Five questions about the Boeing 737MAX!! - Answered

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  • Опубликовано: 23 июл 2024
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    During the last few weeks I have received A LOT of questions about the Boeing 737MAX. In this video I have decided to answer the 5 most common questions so make sure you watch the whole video.
    Now, I want to stress that the views shown in this video are purely MY OWN and do not represtent anyone else.
    I hope you will enjoy the video and continue to ask questions in the Mentour Aviation app, through RUclips, Instagram or Twitter.
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Комментарии • 2,1 тыс.

  • @Chances1957
    @Chances1957 5 лет назад +430

    As an avionics engineer for 31 years, I am absolutely appalled that the MCAS system depended upon a single Alpha Vane sensor.
    All flight critical systems must be dual redundant in function. In a 21st Century designed aircraft this is inexcusable. There are NO EXCEPTIONS TO THIS RULE.

    • @WakeUpAmerican000s
      @WakeUpAmerican000s 5 лет назад +25

      Chances1957 - I am also appalled that the design doesn't provide for a feedback loop from the current stabilizer position to the MCAS so that this bit about repeated and cumulative movement of the horizontal stabilizer can be better controlled. That is, if the stabilizer is already moved to a 3 degree nose-down correction due to the first MCAS activation, the MCAS should be aware of that before any attempt to move the stabilizer further, especially if there are signs that the crew is fighting the MCAS.

    • @Chances1957
      @Chances1957 5 лет назад +2

      WakeUpAmerican000s I absolutely agree with your comment. Certainly as a design engineer I would have implemented your suggestion otherwise you will arrive at the situation we have witnessed. Thanks!

    • @Chances1957
      @Chances1957 5 лет назад +19

      Dmitri Kozlowsky MCAS May be dependent upon TWO sensors after the recent modifications, but it was only dependent on one sensor at the time of the two crashes!

    • @Sky360Phoenix
      @Sky360Phoenix 5 лет назад +2

      @@Chances1957 Is it true that the MCAS alternates between the AOA sensors each time it is switched on & off? Somebody mentioned this in another video.

    • @Chances1957
      @Chances1957 5 лет назад +4

      @@Sky360Phoenix I am not aware of this. As far as I am aware, the unmodified system relied on just one AOA sensor - pathetic really!

  • @Divine_Evil
    @Divine_Evil 5 лет назад +364

    Hey Petter, as a Verification Engineer of Embedded systems. I simply cannot fathom, how the guys who tested/verified the MCAS system did not ask the question, what will happen if we have a mismatch in the alpha veins or if 1 or both pilots are applying manual counter trim... or if the trim wheels are held with X speed that they are supposed to...
    In my line of work, we always ask ourself, what will happen if such an input misbehaves.
    I cannot fathom what the Engineers that tested and missed this are feeling. People died... if I was working on the MCAS... thank god I am not.

    • @MentourPilot
      @MentourPilot  5 лет назад +39

      Yeah, it will stay a mystery

    • @gordonlawrence4749
      @gordonlawrence4749 5 лет назад +20

      Agreed any system analyst would have asked the same.

    • @Joaking91
      @Joaking91 5 лет назад +1

      Im sure that your colleagues werent the ones that called the shots.

    • @Divine_Evil
      @Divine_Evil 5 лет назад +28

      @@Joaking91 You are wrong... our job is to verify the system. Yes we don't design it, or don't set the requirements... but we always ask the questions... why is this like that, what if, how is this etc.
      From those questions often the guys designing it get a second opinion and they rethink it.
      P.S. As a good verifier I am always questioning everything. Even if a detailed specification is written, explaining everything. It is written by a human. There is bound to be an error or misunderstanding somewhere. So is every piece of code I work on. You never know how much code is legacy from a previous system. How much of it is new. What quality it is. Etc
      ...

    • @domesticterrorist483
      @domesticterrorist483 5 лет назад +3

      Ah but MCAS has NOT caused these crashes that we know of YET. Wait for the reports before blaming MCAS.

