"STOP, STOP STOP!!" Recent FAA Air Traffic Control Errors Reviewed.

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 21 апр 2024
  • LINKS:
    VasAviation- Support Victor here! / @vasaviation
    #1 • NEAR DISASTER | Multip...
    #2 • NEAR DISASTER | Takeof...
    #3 • Plane Takes Off WHILE ...
    #4 • NEAR MID-AIR COLLISION...
    MERCH: blancoliriostore.myspreadshop...
    Flying Eyes 10% OFF: flyingeyesoptics.com/?ref=Bla...
    PATREON: www.patreon.com/user?u=529500...
    GEFA Aviation Scholarship: goldenempireflyingassociation...
    Learning The Finer Points -10% OFF! www.learnthefinerpoints.com/g...
    Theme: "Weightless" Aram Bedrosian
    • Weightless - Aram Bedr...
    www.arambedrosian.com
  • НаукаНаука

Комментарии • 2,9 тыс.

  • @VASAviation
    @VASAviation Месяц назад +1321

    Thanks for the shoutout and analysis as always, Juan

    • @vlfreak
      @vlfreak Месяц назад +40

      You do a great job 👍

    • @robinmaelbrancke2560
      @robinmaelbrancke2560 Месяц назад +29

      Both of you are very goodd

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Месяц назад +17

      Thank you very much for the great Work to pick all these incidents up and for making them Public!👍

    • @Kyzyl_Tuva
      @Kyzyl_Tuva Месяц назад +24

      Victor, you’re great. I love the way Juan adds commentary to your fantastic coverage!

    • @ccpperrett7522
      @ccpperrett7522 Месяц назад +14

      Thank you Victor for these videos

  • @user-df3he2ew5m
    @user-df3he2ew5m Месяц назад +1525

    As a retired long haul pilot I cannot believe that one person does not OWN a runway. Two controllers controlling one runway is a recipe for disaster. The ‘super smooth’ clipped speech is another safety hazard. Say it clear and say it once!

    • @bobwilson758
      @bobwilson758 Месяц назад +28

      You are right sir -- stand by ! Glad u r retired !

    • @wturn5354
      @wturn5354 Месяц назад +54

      Only one controller owns one runway, they need to coordinate with each other for each crossing, very inefficient and in my opinion not as safe as one controller owning both runways.

    • @halmc8109
      @halmc8109 Месяц назад +4

      Bingo!

    • @zLigHt44
      @zLigHt44 Месяц назад +76

      I said it once and I'll say it again, everyone needs to speak slowly and clearly, the few seconds extra helps the medicine go down.Looks like the pilots need to remain stationary until everything is very understood.

    • @keithbrown9198
      @keithbrown9198 Месяц назад +42

      And believe it or not, I watched a newly certified controller clear an aircraft for takeoff (not yet on the runway) while there was another on final opposite direction!!! He hit the bricks after that. I had been telling my boss that he was dangerous, to no avail.

  • @mita6010
    @mita6010 Месяц назад +212

    The pilot’s union needs to get involved here. Make some noise until these ATC training issues are sorted out, you all have some power here to save lives.

    • @Alex_Coaster_Adventurer
      @Alex_Coaster_Adventurer Месяц назад +10

      I don't think it's related to training (at least for the JFK one). I think it's procedural: why was Swiss cleared to take off while others were cleared to cross? Because they are handled by two different controllers. Why are they handled by two different controllers? Because one controller handles takeoff/landing clearance and the other handles ground traffic. Why is it the case? because it's the procedure ==> root cause = the procedure.

    • @spicyweasel
      @spicyweasel Месяц назад +2

      @@Alex_Coaster_Adventurer Correct me if I'm wrong, I'm just a hobby flight sim player, but as far as I know isn't it procedure to be switched to Tower whenever there's a need to cross an active runway, and then switch back to GND?

    • @Alex_Coaster_Adventurer
      @Alex_Coaster_Adventurer Месяц назад +5

      @@spicyweasel in most airport yes. But apparently not in JFK

  • @MultiClittle
    @MultiClittle 29 дней назад +29

    I love hearing a pilot asking ATC for a phone number to call.

  • @planetalk1662
    @planetalk1662 Месяц назад +915

    As an international pilot who flew into the USA out of Hong Kong for 18 years, and out of Canada for 10 years, I can tell you that the USA is viewed as some of the best approach controllers, but the ground and tower controllers are viewed as larger threats than most other countries. This is due to clipped speech which leaves a lot of room for confusion. I brief it heavily and will not move a wheel until we are completely clear on what the instructions are.

    • @iancairns7398
      @iancairns7398 Месяц назад +16

      What do you mean by clipped speech 💬?

    • @gregorykelley5555
      @gregorykelley5555 Месяц назад +120

      @@iancairns7398 New York controllers are notorious for non-standard phraseology.

    • @planetalk1662
      @planetalk1662 Месяц назад +161

      @@iancairns7398 non-standard and fast, which inevitably clips words. Without clearly annunciating words the result can be misinterpreted.

    • @iancairns7398
      @iancairns7398 Месяц назад +22

      @@planetalk1662 thanks for the reply 🙏

    • @L.Spencer
      @L.Spencer Месяц назад +43

      enunciating - to say or pronounce clearly.

  • @kurtbilinski1723
    @kurtbilinski1723 Месяц назад +181

    That SwissAir pilot was extremely professional and took the high road regarding his comments about traffic on the runway!

    • @MrTruckerf
      @MrTruckerf Месяц назад +22

      He was both pilot and ATC.

    • @yungrichnbroke5199
      @yungrichnbroke5199 Месяц назад +34

      He just wanted to get home lol

    • @james-p
      @james-p Месяц назад +32

      I noticed that too. Very Swiss of him!

    • @bearpoik
      @bearpoik Месяц назад +9

      Btw guys, swissair died in 2001. Its swiss, not swissair

    • @yungrichnbroke5199
      @yungrichnbroke5199 Месяц назад +6

      @@bearpoik we’re not calling it Swiss lol

  • @lachmaclean2383
    @lachmaclean2383 Месяц назад +17

    I'm an Australian, I hold a GA licence and I used to use a radio professionally. I am amazed at how difficult it is to understand a lot of US controllers with their non standard abbreviations and speed of delivery. It seems to me, that the east coast is worse at this than other places. As a user below says "say it clear and say it once".

  • @FutureSystem738
    @FutureSystem738 Месяц назад +110

    I’ve been retired for nearly five years now - so glad I’m not flying any more. We’re going to have another Teniriffe at this rate! It’s starting to look like “WHEN” rather than “IF”.
    Having flown all around the world, I never liked the competition amongst American ATC as to how fast they could talk.
    It’s not necessary, it’s not safe, and it’s NOT professional.

    • @davidkavanagh189
      @davidkavanagh189 Месяц назад +23

      I completely agree. The fast talking is also only useful to native or very excellent English speakers. What's the point in speaking so fast if you have to repeat it three times, increasingly rudely, to foreign crews?

    • @WWPlaysHoldem
      @WWPlaysHoldem Месяц назад +1

      I can assure you that at many towers if they didn’t speak fast enough there would be less traffic getting in and out of the airport per hour.

    • @FutureSystem738
      @FutureSystem738 Месяц назад +19

      @@WWPlaysHoldem Wrong.
      100% wrong!
      Movements per hour have little to nothing to do with how fast people can talk. As I said- I’ve flown ALL around the world, and that’s with a very major airline. It actually often delays things, and I have heard an awful lot of “say again” and mis-heard communication with American ATC. It’s just not safe, and of course movements will drop to zero when there’s a prang- and never mind the lives lost.
      The best “Say again” I ever heard was actually at LAX with an American business jet.
      After the second “Say again”, the pilot said: “I’m from Texas, and in Texas WE - - TALK - - REAL - - SLOW. Can you do the same please sir so my buddy and I can try understand you!”
      I thought that was brilliant and ENTIRELY appropriate given the way the damn controller was speaking. Out of the four 747 pilots on our flight deck, with all of us being regulars into LAX, (though not Americans), we had all commented how the controller was talking FAR too fast.
      It’s even worse when they do it to people for whom English is not their native tongue.

    • @pfefferle74
      @pfefferle74 Месяц назад +6

      As the old saying goes: "Work slower, it will go faster."

    • @Alex_Coaster_Adventurer
      @Alex_Coaster_Adventurer Месяц назад +3

      @@WWPlaysHoldem If fast doesn't work, make it slower. It's going to cost less (in time, money and security).

  • @mipmipmipmipmip
    @mipmipmipmipmip Месяц назад +90

    With all these near misses, the US is one foggy day away from a historically catastrophic airplane accident

    • @Tom-bp6no
      @Tom-bp6no Месяц назад +6

      I wouldn’t like to takeoff or land outside of daylight right now in the US.

    • @davidkavanagh189
      @davidkavanagh189 Месяц назад +3

      @@Tom-bp6no You'll be fine. The planes have cool flashy lights on them :)

  • @user-ov2er4nd9z
    @user-ov2er4nd9z Месяц назад +269

    As a railroader, having multiple controllers operate the same real estate is crazy to me.

    • @cr10001
      @cr10001 Месяц назад +25

      I don't know about US railroads, but British railways would never have been permitted to operate a layout where so many conflicting movements were regulated just by word of voice. That's where signal interlocking came from - it was complex and cost a heap but it positively prevented any conflicting movements being signalled and prevented thousands of potential accidents. In the same way that aircraft design is so heavily scrutinised (Max being the exception that proves the rule). So with that knowledge as background, I find it hard to comprehend how the setup at DCA is ever permitted.

    • @autosativa
      @autosativa Месяц назад +1

      @@cr10001 In before someone says "the redcoats are coming"

    • @wturn5354
      @wturn5354 Месяц назад +2

      Only one controller controls each frequency/runway or airspace, no one “shares” responsibility.

    • @wolf2179
      @wolf2179 Месяц назад +3

      ​@@wturn5354 this is true and the issue is here you have ground controllers not in sync with the tower controllers for the runways. What needs to happen it seems at this airport is that ground controllers should be restricted from given clearances to cross runways and instead have the pilots switch over to tower for permission to cross the runways. This way you only have a single controller who should know if a plane is landing or taking off or waiting on the runway before clearing planes to cross.

