the fatal flight and the FO was in command
when it crashed.
The Digital Flight Data Recoder revealed that the inputs
(to correct the nose down pitch from MCAS) from the FO were weaker than the
captains, who seemed to have some control over the aircraft.
Why the
capatin didn't take back control of the 737 is a mystery.
Earlier this
month a panel of US government flight-safety experts, the Technical Advisory
Board, said that Boeing's redesign of the 737 MAX complied with regulations and
was "safe".
The Technical Advisory Board, created after the 737 MAX jet
was grounded in March has just presented its preliminary report to the FAA. The
TAB is made up of aviation experts from the US Air Force, the Volpe National
Transportation Systems Center, NASA and FAA.
And US and Europe regulators
said the 737 crashes are a watershed for the industry and that previous
assumptions on pilot competency have to be re-evaluated for all new designs.
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