  • @Chances1957
    @Chances1957 5 лет назад +153

    As I said in a previous video on this MCAS system, there should always be dual redundancy in critical systems on aircraft. There are no exceptions to the rule - NONE!

    • @ReflectedMiles
      @ReflectedMiles 5 лет назад +2

      Control column inputs? They should only be recognized if both pilots are giving identical inputs simultaneously? It could be argued that it might have saved AF447, but it still sounds like an important exception! :-)

    • @Chances1957
      @Chances1957 5 лет назад +5

      @@ReflectedMiles Using two Alpha Vane inputs instead of relying on a single sensor is what I meant by making a system "dual redundant". The planned changes to the software will now require the use of both sensor inputs unless their respective readings differ by more than 5 degrees. Logical!

    • @ReflectedMiles
      @ReflectedMiles 5 лет назад +3

      Chances1957 I understood your reference. I was just pointing out that one exception to redundancy is in the most important sensor inputs of all to the system-control manipulation by one pilot, not requiring two pilots to attempt control of the aircraft at the same time.

    • @Chances1957
      @Chances1957 5 лет назад +1

      @@ReflectedMiles Yes okay, understood. Actually I thought that this was what you probably meant. Thanks.

    • @MauroPanigada
      @MauroPanigada 5 лет назад +2

      @@ReflectedMiles What's the analogy here? A pilot who goes nuts, or a control column malfunction? Pilots can watch each other, both can realize there's something going wrong with one control column and decide to use the other. The pilots are already the system checking that the control column is working, and that each other (humans) are working and acting properly. Similar mechanisms were missing in the MCAS.

  • @TheSonicfrog
    @TheSonicfrog 5 лет назад +26

    Considering AOA indicators as "optional" based on your prior experience with AOA sensor/indicators is irrelevant when it comes to the 737-MAX because the critical MCAS system as (fatally) designed depended on those AOA sensors.

    • @wildwest1832
      @wildwest1832 5 лет назад +5

      true, but a bad aoa sensor mcas can be turned off. You can easily still fly manually and trim yourself without any MCAS. Maybe boeing put too much faith in pilots diagnosing and handling bad sensors. Its not really a design flaw, but humans getting confused is a tough thing to design for.

    • @gopeace755
      @gopeace755 5 лет назад

      @@wildwest1832 well expressed

    • @Rob2
      @Rob2 5 лет назад +5

      @Wild West that is not really the situation. There is no "just turn off the MCAS and continue as usual"!
      You can cut out the trim motors but that does not disable only MCAS, it disables ALL automatic and power-assisted trim. (ok there are 2 switches, but not a separate one for MCAS only)
      So there is no "easily still fly manually". You will have to turn the wheels by hand and you can see in the other video that that is not easy. Remember you not only have to revert the change made by MCAS but also have to perform all other trimming up to the landing.

    • @TheSonicfrog
      @TheSonicfrog 5 лет назад +1

      @@wildwest1832 Worse than a design flaw, Boeing likely committed a criminal act when for commercial reasons they wanted the new 737 version to handle like the old ones. But changes in the new version required an additional system to handle certain flight situations. The development of that system and the safety analysis of its implications were rushed through. Pilots were not informed of it and not trained to counter its failure.

  • @chex383
    @chex383 5 лет назад +251

    Mentour: I am a big fan of your YT channel, but I have to say that in this video, you really sounded like a Boeing apologist. I understand everyone has biases and you realy love flying your 'Baby' the 737, but I think even you could admit that Boeing made a mistake. Anyway, keep up the good work.