    • @wturn5354
      @wturn5354 Месяц назад +3

      @@wolf2179 Yes, years ago the same controller would be controlling BOTH
      parallel runways, this was safer because you eliminated the crossing coordination but required a higher level controller. Today the system is “dumbed down” to accommodate a lower skill level. Not all can handle two runways, but is is much safer. I have personally worked that situation, many years ago at DEN, actually with 3 parallel runways over 70 arrivals an hour many times.

  • @bearowen5480
    @bearowen5480 Месяц назад +33

    Years ago I was a DC-10 F/O flying out of SEATAC. This memorable date was a rare, hot blue sky summer day in Seattle. We were loaded to the gills with a full passenger and freight load and a full bag of fuel for the 10+ hour flight to Narita Tokyo. It would be a max gross takeoff weight departure requiring a very long takeoff roll. We got off the gate on time and taxied south for a northerly departure on the right runway. For some reason SEATAC was doing simultaneous departures and arrivals on the right. We held short for a United heavy jet on final and cleared to land. Shortly after United passed above us and touched down, the tower cleared us for takeoff. The captain pushed the power up and because he knew we had a long roll ahead of us, he kept the power up and the heavily loaded DC-10's momentum going as he finished the 90° turn to allign us with the runway centerline, and we laboriously started to accelerate very slowly down that two mile strip of concrete. I looked down the runway as the second officer jockied the throttles a bit to make sure we had all the N¹ we would need to get the beast safely into the air. "Power Set". Suddenly I noticed that United had not cleared the runway yet as we started to pick up speed. For some unknown reason he had started noticeably dawdling his ground rollout approaching his 90° taxiway turnoff intersection, but to me it still looked like he would clear in plenty of time. As he made the turn he inexplicably stopped, only halfway off the runway! At our 100 knot callout, there he was, not moving! As we accelerated towards V¹, United started creeping forward again, but still had not cleared the runway completely. As we lifted off with a couple thousand feet or so of runway left and the captain called "Positive rate, gear up" I looked down at United as we passed him watching his tail finally clear the runway.
    The tower controller never said anything after he cleared us for takeoff. If my captain had noticed the situation developing, he never mentioned it. All the way to Tokyo, I kept wondering if I should have called a low speed reject when I noticed that the United heavy jet was still on his landing rollout ahead of us, but although I clearly saw something I didn't like, in my experience I was sure that he would soon clear, so I didn't say anything. But at the 100K callout, well down the runway, I had started to have serious doubts. Did I fail to call for a reject then because in the back of my mind I was concerned about the nuisance of very hot brakes, a cooldown period, fuse plugs melting, a new fuel topoff, a disgruntled captain, paperwork, a call from the chief pilot's office....? Maybe. I've questioned myself about it a lot in the intervening thirty years.
    Yes, the controller screwed up by assuming that United would have cleared downfield in plenty of time based upon having seen the same situation maybe thousands of times before? Why did the United captain uncharacteristically "dawdle" getting off the runway? Flying fighters and attack jets for decades I had learned in BFM training safety briefs that to prevent midairs "remain predictable". Fancy ad hoc stick and rudder maneuvers in a rolling scissors might yield bragging rights in the debrief or at the bar, but their unpredictability can run jets together. So, United did something unpredictable, the controller jumped the gun, and I failed to have the courage to call for a marginal, rejected takeoff dangerously close to V¹. We all dodged the bullet that day at SEATAC, the holes in the Swiss cheese thankfully didn't line up, but I recount the incident here as food for thought to my fellow aviators who are facing a growing ATC crisis out there today. Stay safe, mon amis, stay safe!

  • @hatpeach1
    @hatpeach1 Месяц назад +158

    Victor is doing important work. Everyone needs to support him.

  • @jimmysmith5820
    @jimmysmith5820 Месяц назад +441

    Retired ATC about 9 years ago. Could see this coming back then.

    • @cowarddonnie-ji5yz
      @cowarddonnie-ji5yz Месяц назад +22

      Glad you're intact mentally and physically

    • @john9663
      @john9663 Месяц назад +21

      What did you see then?

    • @user-oo8xp2rf1k
      @user-oo8xp2rf1k Месяц назад +12

      Yes what was concerning you .

    • @SearTrip
      @SearTrip Месяц назад +71

      I retired 11 years ago. People have seen this coming since they closed the Academy in 1990. It was pretty evident that all the experience was going to drain away all at once about 25-30 years after that, and of course the FAA never did anything to help increase the flow of people in the pipeline until it was much too late.

    • @111doomer
      @111doomer Месяц назад +9

      Staffing levels? Or not enough training? Or something else?

  • @pirahna432
    @pirahna432 Месяц назад +392

    There are ALWAYS loud and raucous conversations and laughter in the DCA tower cab. It’s on the frequency every day. I have no idea how anyone can work in that environment.

    • @2Phast4Rocket
      @2Phast4Rocket Месяц назад +54

      100% nobody will be fired even after accident

    • @AniRaptor2001
      @AniRaptor2001 Месяц назад +85

      I'm incredulous, the cockpit must be sterile but the tower, no?

    • @Evan-ed7pu
      @Evan-ed7pu Месяц назад +64

      That’s been going on in DCA tower for years now. I was based there in 2017 and 2018 and i remember it

    • @martinlauer7837
      @martinlauer7837 Месяц назад +22

      Hopefully Southwest got a phone number so the controllers could apologize!

    • @chuckinhouston9952
      @chuckinhouston9952 Месяц назад +17

      “Wow! They’re having a great time in there.” (Bob Uecker Miller Lite Commercial)

  • @raysutton2310
    @raysutton2310 Месяц назад +45

    To me the most troubling point is nobody in the DCA tower appears to take ownership of the mistake and/or apologized to the pilots.

    • @libby2012
      @libby2012 Месяц назад +8

      Responsibility is no longer in fashion. It’s always someone else’s fault. That needs to change and fast.

    • @RichFreeman
      @RichFreeman Месяц назад +6

      ​@@libby2012apologies are treated as admissions of guilt in court, which is terrible IMO. It is also that way in the press.
      Just look at any high profile negative press issue. When somebody apologizes everybody dogpiles them. When somebody just doubles down everybody moves on and the lawsuits stall out.
      You get the behavior you reward.

  • @mo40401
    @mo40401 Месяц назад +131

    I retired about three and a half years ago from ATC. I recently was told that the FAA sent down orders that trainees were to receive a minimum of 12 hours of training per week, irrespective of whether or not traffic levels were conducive to meaningful training. From what I understand, this was to expedite the number of controllers attaining full facility certification. Thus, trainees were burning thru their allotted OJT hours. This meant that they may not be exposed to irregular circumstances or heavier traffic prior to certification. A lot of folk were certified post covid under lower traffic levels. You look at the stuff that happened at KSAN and KAUS and it reeks. The FAA claims it was fatigue, I call BS on that. The FAA needs to reinstate the old non- radar screen and realize that cultivating a quality ATC workforce cannot be done quickly or cheaply. The cyclical hiring pattern is also a major problem. The FAA will hire a huge amount and then reduce hiring to a trickle in the intervening years; only to have to do it all over again every 20 to 25 years. The organization is broken. It's only a matter of time before a major f-up happens and the dead litter the landscape.

    • @bwalker4194
      @bwalker4194 Месяц назад +18

      Retired 30-yr center controller here. This SAYS IT ALL! PERFECTLY! Compounding the situation is the hiring of managers from outside of the facility, many times from outside of their knowledge base, i.e approach control to centers or centers to approach control. Completely different worlds. This is going to get ugly!

    • @vladimus9749
      @vladimus9749 Месяц назад +7

      Crazy the govt budgets have increased substantially in the last few years yet corners are being cut like this. Where is it all going?

    • @iahflyr4690
      @iahflyr4690 Месяц назад +15

      @@bwalker4194 Retired in 2012 from Level 12 TRACON. You both have nailed it right on the head. Particularly the bringing in "managers from outside of the facility". The manager when I retired came from a center where he'd been checked out for less than a year on a high altitude sector with the lowest traffic count in the facility. He bid on our manager job and since a "yes man" was selected at a Level 12 TRACON and also at the time was also the Tower manager. Within about three months he wanted to make huge changes in our procedures especially to our TRIP simul operation that he had not a clue of why things were done they way they were, to which our NATCA Fac Rep balked and it was game on with this dude. Horrible stuff and didn't help with management/workforce relations.

    • @MrRV7A
      @MrRV7A Месяц назад +1

      Wasting resources regulating model airplanes.

    • @wturn5354
      @wturn5354 Месяц назад +7

      @@iahflyr4690 you are correct! I retired 12 yrs ago also from a level 12. They were promoting the wrong people, checking out weak controllers and it hasn’t improved. No fear of having a deal anymore, sad. No accountability, enjoy retirement!

  • @jimcaufman2328
    @jimcaufman2328 Месяц назад +323

    As a retired long haul pilot, I have flown over most of the world. I can assure you that U.S. Tower/Ground Controllers are the fastest talking controllers in the world which leads to missed calls, miss understood calls, and general confusion. Controllers need to just slow down. Just as many movements will happen because there are a lot of repeated clearances and miss understandings. Controllers cannot sardine more aircraft operations +into a poorly designed or outdated airport.

    • @pk4459
      @pk4459 Месяц назад +28

      Everyone recognizes this as a problem and nothing is ever done to correct it. Shoulder shrugs and blaming ATC union rules. Guess hundreds of people will just have to lose their lives because nobody in authority gives a toss.

    • @dougfraser77
      @dougfraser77 Месяц назад +23

      I remember that one video where a controller said "cleared to land" almost as a single sound. "Cladala."

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Месяц назад +2

      Indeed, exactly!👍

    • @joelcalmet5710
      @joelcalmet5710 Месяц назад +22

      if even american pilots are complaining that there not understand the too fast speaking controlers, imagin when you are a foreign pilot and English is not your native language .
      Even if you are fluent, with certain controlers is a nightmare to understand them 😱😁

    • @wadepatton2433
      @wadepatton2433 Месяц назад +6

      Astronauts have to learn radio rules and theory in order go get an amateur radio license-this helps them understand how to communicate when things are less than optimal. Intelligibility is something we hams strive for. We understand optimizing our audio and the importance of clear communications. I've never heard some much clipped and pitiful audio than listening to ATC. "Radio Check" is not just about TX/RX but also the quality of the signal, which is a function of many things. Things hams know-as does any audio technician. But no matter how great the audio is, this clipping it and spitting it out is likely to lead to a tragedy or two if something isn't done about it.
      Also I have heard some great ATC controllers with good audio as well. Those folks are the best.

