Dette er grusom lesning. I Norden har vi en såkalt Scandinavian Model når det gjelder cockpit samarbeid. Det betyr at ingen flyger står over den andre fordi vi har en såkalt "level cockpit inclination". I mange land er kapteinens stilling helt overlegen og styrmannen har ingen autoritet til å gripe inn selv om det går rett vest. Dersom han gjør det kan han miste jobben og ansikt. Det er verre en å miste livet. Jeg grøsser nedover ryggen av det jeg leser her. Det som er ille er at jeg har lest det før. (Red.)
Air India Express 737
crash captain did not respond to go-around call
By David Kaminski-Morrow12 September 2021
Investigators
have revealed that the first officer of an Air India Express Boeing 737-800
unsuccessfully tried to convince the captain to abort an unstable second
approach to Kozhikode before the jet landed long in a tailwind and fatally
overran.
The inquiry believes the captain was under “misplaced motivation”
pressure to land at Kozhikode on 7 August last year because he had been
rostered at the “last minute” to operate another flight the next day, and the
airline – owing to “faulty” human resources planning – had too few captains
available at the airport.
India’s aircraft accident investigation bureau states that this
situation was exacerbated by a steep cockpit authority gradient. The captain
had close to 11,000h total time against fewer than 2,000h for the first
officer.
The captain was also experienced in operating to Kozhikode, with 36
flights to the airport in the previous year, which probably resulted in
“overconfidence” and “complacency”, says the inquiry, while the first officer
demonstrated a “meek and unassertive demeanour” in the captain’s presence.
Source: Indian aircraft
accident investigation bureau
Twenty-one of the 190 occupants did not survive the accident
While carrying out the initial approach to the wet runway in rain – during
which the captain’s windscreen wiper failed – the crew executed missed approach
to runway 28, because the runway was not in sight at minimums.
As the first officer was looking to set the aircraft up for a second
approach, an Air India flight departing for Delhi requested to take off from
the opposite-direction runway 10 – even though the prevailing winds favoured
runway 28.
Air traffic control asked the Air India Express pilots whether they
would also like to use runway 10 for the arrival.
“Despite the unserviceable wiper on the captain’s side, [the crew] did
not consider a diversion to an alternate airfield,” the inquiry says. After
receiving weather information from air traffic control, including the wind
direction, the crew accepted a runway 10 approach.
The pilots did not carry out a mandatory calculation of required
landing distance, despite the wet runway and tailwind.
Cockpit-voice recorder information shows the captain had been
apprehensive over the reliability of the windshield wiper, stating: “I hope it
works.” Although the wiper appeared to start functioning, it operated at a
slower speed than that selected.
The crew had often operated in Indian monsoon conditions, says the
inquiry, but the captain opted to make the second approach to Kozhikode
“without any risk assessment” even though the jet had sufficient fuel to divert
to alternate airports in close proximity.
It says this amounted to a “gross violation” of standard operating
procedures, but the first officer – confronted by the steep authority gradient
– “did not give any input” about the situation.
Source: Indian aircraft
accident investigation bureau
CCTV captured the 737 floating and landing halfway along the wet
Kozhikode runway
The aircraft captured the ILS glideslope at 2,200ft and was cleared for
landing, but the captain delayed the flap selection until 1,700ft, opting
eventually for ‘flap 30’ rather than ‘flap 40’ owing to turbulence.
“This [flap position] decision in itself was justified but the delayed
flap approach was not correct,” the inquiry says. It also says the ‘flap 30’
landing was “at variance” with the airline’s standard procedures which
recommended landing with ‘flap 40’ at Kozhikode, especially when the available
landing distance was marginal.
The crew disengaged the autopilot at 500ft but not the autothrottle.
The pitch attitude reduced and the 737’s descent rate started to increase,
reaching up to 1,500ft/min.
Analysis shows the approach “soon became unstabilised”, says the
inquiry, with the rate of descent and a deviation below the glideslope
exceeding criteria. The ground-proximity warning system twice cautioned over
the glideslope but while the captain increased pitch, momentarily slowing the
descent, the rate subsequently began increasing again.
The 737 crossed the runway threshold at 92ft with a tailwind component
of more than 14kt, as well as a crosswind component of 6kt.
Application of manual thrust – counter to autothrottle commands –
gradually reduced the sink rate but increased the airspeed, the engine thrust
still rising even as the 737 floated at 20ft at a point nearly 1,400ft beyond
the threshold.
Only when the aircraft was more than 3,000ft beyond the threshold – on
a table-top runway 8,858ft in length – was the engine thrust reduced.
Cockpit-voice recordings show the first officer made a couple of
attempts to draw the captain’s attention to the unstable approach and, at
4,200ft beyond the threshold, called for a go-around.
But this was not heeded by the captain. The first officer did not take
over the controls and, as a result of the long float, the aircraft touched down
at 4,438ft – halfway along the runway – at an airspeed of 150kt but a
groundspeed of 165kt.
Reverse-thrust was commanded 3s later but the reversers were then
stowed “before [they] could take any effect”, says the inquiry, only being
deployed again 15s after touchdown.
Source: Indian aircraft
accident investigation bureau
After overrunning runway 10 in a tailwind the jet careered down a steep
embankment and broke up
The captain was largely unresponsive during the landing roll, failing
to acknowledge any of the standard calls from the first officer.
Unable to decelerate in time, the aircraft overran at 85kt, travelled
through the runway-end safety area, and collided with the ILS antenna and a
fence before falling 110ft down the table-top embankment and encountering the
perimeter road.
Twenty-one of the 190 occupants, including both pilots, were fatally
injured in the accident, while another 76 received serious injuries.
Alongside its immediate findings on the circumstances of the accident,
the inquiry highlights the absence of a “detailed pro-active policy” and
“clear-cut guidelines” by the Indian civil aviation regulator regarding
monitoring of long landings which have been a “major factor” in
runway-excursion events since 2010.
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