    • @auronoxe
      @auronoxe 5 лет назад +70

      Yes, that‘s my opinion, too.
      - Boeing knew how to do MCAS correctly, but they did not in the 737MAX
      - They used 1 sensor for a flight critical system which is not allowed in civil aircrafts
      - Boeing did not include MCAS in the iPad training, although it changed the behaviour of the plane like NEVER before
      - Boeing did inform the FAA in a wrong way about how much the MCAS can interfere
      So overall, the reason for all this seems to be to avoid that the authorities order a simulator training. Which would have made buying this plane more expensive. And Boeing would have lost more orders to the better A320.
      Overall Boeing deliberately (!) cut short on quality. There is NO excuse for this.
      It is always possible for engineers to make an mistake. This was no mistake. It was deliberate action to only use 1 sensor and not mention the all new system in the training.
      Mentour: I find it strange that in the video that fact that 2 planes crashed is not taken into consideration when talking about if Boeing did well and if that plane is safe to fly.
      One could think you talk about the theoretical case that something with MCAS could go wrong. It went terribly wrong. Boeing will have to pay for this in several ways. Because it was no a „fault“, it was a „fraud“.

    • @drock5407
      @drock5407 5 лет назад +7

      Calling it fraud is just silly. You sound like you work for Airbus. @@auronoxe

    • @auronoxe
      @auronoxe 5 лет назад +32

      No, I don‘t. I‘m an engineer in healthcare. If our company would know about a SW error that could kill or just even hurt hundreds of patients again (!) anytime, we would stop our systems to be used by customers immediately. If we wouldn‘t our company would be closed by the FDA and the EU authorities and someone would end up in jail. Safety critical sub-systems/interfaces/... need to be made error prone TWICE in our business according to regulations. That‘s exactly what Boeing didn‘t do, although this is done for life critical systems in planes, too - normally ;-)

    • @michailbelov6703
      @michailbelov6703 5 лет назад +26

      @@drock5407 He is a realist. I fully agree with him. Boeing screwed it utterly and completely, and I am very confident that criminal charges can and will be brought against them, and it will be succesful, unless they can evade it due to jurisdictional issues. The only unfortunate thing I see here that Boeing did not crash in the USA... Prosecuting them would be much easier.

    • @AleksandarGospic
      @AleksandarGospic 5 лет назад +38

      You are absolutely right, Mentour sounded like PR person for Boeing. He said plane would be thoroughly tested by FAA and other agencies to make sure it is completely safe for you and me! Yeah, wasn't it 'thoroughly tested' to be licensed and yet we are here. They certainly knew this is flawed plane and they didn't even tell the pilots about MCAS, which was also flawed, but they still sold and delivered it, and now 350 people are dead. If this is not a shady business, to avoid using stronger but more realistic word, I don't know what is.

  • @american1911
    @american1911 5 лет назад +6

    Thank you for putting this out. It’s great to hear from someone that actually uses the product.

  • @Pentium100MHz
    @Pentium100MHz 5 лет назад +123

    So, instead of copying the MCAS from the military version that works well (uses two sensors, turns itself off if the sensors disagree, turns itself off if the pilot tries to move the nose up), Boeing made a civilian version of the system with one sensor and more difficult to turn off. Even though the aircraft had two sensors anyway, so it's not like Boeing saved money by not installing one of the sensors.
    This looks to me like the software job was given to an intern or a new employee as a first assignment and it was made very simple - if sensor says AoA is too high (and flaps up, thrust high, autopilot off), trim the nose down, unless the pilot disconnects the trim motors.
    But yea, the 737MAX is probably going to be the safest airplane after this. If there is another crash due to a design problem (problem with the fix or an unrelated problem), that would be really bad for Boeing, so I think that the whole design will be checked.

    • @MauroPanigada
      @MauroPanigada 5 лет назад +7

      I really get the bad design part of the story (reading how the MCAS works made me ask myself “isn't this a rookie mistake?”). What I don't get is how was it possible that the pilots of the second crash didn't know. I mean, you pilot an aircraft and you know there was a crash of the same model and some speculation on the reasons of the crash was already out there and the MCAS is mentioned and explained. How come they didn't think of the stab trim cutoff?