  • @SgfGustafsson
    @SgfGustafsson Месяц назад +280

    We're all human, but I think the best point you made is the transparency needed when ATC makes the mistake. I'm a pilot so my perspective is skewed, but it seems like we always get the attention if a mistake is made. ATC yells at you, you get a phone number, there is the investigation, and all of it is available to the public. When ATC slips up it almost slips under the radar and you don't get to hear much about it. I'm not perfect and neither is anyone else, I am lucky to not have made grave mistake yet.. I do wish that the investigations were handled equally in regards to pilot and ATC deviations.

    • @markwhatley9955
      @markwhatley9955 Месяц назад +51

      The government has never been very good at calling themselves out. But they’ll call you out sure enough.

    • @gustavgans8278
      @gustavgans8278 Месяц назад +52

      I work in ATC in Europe and the airport I've worked at had one incident a few years back when two aircraft were cleared on intersecting RWYs for take off. This was ONE incident in a few years and it got a lot of attention within the ANSP, the state body and changes were made to prevent anything like that happening ever again. In that case the investigations were thorough and effective and published publicly for everyone to read.
      Our system today, in the tower would immediately give a warning when one controller clears an aircraft for takeoff while another is cleared to cross. It's a simple tool, that would have alerted the ATCO in all of the three incidents, much earlier. Potentially even while giving the clearance in the first place.
      It's really worrying though, to observe the current events in the US. There must be inherent systematical flaws, that allow these incidents to occur at this alarming rate. I don't know if its an increase in incidents or "just" that we hear about more of them... it unacceptable, regardless.

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Месяц назад +7

      @@gustavgans8278 Thank you very much for this informative statement!👍

    • @44R0Ndin
      @44R0Ndin Месяц назад +12

      @@gustavgans8278
      You forget that this is America, the orders from on high are "push tin fast", not "push tin as fast as you can safely" and the difference in those two sets of orders is why we're seeing what we're seeing.

    • @RichUK5
      @RichUK5 Месяц назад +12

      Sounds a lot like the FAA marking it's own homework doesn't it. That's going really well for Boeing at the moment too... I think it makes sense for a 3rd party like the NTSB to be investigating ATC incidents. I'm not interested in holding the individual controllers to account, clearly there is a systemic issue across the country given these 4 incidents were at four different airports.

  • @Cappy22279
    @Cappy22279 Месяц назад +93

    I am a 69 year old retired airline captain with 54 years and over 30K hours.
    I have watched the US airline industry sink into a very disorganized mess. Airlines hiring pilots and awarding captain bids within a year. Very low experience level for entire cockpit. ATC with similar issues. Add in a record number of aircraft flying and ohh yeah, BOEING. Needless to say, I do not fly. No way. With reduced visibility at JFK, it would have been a horrific accident with hundreds of dead. Hundreds of dead. Stop the insanity. All aircraft using a runway must always be on the same frequency! This must stop.

    • @Kevin19700
      @Kevin19700 Месяц назад +5

      Very well said!

    • @BamaCyn
      @BamaCyn Месяц назад

      I haven't flown since early 2001. I agree that flying is a scary thought now and hope I never need to fly again.

    • @Justin.Franks
      @Justin.Franks Месяц назад +6

      I was just thinking the same thing. Had the weather been bad at JFK that day, it is all but guaranteed that a high-speed collision would have occurred. They might have gotten lucky and missed one or two, but when you have FOUR planes crossing, there is little chance of scraping by all of them. Depending on the specific aircraft, it could have been worse than Tenerife. Both the Swiss plane taking off and one of the crossing planes were widebodies.

    • @tullochgorum6323
      @tullochgorum6323 Месяц назад +1

      @@BamaCyn Even if safety standards are slipping a bit, US commercial aviation is still 3x safer per mile than trains and 57 times safer than domestic cars. Seems that people aren't very good at judging risk!

    • @AlanMydland-fq2vs
      @AlanMydland-fq2vs Месяц назад

      i agree😢

  • @ctbale1
    @ctbale1 Месяц назад +26

    Former Alaska Airlines technician here Juan, we owe you a debt of gratitude for what your doing on this channel. Thank you.

    • @jamesrecknor6752
      @jamesrecknor6752 Месяц назад

      Even us certified master toilet technicians [plumbers] think Juan is the best of the best

  • @heinzpilot
    @heinzpilot Месяц назад +509

    Retired captain here. This has gotten out of hand. Things are falling apart in America's aviation.

    • @citizenblue
      @citizenblue Месяц назад +86

      It's not just aviation.

    • @ourlifeinwyoming4654
      @ourlifeinwyoming4654 Месяц назад +89

      Things are falling apart in America's ___________________ *insert here.

    • @festerofest4374
      @festerofest4374 Месяц назад +121

      @@citizenblue At least we are making great strides in being "greener," and diversity!

    • @elderbob100
      @elderbob100 Месяц назад +55

      As we circle the drain, you may want to increase the bank angle.

    • @inspector4133
      @inspector4133 Месяц назад +34

      @@ourlifeinwyoming4654 It's not just America.

  • @jimsvideos7201
    @jimsvideos7201 Месяц назад +215

    To quote a notable movie: "This business will get out of control. It will get out of control and we'll be lucky to live through it."

    • @johanjacobs9240
      @johanjacobs9240 Месяц назад +30

      Red October? Remember that one. Excellent movie by the way.

    • @cunn9305
      @cunn9305 Месяц назад +2

      So true ...

    • @fhturner3
      @fhturner3 Месяц назад +26

      @@johanjacobs9240 And, interestingly, Fred Dalton Thompson, the actor playing the Admiral on CVN-65 Enterprise in that movie that made the quote above also plays an air traffic controller in Die Hard 2... "Stack 'em, pack 'em, and rack 'em."😊

    • @leinonibishop9480
      @leinonibishop9480 Месяц назад +10

      @@fhturner3 as well as being an actor in several movies and tv shows (he was on law and order too) he was also a US Senator for 9 years, sat on several government advisory and security committees, and ran for president in 2008.

    • @KevinT3141
      @KevinT3141 Месяц назад +12

      ​@@fhturner3 Yup, when I read the comment I immediately heard that voice in my head and thought of Die Hard 2. Then I saw the Red October comment and was like, "D'oh, of course!"

  • @WWPlaysHoldem
    @WWPlaysHoldem Месяц назад +125

    Retired controller, manager. This has been brewing for 2 decades.

    • @wturn5354
      @wturn5354 Месяц назад +6

      Yes, no accountability now, deals don’t matter. NATCA runs the agency now.

    • @theGGonYT
      @theGGonYT Месяц назад +3

      @@wturn5354 LMFAO if NATCA ran the agency, you'd think controller salaries would've kept up with inflation. NATCA can't even legally strike.

    • @WWPlaysHoldem
      @WWPlaysHoldem Месяц назад +4

      @@theGGonYT Controller salaries have far exceeded inflation over the last 50-40-30-20 years. I started in 1968 at $2.97 an hour.

    • @wturn5354
      @wturn5354 Месяц назад +2

      @@theGGonYT controllers receive raises yearly to keep up with inflation. Every year when I was working and now in retirement I received the annual COLA raise plus whatever general raise the President approved, plus any “time in grade”. Controllers are very well compensated, if I was still working my yearly salary would be well over 200k as basically a GS15, although controllers have their own pay band designator now. Pretty good pay for generally 5 hours a day on position, many federal holidays, and 26 vacation days and 13 sick days. So, compensation is VERY good.

    • @wturn5354
      @wturn5354 Месяц назад +2

      @@WWPlaysHoldem So true! These morons talking about pay without ANY knowledge. I retired 12 years ago at $84 an hour! If still working I would be around $125 at least. My monthly COLA pay increase last year in retirement was around $800. I had a great career, and was well compensated and knew it!

  • @Cirrus3688
    @Cirrus3688 Месяц назад +32

    Being used to strict and precise german ATC two things across the pond still confuses me:
    - two controllers responsible for one runway (in Germany you always have a handover to tower for crossing an active runway - so one person, one runway)
    - receiving landing clearance before the runway is yours, sometimes even two or three aircraft on approach are already cleared to land (In GER the runway is all yours when cleared to land)
    With safety standards being the highest in aviation I still don't get why no one is seeing those issues as a serious hazard... 😵‍💫

    • @beeble2003
      @beeble2003 Месяц назад +5

      I think it's only the US that allows a landing clearance onto a runway that has traffic on it.

    • @tacticallemon7518
      @tacticallemon7518 Месяц назад +1

      You’re surprised America has a competence shortage?
      have you heard of some of the shit our politicians do?

    • @jamesrecknor6752
      @jamesrecknor6752 Месяц назад +2

      @@tacticallemon7518 Senator Biden wants to know your location

    • @cola98765
      @cola98765 29 дней назад +2

      I was thinking that this separation would be needed for keep that minimum safety. Good to know it's done like that over here.

    • @kL-pb9yx
      @kL-pb9yx 14 дней назад

      That’s how it’s done South Africa.

  • @lborate3543
    @lborate3543 Месяц назад +158

    The pilots have sterile cockpits, the towers do not have those same requirements. That's a good call Juan!

    • @tommytfaa
      @tommytfaa Месяц назад

      That is not entirely true

    • @flybobbie1449
      @flybobbie1449 Месяц назад

      Why aren't controllers in their own booth, with no distractions.

    • @CaptainKevin
      @CaptainKevin Месяц назад +3

      @@flybobbie1449 If you mean like a cubicle, I assume because controllers still have to look out the window, so putting walls up won't help there. Additionally, if you have to coordinate with another controller for something, putting walls up won't help there.

    • @tommytfaa
      @tommytfaa Месяц назад +1

      ​@@flybobbie1449 They are it is called a tower cab. Just like pilots have a cockpit. They have multiple controllers with different jobs depending on the size of the airport. I mid size airport would usually have 1 tower 1 ground and one cic or sup. Larger ones have multiple grounds and tower controllers

    • @tommytfaa
      @tommytfaa Месяц назад

      ​@@CaptainKevinyeah ground and tower need to talk to each other

  • @akaknowlesy10
    @akaknowlesy10 Месяц назад +407

    Unfortunately I think there will be an accident if this isn’t cleaned up. These mistakes are becoming more and more common.

