
Originally Posted by
Hugh Jars
The opening minute or so of the above video seems to imply that the stabiliser screwjack is to blame, whereas it definitely is NOT.
No. He merely states that it has been "widely reported". Also, he relates what the ATSB stated, that the jack screw was in the "full nose down position".
The author of the video is a pilot of possibly more hours than you ( sorry, I have no idea how many hours you have, but he states his in subsequent vids. Maybe you should watch. However, I'll bow to your superior knowledge ), and he goes on to quote the preliminary report at length in his vids. He never blames the jack screw. He blames the poor implementation and initial design of MCAS, in particular the non redundancy of that system. He blames pilot error ( like you say, the switches should have stayed OFF, as Boeing said). He blames poor training for the event of MCAS 'runaway' ( my words ), He describes the problem with the autothrottle in take off mode, and clearly describes the issues all of the above would have created for pilots with only 2,000 ft AGL to work with.
He also describes the difficulty actuating manual trim at the airspeed the aircraft had. As a layman, I can only go with what the people who actually fly the things say. He is one of them, although I believe his currency is on the 777.
And people want self driving cars... If Boeing can't work out automation, you can be damned sure that neither can Google.
Meanwhile, Boeing is losing a reported 70 MILLION a day. Can you still travel to Europe by sea?
JayTee
Nullus Anxietus
Cancer is gender blind.
2000 D2 TD5 Auto: Tins
1994 D1 300TDi Manual: Dave
1980 SIII Petrol Tray: Doris
OKApotamus #74
Nanocom, D2 TD5 only.
Bookmarks