    • @dks13827
      @dks13827 5 лет назад

      Dumb American schools.

    • @Pentium100MHz
      @Pentium100MHz 5 лет назад +3

      @@WilliamJones-Halibut-vq1fs From what I read about the "new math" crap (where 3*5 is not the same as 5*3) and forcing the students to strictly follow procedure instead of thinking, then I'd say at least that part is not so great.

    • @BrianBell4073
      @BrianBell4073 5 лет назад +1

      @@WilliamJones-Halibut-vq1fs. American baseball teams are all best in the World Series though. Can we assume this study was carried out by alt right Americans.

    • @tynandouglas348
      @tynandouglas348 5 лет назад +3

      @@WilliamJones-Halibut-vq1fs blacks, hispanics, and you?

  • @JayStClair-mh5wv
    @JayStClair-mh5wv 5 лет назад +22

    I think your giving Boeing way too much credit. 2 of the main aeronautical engineers who were principle designers of the 737 MAX since have walked away from Boeing over safety concerns over the airplanes air worthiness...On top of that..
    There is an American Airlines Senior Captain of their 737 MAX Fleet is on T.V. saying he no longer supports Boeing and had a meeting with top executives at Boeing along with the Pilots Union here in the U.S. and raked Boeing over the coals and insinuated a huge betrayel by Boeing to the Pilots and the flying community.
    I would really like to hear you comment on this please.
    Thank You

  • @StevenBanks123
    @StevenBanks123 5 лет назад +26

    You are being very kind to Boeing. They are paying a price that they well deserve to pay.

    • @jessfucket
      @jessfucket 5 лет назад +5

      *> They are paying a price that they well deserve to pay.*
      No, 384 souls paid the price. The rich execs don't pay ANY price unless their wives and kids die screaming and crying when their airplane falls out of the sky.

    • @StevenBanks123
      @StevenBanks123 5 лет назад

      Luxi Turna sad but true

  • @TheKatava
    @TheKatava 5 лет назад +6

    Fantastic as always. Love the way you explain everything in layman’s terms. Keep up fantastic videos!

    • @MentourPilot
      @MentourPilot  5 лет назад +1

      Thank you! I’m happy you like it!

  • @dheyes803
    @dheyes803 5 лет назад +1

    Mentour, your videos make everything much clearer. Your approach to whatever the subject matter is never feels like you are forcing your personal opinion down everyone’s throats. You give factual and very straightforward information based on what has been documented by the various aviation authorities. Some other YT aviation gurus feel that they need to use brute force to drill the subject matters into our heads. I’ve personally found that you teach very well and I hope that you will be recognized for doing a video in the correct manner. As an aside, we can also get to see your hairy kids as well showing that you are human and don’t consider yourself to be at a level above your audience. Great job as always.

  • @Halli50
    @Halli50 5 лет назад +63

    I see the lack of AOA sensor redundancy as a severe design flaw, especially since the second AOA sensor was installed, anyway.
    To keep knowledge of the MCAS system from the pilots just to reduce conversion training costs, however, verges on being criminal negligence.

    • @k53847
      @k53847 5 лет назад +8

      The criticality of the system was high enough that it should have required redundancy by FAA policy per the Seattle Times report. How it does not have redundancy and still got approved is apparently not yet available. I suspect the FAA and DoJ are looking at that pretty hard.

    • @henrydelana9317
      @henrydelana9317 5 лет назад +2

      Boeing provided data from NG flights that demonstrated the required performance for prevention of engine-driven pitch up. Since the FAA had no responsible representatives present at Boeing they accepted the data as proof of performance for the augmentation required for the new engines. Only Boeing and the FAA know why Boeing's proposal to use only one AoA sensor for what was to become MCAS was accepted as sufficient. We know why Boeing did it. It was all about the "less than an hour train for the new certification" sales pitch. It takes a very strong CEO to face the facts and say NO.