    • @andrewb9590
      @andrewb9590 Месяц назад +35

      Juan’s pause just before, and then the resignation in his voice as he says “inevitable” is chilling.
      There are plenty of lessons learned in aviation, but I think this falls into the category of lessons YET TO BE learned.

    • @russellmillett5642
      @russellmillett5642 Месяц назад +24

      ​@andrewb9590 the largest loss of life ever in an aircraft disaster happened this way? Look up the Tenerife Airport Disaster

    • @andrewb9590
      @andrewb9590 Месяц назад +11

      @@russellmillett5642 I’m familiar with that one. If I recall correctly though, it was a pilot ignoring ATC instructions that caused that one. The ones covered here are accidents that (nearly) happened by following ATC instruction.

    • @russellmillett5642
      @russellmillett5642 Месяц назад +10

      @andrewb9590 that's fair, I thought we were just discussing runway collisions in general. I do believe you're correct

    • @russellmillett5642
      @russellmillett5642 Месяц назад +3

      @@Plutogalaxy I would still argue that the lesson to be learned from that incident and these are the same. The question mark had nothing to do with my assurance of what I was saying.

  • @Orxenhorf
    @Orxenhorf Месяц назад +36

    Sounds like the same problem that's been creeping into law enforcement for ages. As long as they get to self-investigate (and find they've done nothing wrong) nothing ever gets fixed.

    • @Alex_Coaster_Adventurer
      @Alex_Coaster_Adventurer Месяц назад

      Here it's getting investigated by the Swiss "NTSB". So more likely to produce something of value.

  • @DLRPyro1
    @DLRPyro1 Месяц назад +11

    It's amazing that ATC didn't call SwissAir to reject. Fortunately the SwissAir pilot was awake and handled the situation well

  • @pitts64lb
    @pitts64lb Месяц назад +308

    Controllers are VERY friendly when they screw up.

    • @cooperparts
      @cooperparts Месяц назад +5

      You said it when they

    • @pilotembgamers4644
      @pilotembgamers4644 Месяц назад +27

      Yeah funny the double standard right?

    • @clarkpj1
      @clarkpj1 Месяц назад +2

      That is soooooooooooo true!!!

    • @jaysmith1408
      @jaysmith1408 Месяц назад +6

      Probably because the problem controller is almost immediately benched, and replaced with the more senior and level headed soup.

    • @leechjim8023
      @leechjim8023 Месяц назад

      So are drunk drivers!😮

  • @tomcrozier9548
    @tomcrozier9548 Месяц назад +309

    I don’t think prizes should be handed out for how fast you speak anymore, regardless of how cool it made you look in the olden days.

    • @6yjjk
      @6yjjk Месяц назад +24

      "CLAH!" is not a landing clearance!

    • @whophd
      @whophd Месяц назад

      @@6yjjk”kladala” click

    • @mikediamond353
      @mikediamond353 Месяц назад +27

      "Clahdalah" I said it three times!

    • @hotrodray6802
      @hotrodray6802 Месяц назад +7

      AMEN 👍👍👍

    • @leroycharles9751
      @leroycharles9751 Месяц назад +22

      Amen to that. Slow down a little. Also, cut out all the niceties like "good day", "see ya", and what ever you can come up with. Just acknowledge and repeat what is required. Nobody cares about your greetings and good byes.

  • @akb5531
    @akb5531 Месяц назад +34

    I agree with Gryder on this one: the ATC should run like the cockpit! Nothing but work going on in the tower; no tours, no music, no casual conversations, etc.

    • @tommytfaa
      @tommytfaa Месяц назад

      Tours and music lol. Okay

  • @noonedude101
    @noonedude101 Месяц назад +14

    A lot of us flying Part 121 have added a new call out in response to this.
    In addition to the stabilized approach call, now many of us are scanning all intersecting runways and taxiways, then saying, “All traffic clear of the runway.”
    Tenerife is going to happen again if the spacing at these airports isn’t brought under control.

  • @JohnChuprun
    @JohnChuprun Месяц назад +112

    VASaviation is impressive how he gets them out so fast... huge respect.

    • @BOHICA_
      @BOHICA_ Месяц назад

      Why is this "respect"? What does that even attribute?

    • @JohnChuprun
      @JohnChuprun Месяц назад +4

      @@BOHICA_ His commitment to delivering this breakdown to the public as fast as possible - even if it's midnight (which he's done several times in the past). He works odd hours and finds the audio that is not easy to get sometimes. That is respectable. He is also a big part of the aviation community and doesn't strike people down for showing his work.

  • @MartyBecker
    @MartyBecker Месяц назад +49

    Maybe for the JFK incident, they need to adopt what they do at Zürich.
    Aircraft land on Rwy 14 and need to cross Rwy 28 to get to the south side terminal. Exiting Rwy 14, they are switched to Ground and taxi towards Rwy 28. Upon holding short of Rwy 28, they are instructed to contact the Tower for crossing Rwy 28. After the Tower tells the aircraft to cross Rwy 28 and it has crossed, the aircraft is then again switched to Ground for the rest of the taxi.
    Only the Tower can tell an aircraft to cross an active runway. No multiple frequencies used like at JFK.
    My personal thought: The Tower owns any active runway and only they can tell an aircraft to cross it; giving permission to Ground to tell the aircraft is not acceptable.

    • @yungrichnbroke5199
      @yungrichnbroke5199 Месяц назад +11

      This is the only option that makes sense

    • @danielparkin1043
      @danielparkin1043 Месяц назад +13

      And standard procedure the world over, except the US. While a lot of the comments here suggest that government funding is an issue the US system needs to change. Continuing on this trajectory, the US is going to have a Tenerife; it's just a matter of when not if.

    • @CaptainKevin
      @CaptainKevin Месяц назад

      They were both tower controllers. At JFK, during busy periods, 123.9 handles departures and arrivals on runway 4L/22R and 13R/31L, and 119.1 handles arrivals on runway 4R/22L and 13L/31R. In the case of 4R/22L, they also handle the crossing on 4L/22R. When it isn't busy, 123.9 doesn't get used, and 119.1 handles everything. Additionally, when 4L/22R is used for departures, it's possible to have departures off of 31L at KE. The ground controller wasn't involved at all. In this particular incident, the planes landing on 4R were on 119.1 up until they crossed 4L.

    • @CaptainKevin
      @CaptainKevin Месяц назад

      @@danielparkin1043 Different depending on the airport. At O'Hare, from what I've seen, the ground controller will instruct planes to switch to tower in the event they need to cross a runway, and once they cross, they go back to ground.

  • @christianpayne6826
    @christianpayne6826 Месяц назад +8

    I drive suburban railcars in Australia and your barely concealed frustration at the lack of transparency if control makes a mistake is exactly how I feel in my line of work also. Mistakes happen, its human. I never want to needlessly throw someone under the bus, but just like with ATC, train drivers here have very little transparency available when potential conflicts occur in a controlled location.
    The pilots in this video definitely did the right thing getting their voice on record here, and I think its extremely important to ALWAYS speak up if something seems off.
    No-one will ever red card you for valid questioning over frequency. In fact we are trained to be assertive over radio for this reason.
    Speak up and stay safe

  • @Henoik
    @Henoik Месяц назад +9

    As a European I am also astonished that you can clear several aircraft to use the same runway at the same time. That definitely does not instate any sort of control or barrier around those runways

  • @richardpeugeot6062
    @richardpeugeot6062 Месяц назад +144

    Juan, i fly for one of the airlines involved in the DCA incident. Over the past few months i have observed as many as three runways in use for departure all of which intersect. The controllers here push departures and arrivals to expedite the flow and at times it can be quite stressful even for an experienced pilot. Last month i landed at dusk after being asked to follow a preceding aircraft that was not following the river visual profile correctly. This caused a potential spacing issue but tower launched another aircraft in between us and then upon landing, asked us to expedite off the runway for a departing aircraft. So i am not surprised to learn of this controller error that could have led to a serious accident. From now on when i push back from the gate and ground asks if i can accept any other runway besides 1/19, i will tell the FO to say unable. Risk mitigation!

    • @SkylineFTW97
      @SkylineFTW97 Месяц назад +12

      I'm not a pilot, but a hobbyist spotter who often watches from Gravelly Point. I've noticed they've been using the intersecting runways more and more. I didn't think the situation was as dire as it is, but it makes sense.

    • @vbscript2
      @vbscript2 Месяц назад +4

      The runway layout at DCA is really unfortunate. Parallel runways are the way to go, not 3 runways where all 3 cross each of the other two. Of course, even with parallel runways, as this video clearly demonstrates, the controllers really need to be paying attention.
      In my opinion, if two different runways need different controllers working them (such as the examples here,) the aircraft should be handed over to the controller working the runway they're about to cross after landing rather than staying with the controller that handled their landing, but who is focusing on the other landing aircraft behind them rather than on the ones that are about to depart from the runway they're clearing aircraft to cross. Yes, it's an extra frequency change, but it would prevent stuff like this.

    • @grayrabbit2211
      @grayrabbit2211 Месяц назад +5

      DCA has approximately the same amount of aircraft operations per year as Gatwick. Perhaps DCA needs to go down to single runway operation like LGW does.

    • @vbscript2
      @vbscript2 Месяц назад +2

      @@grayrabbit2211 Or Gatwick could do like sane places and build more runways. They really need at least 2 parallel runways, 3 would be better. Also, DCA had 23% more runway operations than LGW last year (310k vs. 253k.)
      For comparison, BNA actually does have about the same number of runway operations as LGW (272k at BNA vs. 253k at LGW) and it has 3 parallel runways plus a crosswind runway.

    • @user-iw7ut2ls9l
      @user-iw7ut2ls9l Месяц назад +2

      In the days of DC-9s and 727s that was the only runway with some proppers on the other two. Maybe a STOL landing. Now with higher climbing everything and a million RJs. They really need a foul deck system ala aircraft carrier there. DCA is an awesome airport to watch. They have always had dangerous lapses. Question is the rate of dangerous lapses up or down. Few accidents though. AA MD-80 and Air Florida only I recall.

  • @gordonbruce2416
    @gordonbruce2416 Месяц назад +92

    In 1995 we had a very similar incident at Honolulu when we were cleared to land on 4R while another large aircraft was cleared to land simultaneously on 8L. A slightly higher pitched voice directed us to stop short of 8R which we did with maximum braking as the other aircraft went speeding across our nose!

    • @dreamcatcher5502
      @dreamcatcher5502 Месяц назад +1

      Aloha and Mahalo 🤙😎🤦‍♀️😂

  • @saabpoppa
    @saabpoppa Месяц назад +12

    You said something about one of the crews "dragging their feet"... The misperception between controllers and pilots about how long it takes to run checklists and act on a clearance is a perennial problem. At my local airport we've had conferences with the class D folks in regard to the differences between jet and prop training traffic. ATC's expectation is sometimes that the pilot/crew will act immediately -- "do what you're told", but the reality of cockpit operations is different and the perception gap can cause issues.

  • @TiagoSeiler
    @TiagoSeiler Месяц назад +9

    We have a saying in skydiving which applies to ATC as well: "slow is smooth, smooth is fast". When you're trying to speak at 4000 words a minute, you're just going to end up having to repeat yourself, and that in the end, will take more time. Take the proper time to do it slow and correctly the FIRST time, and THAT'S how you'll save time at the end of the day.

    • @beeble2003
      @beeble2003 Месяц назад

      OK but none of these incidents was a result of somebody talking too fast. They happened because controllers gave contradictory instructions, which were perfectly understood and acted on by the pilots.

  • @thedevilinthecircuit1414
    @thedevilinthecircuit1414 Месяц назад +88

    That JFK situation...imagine if it were raining or foggy and visibility was hindered. SwissAir would've pressed for takeoff and we'd be seeing the story of the disaster in the news.

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Месяц назад +3

      Indeed. At low visibility the Swiss A 330 would probably have crashed into the Delta 767, both with 200 plus X People on Board.

    • @josephoberlander
      @josephoberlander Месяц назад +6

      If they had immediately started their takeoff after turning, as is quite common, they'd be going 100mph+ by the time this started evolving. Coming to a stop... maybe in time? But, yes, low visibility for sure would have been at least 2 or all 5 planes involved as it was the pilot who said no, not the tower - they were unaware from the sound of it.

    • @Orxenhorf
      @Orxenhorf Месяц назад +8

      Unfortunately, that's probably what it will take for them to fix the problem.

    • @andrewlorenzo6611
      @andrewlorenzo6611 Месяц назад

      Doesn't matter, JFK has an ASDEX

    • @webcucciolo
      @webcucciolo Месяц назад

      ​@@josephoberlander they were cleared only for lineup and wait, so they couldn't take off right after turning

  • @AlyssaM_InfoSec
    @AlyssaM_InfoSec Месяц назад +58

    It's particularly nerve racking at these larger airports where you have multiple tower and ground frequencies. So hard to build any situational awareness as a pilot. Good on these pilots for still seeing the issues unfold and respond quickly to avoid disaster.

  • @thomascason2414
    @thomascason2414 Месяц назад +17

    Given the staffing levels and the workload placed on the atc team it should no surprise that these kind of things occur. Pilots have strict work/rest requirements. They would never waked to pull a double over the graveyard shift but the folks on the ground responsible for that phase of “flight” are required to do it all the time.
    Juan, thanks for banging the drum on this issue.

  • @davetenery4611
    @davetenery4611 Месяц назад +38

    I am a licensed pilot and a licensed air traffic controller. I also work at CAE as a right seat support for Citation X pilots. I am scared to death about the future of USA’s aviation safety. The entire system of training from the ground up is being filled by kids with more zits than experience and they are just passing on the vomit they were fed with no understanding. The pool of experience and decision making skills has given way to swallow this, vomit out that, here’s your rating and license. In air traffic control and flight schools. Yes, disaster is on its way.

    • @gpaolino
      @gpaolino Месяц назад +2

      Hi, Dave! I, too am a pilot (ASEL Commercial/Instrument, Mountain, Glass Cockpit, Complex), trained in the vicinity of the SFO class Bravo. Jason Miller of "The finer Points" youtube channel is in my logbook as instructor. I, too, am petrified at the lack of relevant experience that ATC has in or around aircraft. I'm not sure how I feel about the age restriction for controller hire, as it is thrusting young people who can't even afford a teaser flight in a 152 into controlling a sky full of aircraft. I've also known folks who have attempted the transition from 20-yr-old CFI to 121 and 135 operations. Both of these paths are fraught with danger due to no one having any industry wisdom anymore, but only the rote knowledge they've just absorbed from their own CFI's or ATC training staff. Add to that the fact that in aviation Cockiness is the inverse square of Age as Age has wisdom on its side due to experiencing just how easily one can get oneself killed for the slightest lapse of duty or attention. Let's all try to remember the old quote:
      “Aviation in itself is not inherently dangerous. But to an even greater degree than the sea, it is terribly unforgiving of any carelessness, incapacity or neglect.” Captain A. G. Lamplugh,

    • @jimsteinway695
      @jimsteinway695 Месяц назад +4

      Don’t forget the DEI hires the current administration is pushing

    • @NigelWinfrey
      @NigelWinfrey Месяц назад

      It will affect more than just aviation. The entire American infrastructure will soon crumble.

  • @michaelhoffmann2891
    @michaelhoffmann2891 Месяц назад +69

    For comparison, American listeners could "dial into" LiveATC and listen to something like Sydney or Melbourne in Australia. Even if you are unfamiliar with our "notorious" accents, you should find that you'll have little trouble understanding ATC, be it tower or app/dep. It's fast, but not clipped, no slang, no abbreviations or references that only locals would get, pure ICAO terminology. (fun fact: until a few years ago, you could even hear an American accent! a well-known controller who left the USA after PATCO fiasco and had a long continued career here in the Melbourne airspace)

    • @pgilb70
      @pgilb70 Месяц назад +5

      Hk ATC too. Clear, easy to follow instructions.

    • @jackfromthe60s
      @jackfromthe60s Месяц назад +3

      That American guy on Melbourne ATC was good.

    • @eriechannel5139
      @eriechannel5139 Месяц назад +5

      As an aviation enthusiast and former GA pilot, I've listened to ATC all over the world. I find MOST non-US ATC easier to understand than JFK - and I'm an American.

    • @davidkavanagh189
      @davidkavanagh189 Месяц назад +2

      Basically most of the world apart from Murica. Except for a few places, Euro ATC is exceptionally good too.

    • @beeble2003
      @beeble2003 Месяц назад +1

      "you'll have little trouble understanding ATC"
      But none of these incidents was caused by somebody not understanding ATC. Everybody understood ATC perfectly. The problem is that ATC was instructing people to crash their planes into each other.

  • @timothypropst238
    @timothypropst238 Месяц назад +82

    As an Airbus captain that flew a lot into LAS and LAX I would always square my turn onto the taxiway I was holding short on so we could see the departure end of the runway we were about to cross.

    • @MrTruckerf
      @MrTruckerf Месяц назад

      I hoe all pilots are as wise.

    • @tedwalford7615
      @tedwalford7615 Месяц назад +6

      Smart. They should make that a rule.

    • @hiscifi2986
      @hiscifi2986 Месяц назад +7

      I always do that, and I only drive a van..!

    • @MrTruckerf
      @MrTruckerf Месяц назад

      Everyone should, I would think.

    • @Luke_275
      @Luke_275 Месяц назад

      @@hiscifi2986hahaha I was thinking the exact thing

  • @rhfil
    @rhfil Месяц назад +6

    Long, long ago I was an ATC supervisor. Coordination is absolutely necessary and it is the role of the Tower Supervisor.

  • @andrewluymes2977
    @andrewluymes2977 Месяц назад +10

    Our SOPs before crossing any runway is " clear left, clear right" well before we cross any runway.

  • @BillySugger1965
    @BillySugger1965 Месяц назад +115

    Juan this situation is seriously messed up. Good job in highlighting this in conjunction with Victor. With the debacle at Boeing, US aviation already has a sinking reputation. A US version of Tenerife will not only kill a lot of people unnecessarily, and will decimate the remaining confidence in the US aviation industry.

    • @kenbrown2808
      @kenbrown2808 Месяц назад +2

      was just wondering how the boeing haters were going to blame this on boeing.

    • @whophd
      @whophd Месяц назад

      October Surprise for election year

    • @mikediamond353
      @mikediamond353 Месяц назад

      Boeing has been chosen by the Deep State to suffer coal raking.
      All the airplanes decided on a month to turn BAD. CONSPIRACY!

    • @dpeasehead
      @dpeasehead Месяц назад +5

      @@kenbrown2808 Boeing has and continues to earn 90% of the criticism that has been leveled at it. Has that company determined responsibility for that faulty door installation yet , or, are they still shucking and jiving as if no one outside of Boeing knows how serious that one situation is and what it says about its safety and accountability cultures?

    • @kenbrown2808
      @kenbrown2808 Месяц назад +1

      @@dpeasehead no. boeing is currently being blamed for every mishap that affects a boeing plane, even when the mishap is the fault of the airline maintenance process, or even defective parts that are not Boeing specific, such as the wheel that came apart. yes, Boeing has been shooting itself in the foot unusually prominently, lately, but that doesn't make everything that goes wrong a Boeing problem.

  • @timkellyD2R
    @timkellyD2R Месяц назад +29

    For you guys who have not subscribed to Juan's Patreon, it is well worth it. There are numerous pilots on RUclips but they just do not do the depth of analysis like this channel. Juan brings together extensive experience in general aviation, military aviation and currently flies for the world's largest airline as a 777 pilot to Sydney and London from the western US.

  • @Thomas-sp1pp
    @Thomas-sp1pp Месяц назад +8

    Your last comments about the ATC SYSTEM is spot on, ATC and mostly management has degraded, I was an ATC CONTROLLER for 31 years, retired in 2003, it was always a difficult yet rewarding job, all the facilities I worked at had strict requirements for local controller operating the runways and ground controller operating taxiways which crossed runways to immediately coordinate crossing clearances before issued. Obviously that procedure is lacking and and failing the flying public....controllers are just ASSUMING and gambling .....thus the potential for collision incident is going to happen. The FAA is lacking and failing the flying public.

  • @msethhunter
    @msethhunter Месяц назад +4

    I work at the same airline Juan, and I keep looking for you in the terminal to shake your hand. The LAS situation is, IMO, how it’s supposed to go. Only tower should be able to clear an aircraft to cross, so everyone in the loop can hear what’s happening on frequency. When a controller has the ability to create a conflict on a piece of pavement they don’t own the control of, the left hand has the ability to not know what the right hand is doing.
    Keep these coming. I always learn something. 👍

  • @pwe52
    @pwe52 Месяц назад +57

    I spent 30 years with one of the major airlines and every runway crossing involved both pilots looking out the window to make sure it was safe. That saved us one day in MSP when we were cleared to cross runway 4 while a DC-10 was rolling. I held short and ground reminded me we were cleared to cross; that changed when I pointed out the 10 that was coming our way. Having flown countless times to JFK, DCA, LAS & LAX I am perplexed that no one in these episodes noticed the departing aircraft and stopped.