    • @daffidavit
      @daffidavit 5 лет назад +5

      @@henrydelana9317 Speaking of CEOs, the one from Ethiopia Airlines ought to have his tail set on fire. He allowed a 200-hour pilot to sit in the right seat.
      That's no better than having a single pilot in the left seat and one of the passengers from the back sitting in the right seat who just got his private pilot's license.
      As Capt. Sully said: "It's abhorrent" to have a 200-hour pilot as a crew member. The CEO was trying to save money by getting young eager guys to build hours at the expense of the 180 people who died due to lack of education. The fact that the prior evening flight crew experienced the same problem but didn't advise the following crew really burns me up. Luckily, the crew the night before had a pilot sitting in the jump seat who knew about the two trim cutoff switches. Otherwise, the disaster would have happened a day earlier.

    • @Halli50
      @Halli50 5 лет назад

      @@daffidavit, you are confusing the Ethiopian and the Lion Air crashes. The Lion Air aircraft had the same problem on the previous flight, spotted and solved by the jump seat pilot. The problem WAS written up and the AOA sensor replaced before the fatal flight, so the failure was most likely in either the wiring or the computer input channel. At this stage in the B737 Max saga, few pilots knew about the MCAS system as it was not included in the conversion training.
      The Ethiopian 200hr pilot: In the past, it has not been uncommon during pilot shortages to hire pilots with the ink on their CPL licences still wet. This may be rare among major carriers, but this is simply a matter of company policy, which is usually changed to suit the new pilot supply situation, and has been true around the world. There is no indication that this low aexperience had any bearing on the accident, in fact this pilot must have just come out of the rather intensive initial type training on a regular B737 flight simulator, so he was most likely quite competent.

    • @daffidavit
      @daffidavit 5 лет назад +4

      @@Halli50 Thank you. I did confuse the Lion Air flight, so I have to take it back about the failure to advise the next crew on the Ethiopian flight.
      But I still agree with Capt. Sully, it was "abhorrent" to put a pilot with only 200 hours of flight experience in the right seat. I don't blame the pilot. Any young guy would jump at the chance to be a first officer in a 737 MAX.
      But the CEO should be held accountable for not training the Captain on the MCAS system, especially since it was known from the Lion Air incident and other NASA voluntary pilot reports that the trim could go into a runaway situation.
      Finally, the Colgan air disaster near Boston taught us that flight experience can mean the difference between life and death. When there are many people sitting in the back seats, they expect and deserve the best. After the Colgan disaster, Congress made the FAA change its regulations to require all major airline pilots to have at least 1,500 hours. The Captain must have an ATP rating. And if the captain is over a certain age, the pilot in the right seat must also have an ATP. I respectfully disagree with you about a 200-hour pilot coming out of 737 sim training being competent.
      As Capt. Sully said the crew must act as one. They have to be able to almost read each other's minds and act accordingly when there is an emergency. No 200-hour pilot is that good. The passengers deserved the best pilots not, as Sully said, one pilot and an apprentice.
      Thank you for correcting me..

  • @BelusTraveller
    @BelusTraveller 5 лет назад +13

    2 planes down breaks my heart, I really hope they make it right for the lost lives. I have flown on the max more than once. SAFE TRAVELS,

    • @SagaciousFrank
      @SagaciousFrank Год назад

      They will make it right only for their profits which might be compromised as a result. They thought they'd get away with it, but not after the second one went down. Sociopathic Dennis Muilenburg didn't end up out of pocket.

  • @gabrielejonte4620
    @gabrielejonte4620 5 лет назад +3

    Looking forward to seeing you at the Aero Expo in Friedrichshafen! 🙂

  • @FLY_GUY_JZ
    @FLY_GUY_JZ 5 лет назад

    So refreshing to have a qualified and knowledgeable person talk about this issue.

  • @brianheffernan8982
    @brianheffernan8982 5 лет назад +3

    I just found your channel and I really enjoyed it.