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Месяц назад +14

      Indeed, a very good Point! In the JFK incident four Captains had the chance to see that the Swiss A 330 is starting his take-off-roll and none of them catched it.

    • @jasonperry7970
      @jasonperry7970 Месяц назад +11

      The school bus/train crossing law needs to be applied to aircraft crossing active runways. Stop look and listen.

    • @alexhajnal107
      @alexhajnal107 Месяц назад +7

      Learned that in kindergarten, "look both ways before crossing the street." Surprised it isn't SOP.

    • @thecrazyswede2495
      @thecrazyswede2495 Месяц назад

      @jasonperry7970
      @alexhajnal107
      That's very good! In Sweden we had the same training. "When crossing the street, look left, then right, then left again". (That last left is because, with automobiles driving on the right side of the road, looking to the right you have your back turned to those cars that are closest to you, coming right at you. So making a last look left minimizes the risks for a huge splat.) cheers / CS

  • @ericl1421
    @ericl1421 Месяц назад +130

    If there was low visibility bad weather it would have been Tenerife 😮.

    • @roryoconnor4989
      @roryoconnor4989 Месяц назад +6

      Exactly.

    • @trilight3597
      @trilight3597 Месяц назад +6

      It would've been worse and a combo like CanadaAir almost was when it almost landed on a taxiway a while back.

    • @TheVillageIdiotUk
      @TheVillageIdiotUk Месяц назад

      Sadly too true. Very alarming as an interested non-pilot. It strikes me that workload is way too high - JFK controllers are talking so fast I have no idea how the guys in the short sleeved white shirts and gold stripped epaulets comprehend every word.

    • @X737_
      @X737_ Месяц назад +1

      No, because there’s now the live map system. Also the tcas probably warned Swissair

    • @roryoconnor4989
      @roryoconnor4989 Месяц назад +27

      @@X737_ tcas doesn’t function on the ground.

  • @i_r_matty
    @i_r_matty 24 дня назад +3

    Ex-London controller here. Great review of events and considerations here, good job.
    You lot really need to calm down the complexity of your operations, especially when it comes to airport layouts. Stop trying to be heroes and standardise/systemise things. We did away with most cross-runways yonks ago in the UK (especially Heathrow) and make do with 2 parallels (aprons in middle, minimal crossing), or even 1 for Gatwick (and I bet they shift considerably more there than DCA…).
    Take a look at Munich’s layout operation. It’s a dream, and incredibly simple/standardised. Take a leaf from their book and stop trying to be heroes

  • @elmangado
    @elmangado Месяц назад +17

    I don't understand the practice in the US of simultaneous clearences for the same runway. Everywhere else in the world (with certain exeptions in some banana countries) I can expect the runway in front of me to be clear the moment I get my T/O or LDG clearence. Hey, what do we have the clearances for? Is it just a coincidence that clearence contains the word CLEAR?

    • @loopbackish
      @loopbackish Месяц назад +2

      Americans will defend this practice to the death, which is ironic.

    • @Alex_Coaster_Adventurer
      @Alex_Coaster_Adventurer Месяц назад

      @@loopbackish Why would they defend the practice if it leads to incidents tho?

    • @loopbackish
      @loopbackish Месяц назад +2

      @Alex_Coaster_Adventurer they say it improves efficiency because they can get the clearance "out of the way" and the pilot can land at discretion. Unfortunately this doesn't explain how it is supposed to work in low visibility when you can only see 200m down the runway. The rest of the world uses "continue approach, expect late clearance" or if they really want the pilot to make the decision "land at discretion"

    • @francoisjackson
      @francoisjackson Месяц назад

      @elmangado Does the US now qualify as a banana country?

  • @xDefender11
    @xDefender11 Месяц назад +349

    That woman yelling STOP STOP STOP is nightmare fuel

    • @haqvor
      @haqvor Месяц назад +43

      She really saved the day!

    • @ValerieGriner
      @ValerieGriner Месяц назад +14

      Yes! That was really scary!

    • @atcdude067
      @atcdude067 Месяц назад +32

      Why? At least someone was saying something.

    • @ValerieGriner
      @ValerieGriner Месяц назад +52

      @@atcdude067 NOT proper protocol...but good thing she yelled it.

    • @meofnz2320
      @meofnz2320 Месяц назад +19

      @@ValerieGriner
      What is the proper protocol for impending disaster..?

  • @rickdecastro4584
    @rickdecastro4584 Месяц назад +78

    When a pilot screws up, people die.
    When ATC screws up, people die.

    • @Breenild
      @Breenild Месяц назад +19

      But when the pilot screws up he also dies.
      But the controller neither!

    • @umi3017
      @umi3017 Месяц назад +15

      When a pilot screws up, pilot dies
      When ATC screws up, pilot dies.

    • @jhsevs
      @jhsevs Месяц назад +6

      When a pilot screws up, someone loses their job and there is lots of paperwork and investigation.
      When ATC screws up, the day continues as normal.

    • @skyboy1956
      @skyboy1956 Месяц назад +4

      In all cases, controller gets in car and goes home.

    • @sootikins
      @sootikins Месяц назад +2

      When ATC screws up the controller goes home, has a beer and gets on the phone to his union rep to plan how they're going to shield him from all responsibility.

  • @josephoberlander
    @josephoberlander Месяц назад +8

    As I see it, it's that the airports are practically in the position of serfs to the airlines and don't stand up for themselves and say "no more flights". Just keep cramming them in closer and closer to each other, hoping that the overworked ( and under-staffed) controllers never make a single mistake. Because everyone in management on both sides wants more flights and more profits.

  • @marklittle8805
    @marklittle8805 Месяц назад +14

    I was a failed ATC candidate in Canada with what was then Transport Canada. First rule we learned in Airport ops was the departure arrival controller owned access to his runway. There was no crossing an live runway if it was cleared for a departure or if there was an AC short final. These guys at JFK are playing fast and loose

  • @tomcrozier9548
    @tomcrozier9548 Месяц назад +24

    There’s a saying in the software development industry: “If you want to go fast, go slowly.”

    • @critterwatcher8009
      @critterwatcher8009 Месяц назад +5

      I was taught (about anything) if you don't have time to do it right the first time, how do you think you'll find twice the time to redo it.

    • @TopDedCenter1
      @TopDedCenter1 Месяц назад

      'slow is smooth and smooth is fast'.

  • @marcomcdowell8861
    @marcomcdowell8861 Месяц назад +41

    Not aircraft related, but similar in actions. In the military working comm during training center ops, I'm passively listening to chatter on the net aka radio watch. One of our engineer units were scheduled for a range usage and were building bunkers. it's a pretty mundane task if you're not actively communicating and you can zone out. I was on the verge when I caught range control clearing 81mm mortars to fire onto the same range. I know what I heard, but couldn't believe it, so I called a check fire and asked range to verify. He did and checked his schedule, and caught his error. He tried to play it off like he gave them different coordinants until they ran the tapes. All he had to do was fess up to the mistake. No thanks was needed because stuff happens and everyone looks out for each other, but he fought it to the end, even with the tapes clearly revealing what he said. Don't cover it up, take the L and learn.

    • @alexhajnal107
      @alexhajnal107 Месяц назад +1

      Might some form of lockout-tagout system help prevent that?

    • @bruiserdotcom
      @bruiserdotcom Месяц назад +1

      Engineering would thank you greatly

    • @keithbrown9198
      @keithbrown9198 Месяц назад +2

      Yep. I used to have to go out to the Crow Valley range in the Philippines to recover airdrop loads and we had to check in with the range officer. If it was hot, we'd sit in the tower and watch the show (and it was spectacular). God forbid they effed up and we were down there working when an airstrike was inbound. Granted they were only practice bombs, but still a huge projectile traveling at about 300 kts. Would not have been a good day...And I was lucky enough to have served between all the "wars" (except Grenada) so I can't compare it to what the GWOT guys have been through in Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Somalia (stop me when the list gets too long)....

    • @MrTruckerf
      @MrTruckerf Месяц назад +2

      @@alexhajnal107 Yes. With people on the range huge flags should be visible to all. With ranges which are too long for a visual, it is essential for the firing sector to be 100% certain that the range is clear using communication.

    • @alexhajnal107
      @alexhajnal107 Месяц назад

      @@MrTruckerf I was envisioning something along the lines of lockable gates at the entrances to the firing areas.

  • @timmotel5804
    @timmotel5804 Месяц назад +3

    Good Day Juan and All. As a lay person but with many hours of flight training as a student, I find this INSANE! For a Pilot such as yourself, I can barely imagine what this does to your mind. Each day, the "Holes" in the "Swiss Cheese" grow in number. I understand to the degree that I can, exactly how busy and congested the airways and also the ground traffic situation is. It's seriously time for a Major REGROUP of communications between ATC & Ground Control, or your thought of a Tragedy Will Occur. Safe Flying to You and Best Regards. Thank You.

  • @340ACP
    @340ACP Месяц назад +6

    The race to bottom continues…it’s the same in many walks of life

  • @grenfellroad8394
    @grenfellroad8394 Месяц назад +61

    As someone outside the airline industry, but with an interest in it, I’m concerned that corporate history is being ignored or forgotten, and it’s inevitable that the disasters of the past are going to be repeated. Too much focus on speed and numbers, not enough focus on safety. Stay safe.

    • @davidfrench5407
      @davidfrench5407 Месяц назад +7

      Agreed. I'm an engineer that has done a lot of aviation design, runways, airport master plans. The US is needing more runways, first off (ATL went to 5 fifteen years ago, and has plans for a 6th runway), ORD did good things by mostly getting rid of intersecting runways. But I think ATC is stretched. JFK ground, for example, is fast, fast talk. We're in a hurry to get aircraft to cross active runways, we're in a hurry to clear for takeoff, too much traffic in the system.

    • @grenfellroad8394
      @grenfellroad8394 Месяц назад

      @@davidfrench5407 with runways either side of central terminal/ramp areas, as shown in Juan’s film, why are they all using just one side of the airport for takeoffs and landings? The safest option is to have takeoff to the south of the ramp (for example) and landings to the north, then conflict is hugely reduced. It’s not rocket science.
      Two runways at London Heathrow do exactly that, and keep runway incursions to an absolute minimum. Simple solutions to simple issues.

  • @luhaarunk3085
    @luhaarunk3085 Месяц назад +66

    Saw these on VASAviation and my immediate thought was to wait for your video for more insights. Thank you!

  • @haruncordan4726
    @haruncordan4726 Месяц назад +23

    Current longhaul pilot but new’ish to the US. One of the biggest threats to each arrival and departure into the US is ATC, and for exactly the reasons shown on this channel. The guys and gals are good but the standard procedures they work to are terrible and outdated.I hate to say it, but the US will change to a European style of procedure when the inevitable occurs. Clearing someone to land when another a/c is on the runway is plainly ridiculous. Having ramp control and dodgy handovers from ground to ramp and ramp to tower is an awful concept. Unfortunately US aviation is under the spotlight but hopefully now is the time to change before it’s too late. ‘Pushing Tin’ it isn’t.

    • @simonjc8388
      @simonjc8388 Месяц назад +1

      I agree 100%. It has always seemed absolutely crazy to me that multiple aircraft are cleared to land on the same runway before ensuring the runway is clear (either of departing or preceding landing aircraft ahead). One day with low visibility operations this will turn into a massive tragedy happening. US ATC should carefully study the SOP’s of north european ATC - much more safe way conducting operations. Furthermore, US ATC needs to slow the “duck” down with their talking pace. It does no one any good, instead things has to be repeated many times or maybe even things are not heard. They really need to step up their game and realise it’s not just a game of dots on the screen - it’s people’s lives.
      I fear real action will only be taken once the inevitable tragedy occurs.

  • @johnypitman2368
    @johnypitman2368 Месяц назад +2

    Thanks JB for being one of the best advocates for commercial and private aviation, both for safety and fun

  • @Ridejumpfly
    @Ridejumpfly Месяц назад +19

    FYI there is no more “marking the tapes” as long as it’s within (I believe) 45 days any recording can be looked at easily. It does take FOIA request from the public to get a copy. When you call or ask the controller something like this in LAS the front line manager or controller in charge will fill out a mandatory occurrence report which will be sent to the facility manager, QA specialist etc.

  • @bradleybriggs
    @bradleybriggs Месяц назад +27

    As a subscriber to this wonderful RUclips channel, I have learned that I could never become a pilot. Various reasons prevent me from being a pilot, among the greatest reasons is because I have NEVER been able to understand what practically anybody is saying over the pilot to control communications, much less, repeat it back to the tower.

    • @AndyPat239
      @AndyPat239 Месяц назад +2

      yep any type of brain fog which i have would rule me out. especially at some ungodly hour!

    • @jameshennighan8193
      @jameshennighan8193 Месяц назад +4

      ATC CHAT
      Bradley,
      You are spot on...!
      In my book much of ATC communication is virtually unintelligible.....and especially so at Kennedy, where speed of communication over clarity seems the norm. I suspect that clarity of expression and clear diction.......more than likely the essential and most important part of ATC training...........has been let slip.
      Additionally, I would suggest that the increasing practice of Aircraft Call Signs being only alphabetic....and lacking any number component.......is not helping matters.
      It always seems to me that when an Aircraft Call Sign has a numeric component to it there is additional thinking time and separation in diction available....something lacking where letters only are involved.
      Much of this is part of the fashionable fad for Aircraft Call Signs to be akin to personalised Number Plates, (Tags), on vehicles....
      Clearly a madness....!
      James Hennighan
      Yorkshire, England

    • @JoshuaTootell
      @JoshuaTootell Месяц назад

      I don't have this problem as a private pilot. I'm not flying into this kind of airspace. I normally fly out of an uncontrolled airport, but even talking to the local Class D towers are much calmer.

  • @Jdr1053
    @Jdr1053 Месяц назад +4

    I agree. Voting for transparency. it would be great to see changes in the reporting and investigative processes for ATC incidents.

  • @warrenwilson8398
    @warrenwilson8398 Месяц назад +1

    Thanks much for your videos friend! As always, very informative and well done! I usually don't leave comments, but this time I just need to put my two cents in. I have been a corporate pilot now for close to 40 years...flying mostly Pt 91, but have several years flying 135. In any case, over the years I have noticed the slow and methodical degradation of "Airline" safety. Thankfully, I only have to travel on an airliner twice a year to attend Flight Safety Recurrent every six months so my normal routine for the past several years is catch an Oakland to Wichita flight with a stop over in Las Vegas. Without a doubt this is the most nerve wracking part of my year...that airline flight to and from ICT on Southwest! There are several reasons for my concern...the first being exactly what has been highlighted in this video...the mistakes being made by ATC. Of course, I don't think this situation is entirely the fault of the individual ATC controllers themselves because there are many factors that are making their jobs almost entirely unsustainable at this point. I recently watched a documentary that pointed out most of these professionals are working 6 day weeks and 10 hours per day?! I have not verified the truth of this, but if true...no wonder these folks are making mistakes...and if left unchecked...will end up potentially killing hundreds of people in one accident!
    There are other issues as well...like the increased volume of air traffic, the outdated infrastructure of the ATC system itself and yes, I must mention this incredibly stupid DEI hiring agenda being force fed to many industries including ATC and the Airlines!
    Finally, from an operational standpoint specific to privately operated, high performance aircraft and yet something that affects all areas of Professional Aviation was this move several years ago to a GPS Navigation Based System to handle the flow of air traffic. I think the system over all is very reliable and accurate and it has allowed more aircraft to use the airspace system due to this accuracy. However, I am concerned that the complexity of this system and the severe lack of "Standardization" amongst the different NAV equipment manufacturers is also putting opening up this type of travel to hazardous consequences if continued in it's current state. The entire system is much more difficult to use due to the fact it is much more complex and technical than the old Ground Based Radio System. From the highly complex RNAV Departure and Arrival Procedures (effectively have to be flown via the onboard FMS system) to the crazy RNAV Approach procedures and the different ways each FMS manufacturer has chosen its equipment to utilize the GPS RNAV System is really quite ridiculous!
    A literal book could be written on the issues facing "modern" air travel in the USA, but suffices to say, if something doesn't change in several areas, "we," the traveling public are basically playing Russian Roulette each time we get into a corporate aircraft or airliner. I for one made the decision many years ago that when I am done flying for a living I will at that point become what I call a "John Madden Type" traveler...

  • @JohnnyPerth
    @JohnnyPerth Месяц назад +87

    This is particularly scary after the recent collision in Japan, of flight 516. ,

    • @6yjjk
      @6yjjk Месяц назад +27

      Honestly, the ONLY thing that surprised me about that incident was that it didn't happen in the US. It will.

    • @baomao7243
      @baomao7243 Месяц назад +3

      That one still gives me nightmares given i fly to Japan with some regularity.

  • @haqvor
    @haqvor Месяц назад +21

    Multiple controllers on several frequencies can of course not independently give clearances to operate on the same runway. Ask any programmer how a multi threaded program can operate on the same set of files safely...
    I find it baffling that they can't see each others clearances on their screens.

  • @nealrehm6900
    @nealrehm6900 Месяц назад +1

    Juan, good morning. I just want to say you have produced another video. I would say outstanding easy for us to comprehend exactly what’s going on at our busiest airports. It is absolutely frightening as to what is about to happen here in the good old US of A. With the other channels out there, recording ground control, and tower control I believe most of the public wouldn’t even realize these events are happening and compounding.
    Thank you for your service and thank you for your no nonsense videos .

  • @DMNSAV
    @DMNSAV Месяц назад +173

    For the Delta plane cleared to land, I would have been like, “Are you sure it’s cleared, Kennedy Tower?? Are you positive?? Like how positive?? You’re 0 for 4.”

    • @qbi4614
      @qbi4614 Месяц назад +20

      You would want to request a fly past, just to check for yourself

    • @mrjjman2010
      @mrjjman2010 Месяц назад +1

      @@idkjamesgood thing it was white people screwing up almost exclusively then since you’re so worried LOL
      Nah Fred, it’s just that you suck at your job so someone else got the promotion 🤭

    • @StarkRG
      @StarkRG Месяц назад +36

      ​@@idkjames I really don't think bigotry is what's needed here.

    • @jackharle1251
      @jackharle1251 Месяц назад +3

      They are Union workers, correct?

    • @jackharle1251
      @jackharle1251 Месяц назад

      @@StarkRGWhy do you assume bigotry? Dumb is dumb, period. Are you one of those people who thinks minorities aren't smart enough to get identification. I assure you my family has no problem getting identification.

  • @glennbowers78
    @glennbowers78 Месяц назад +123

    The Swiss Air captain should have said, "Kennedy Tower, let me know when you're ready to take down a number".

    • @takingthescenicroute1610
      @takingthescenicroute1610 Месяц назад +38

      The pilot on the mike was INCREDIBLY calm and polite when he said "Swissair 17k rejecting takeoff, traffic on the runway." The candor was that of announcing a teatime. I'm sure the crew silently wanted to wring some controllers' necks.

    • @xxwookey
      @xxwookey Месяц назад +3

      @@takingthescenicroute1610 I think you mean 'demeanor', not 'candor'.

    • @thebigmacd
      @thebigmacd Месяц назад +4

      ​@@takingthescenicroute1610they are Swiss. Everything is serious business.

    • @whophd
      @whophd Месяц назад +10

      “Possible tower deviation”

    • @mikediamond353
      @mikediamond353 Месяц назад +2

      Cursory or Casual

  • @terrydavis8451
    @terrydavis8451 Месяц назад +3

    The Swiss fellow probably didnt want to leave right away but figured he would be safer in the air than in NYC. Which I can agree with.

  • @hack1n8r
    @hack1n8r Месяц назад +9

    Hi Juan -- regarding JFK, Victor said that Swiss Air 17K AND Delta 29 were both cleared *AT THE EXACT SAME TIME* -- Swiss on 123.9, and Delta on 119.1. Victor (VASAviation) made that very clear, and explained that instead of overlaying the simultaneous transmissions in different audio channels (e.g., 123.9 in L, and 119.1 in R), he 'serialized' the transmissions, placing 119.1 audio before 123.9.
    In other words, both controllers gave their inital clearances at the exact same time, so TWR 123.9 did not know that TWR 119.1 had cleared Delta to cross when TWR 123.9 cleared Swiss to take off. Further, TWR 119.1 continued with his other crossings because he did not know TWR 123.9 cleared SwissAir. As far as TWR 119.1 was concerned, he was the current "owner" of the runway, which was why he continued with the other crossings -- all the while unaware that TWR 123.9 had started SwissAir rolling.
    So which controller was at fault? Neither, and Both. Neither in that their initial comms were at the exact same time, and Both for failure to properly coordinate with each other.
    Also, I would suspect that the ATC software is defective, in that both controllers updated the runway status at the exact same time, and the software failed to deconflict and/or raise an alarm.
    Our government at its best.

  • @mikemarkowski7609
    @mikemarkowski7609 Месяц назад +12

    As a long time pilot I think I'll drive, thank you!!!! This is getting ridiculous. Airplanes with parts falling off, quality control issues and now ATC problems...

    • @whophd
      @whophd Месяц назад +2

      Yep, though it depends where and how you drive (by a lot). Thanks to some excellent PR work, we don’t count road deaths the same as any other kind. Even e-bikes on the same streets get terrible press for 1/1000th of the same level of danger, or “potential” danger as it turns out usually.
      The US measures car deaths in fatalities per hour. Name any other thing that works that way.

  • @gerardwall5847
    @gerardwall5847 Месяц назад +117

    ATC is overworked and understaffed. Many industry observers had warned of the retirement bubble in the 2010s but no extra funding was made available to hire and train ATC replacements in advance of those retirements. ATC has lacked sufficient trained and experienced staff ever since.

    • @AlyssaM_InfoSec
      @AlyssaM_InfoSec Месяц назад +17

      And again with the most recent reauthorization, Congress still didn't add any meaningful level of funding to address the issues in ATC. Instead they held hearings to berate the administrators. If they ever do get more funding, it'll take years to make up for just the warm bodies and even longer to get to a decent level of experience and expertise.

    • @slates010
      @slates010 Месяц назад +4

      hello, NATCA? Is that you? Time to look in the mirror, ATC folks.

    • @MCMXI1
      @MCMXI1 Месяц назад +16

      @@slates010 It's not NATCA just like it wasn't PATCO. It's congress and the FAA

    • @bikeguy3034
      @bikeguy3034 Месяц назад +8

      Try training as ATC in New Zealand - 18 months with no pay (9 month course and 9-ish months OJT) and you have to pay approx. NZ$20K for course and accommodation etc. yourself while training. - Got accepted to attend selection after passing all online training but straight-up can't afford it. Crazy. Oh and even after all that, as you are not actually employed by Airways yet - you are not actually 'guaranteed' a job as an ATC......lol.

    • @allgrainbrewer10
      @allgrainbrewer10 Месяц назад +17

      @@AlyssaM_InfoSecbut billions for Ukraine. Tells you their priorities

  • @paulkorpas9988
    @paulkorpas9988 Месяц назад +1

    Keep up the great work, Juan! Thank ya!!

  • @DaveC_TN
    @DaveC_TN Месяц назад +3

    Not a pilot here but I really appreciate you bringing these scenarios to light!! As a passenger, this is one of my worst fears!!
    They say that once you're airborne on a commercial flight, the odds of a collision are nearly ZERO.
    However, hearing and being able to visualize these on-the-ground situations through your fantastic presentations, really brings the danger into focus!!
    A couple planes clipping winglets doesn't worry me nearly as much as a plane landing or taking off THROUGH or ON TOP OF another plane!!
    And at the rate these incidents are happening, I fear it is only a matter of time before another disaster similar to the Haneda collision happens.
    Thank you for your outstanding presentation!!!

  • @deeanna8448
    @deeanna8448 Месяц назад +27

    I have always loved flying and never felt an ounce of anxiety about it. I'll be flying next month, and I have to say, i feel nervous.

    • @BobE.Dancho
      @BobE.Dancho Месяц назад +4

      Yes, be. nervous.

    • @cementer7665
      @cementer7665 Месяц назад +1

      From mid 1982 till early 2009, I worked either a 28/28, or a 35/35 commuter schedule on every continent except South America, Australia, and Antartica, and given what is becoming quite commonplace with air travel in the united States, I am so glad I do NOT have to be part of this BS anymore. (And, my @ ONE million frequent flyer miles will most likely never get used)
      Now, if I want to see the United States, or Canada, I ride AmTrak, or the Canadian equivalent.

    • @JoshuaTootell
      @JoshuaTootell Месяц назад

      Still more likely to die in a cat accident driving to the airport.

    • @therileyobrien
      @therileyobrien Месяц назад +3

      @@JoshuaTootell You sure about that? How many people are dying in cat accidents each year?

  • @oldschoolman1444
    @oldschoolman1444 Месяц назад +8

    What a mess! Great situational awareness by the Swiss crew!

  • @Crazysurferdude
    @Crazysurferdude Месяц назад

    Keep doing these breakdowns. These are very good and very informative. Great safety reminders for the GA community as well. Always keep your wits about you.

  • @robn7589
    @robn7589 Месяц назад +2

    Thanks for another excellent video! Just one nitpick: Swissair is history, it went bankrupt in 2002 - the current Swiss flag carrier is actually called Swiss (same as their callsign, or "Swiss International Air Lines" if you want the full name) and is a subsidiary of Lufthansa.

  • @trollied
    @trollied Месяц назад +37

    What is happening with ATC in the US right now? Seeing this sort of thing every other week right now. Only a matter of time before there's a disaster

    • @EmpReb
      @EmpReb Месяц назад +19

      The FAA didn’t hire enough + retirements + hired DEI people that washed out of training so they don’t have enough people in the pipeline to now having overworked Controllers.

    • @SEAAviator
      @SEAAviator Месяц назад +18

      @@EmpReb”DEI people” lol

    • @MCMXI1
      @MCMXI1 Месяц назад +12

      It's not what is happening, it's what happened and goes all the way back to PATCO, Reagan, the ATC academy in OKC, and above all congress and the FAA

    • @StarkRG
      @StarkRG Месяц назад +25

      @@EmpReb There seems to be an inordinate number of you bigots in these comment threads. Are there really that many horrible people posing as pilots?

    • @jacksons1010
      @jacksons1010 Месяц назад +13

      @@EmpReb. BS, and don’t bother with any “I’m not being racist” disclaimer. The FAA is constantly hiring, and their situation is no different than every other skilled position across the USA: more jobs than people willing to take the job at the given pay level.

  • @scofab
    @scofab Месяц назад +8

    What a cluster... unbelievable.
    Thanks Juan.

  • @aerospaceguy4639
    @aerospaceguy4639 Месяц назад +4

    I don't like the Abbreviations, Slang and speed of US controllers. It is dangerous. SOP and ICAO/FAA standards should be the norm. No letter, number, name should be shortened

  • @stevenwest000
    @stevenwest000 Месяц назад +1

    Love your videos. I only recently realised you’re a commercial pilot too.
    Fantastic explanation.

  • @LoydChampion
    @LoydChampion Месяц назад +12

    Another great report on this important issue. I'm not flying as much as I used to these days, but was in an almost Kablamo at LAX one morning when a Mexicana flight landed and didn't wait to cross after landing on 25L. I was on a United 757 taking off on 25R to Washington DC. This was back when they had air traffic control on Channel 9 so I heard it all. the 757 pulled up a little early and he hit the throttles to flank speed. I saw the tail of the Mexicana plane pass under clear as can be. He put the nose down and the gear was coming up. We crossed the beach at about 200 feet or so. I could read what was on the shirt of a guy riding his bicycle; I would bet the plane kicked up sand going by. But he got the speed up now and started climbing. Yep, they gave him a phone number to call.

    • @nattybumpo7156
      @nattybumpo7156 Месяц назад +6

      Thank your dear lord that 75 has a lot of power....

    • @LoydChampion
      @LoydChampion Месяц назад +3

      @@nattybumpo7156 Yes, and I'm pretty thankful for it too!

  • @josephroberts6865
    @josephroberts6865 Месяц назад +7

    Great review Juan! Kudos to both the Frontier pilot and the Swissair pilot for great situational awareness. These reviews and VasAviation’s videos are fantastic for giving commercial airline pilots examples of mistakes made by other pilots and ATC that will help to raise their situational awareness during flight operations.

  • @edschoenstein1893
    @edschoenstein1893 Месяц назад +5

    ATC is the government and therefore are faultless right?
    I agree with Dan Gryder. The FAA is ready to commit a grave error and should be called out for a safety stand down BEFORE any bloodshed.

    • @tommytfaa
      @tommytfaa Месяц назад

      Dan Gryder is a tool and has no idea how the FAA works internally. I guarantee you tapes were pulled suspensions or certs will be pulled and leadership will be changed. It’s not like the FAA blows these incidents off. The people that work there take their jobs seriously.

  • @patrickmonks9761
    @patrickmonks9761 Месяц назад

    I had only heard of one of these. Thanks Juan and VAS!

  • @georgewchilds
    @georgewchilds Месяц назад +23

    DCA sounded like a training session for someone.

    • @gordslater
      @gordslater Месяц назад +1

      yeah - the laundry crews too

    • @jhsevs
      @jhsevs Месяц назад +2

      Sounds more like a football game in the background

  • @martindehavilland-fox3175
    @martindehavilland-fox3175 Месяц назад +10

    This is genuinely frightening.
    I've worked in aviation long enough to know that this is not right.
    ATC are stressed enough, but so are drivers. They rely on each other for this system to work. It needs one weak link and we have another Tenerife on our hands.

  • @joemehere1151
    @joemehere1151 Месяц назад

    Thanks Juan, I love your work!

  • @amcam124
    @amcam124 Месяц назад

    Once again a riveting explanation Juan.....I'm not a pilot but a huge aviation enthusiast so I just love this channel.

  • @deanc.5984
    @deanc.5984 Месяц назад +47

    Pilots to Tower: Tower I have a number for you to call, ready to copy?😅🤣🙄

    • @TeemarkConvair
      @TeemarkConvair Месяц назад +7

      yup.. seen this somewhere ...

    • @williambush7971
      @williambush7971 Месяц назад +6

      I actually saw a video a couple of days ago where ATC screwed up and the pilot asked for and got a number for the tower.

    • @MrTruckerf
      @MrTruckerf Месяц назад +2

      @@williambush7971 It was on this video, too.