  • @michaelcrossley5661
    @michaelcrossley5661 5 лет назад +6

    I’ve been waiting for this one. Thanks mentor!

    • @MentourPilot
      @MentourPilot  5 лет назад +2

      I hope the answered were to your satisfaction.

    • @michaelcrossley5661
      @michaelcrossley5661 5 лет назад +2

      Mentour Pilot always! You’re doing a great job of educating me. Thanks again!

  • @doug9066
    @doug9066 5 лет назад +3

    Some interesting information & facts. Thank you for sharing.

  • @GonteanuPaul
    @GonteanuPaul 5 лет назад +2

    Thanks, for updating. A wonderful day

  • @ronb.6582
    @ronb.6582 5 лет назад +2

    Finally a voice of reason and expertise on RUclips. There are so many people eager to jump on the lets bash Boeing bandwagon who hardly know one end of an airplane from the other. Keep up the good work. I found your explanations clear, concise, and accurate. I am long retired, but have logged around 25,000 hours in Boeing 727, 757, & 767 aircraft, and am amazed at the rush to judgment of so many uninformed people. .

  • @cleo6686
    @cleo6686 5 лет назад +10

    the Ethipoan report is out now. What say you now Mentour pilot? It looks bad. They had no chance to recover at that high rate of speed.

  • @Chances1957
    @Chances1957 5 лет назад +44

    Ethiopian Airlines crew in Boeing 737 crash "could not control" jet despite following procedures, report finds!

    • @ericbedenbaugh7085
      @ericbedenbaugh7085 5 лет назад +6

      Read more than the head line, they didn't follow procedures.

    • @moow950
      @moow950 5 лет назад +11

      Eric Bedenbaugh yes they did

    • @1969bogdi
      @1969bogdi 5 лет назад +7

      Eric Bedenbaugh yes they did! You stupid ufck!!!

    • @ericbedenbaugh7085
      @ericbedenbaugh7085 5 лет назад +3

      @@1969bogdi Read the entire report. They did not!!!!

    • @WakeUpAmerican000s
      @WakeUpAmerican000s 5 лет назад +16

      @@ericbedenbaugh7085 - the Ethiopian crew did follow procedures after three cycles of incremental (and un-wanted) stabilizer movements initiated by the MCAS. The crew turned off both switches to remove power from the horiz stabilizer motor, then attempted to manually change the stabilizer position by using the control wheel in the cockpit, as documented in Boeing's procedures following the Lyon Air crash. Current hypothesis is that because they were also honking back on the stick in an attempt to raise the nose of the aircraft, the limited mechanical advantage of the small stabilizer control wheel in the cockpit used to move the stabilizer was not enough to overcome the extreme forces on the stabilizer of the aircraft which was now exceeding the design limit of airspeed as it dove toward the ground. The crew realized that the frozen control wheel meant a certain crash, so they re-powered the stabilizer control motors, and attempted to use the thumb switches to correct the horizontal stabilizer position, but by then, it was too late.
      Boeing is in deep doo-doo with this woefully poor design because:
      1) dependent on a single point of failure (one AOA sensor) for a critical response (nose-down correction, even at low altitudes)
      2) no diagnostic checking of AOA sensor function visible to pilots on aircraft without the optional package to do so (which clearly says that Boeing realized this was necessary, but decided for some really strange reason to charge extra for it)
      3) No feedback loop between Horizontal Stabilizer and MCAS - so no matter how 'smart' the MCAS software is, it couldn't tell that the Horizontal Stabilizer was already moved to a dangerous nose-down position before moving it further
      4) inadequate manual backup for pilots to move the horizontal stabilizer under several flight conditions (something well known since the 70's - pilots used to be trained for this, but for some reason are no longer trained for it)
      5) the "emergency" cut-off switches should provide the option to just turn off MCAS, and not the entire power to horizontal stabilizer motor, so that the pilot can make corrections to the stabilizer position using the thumb-switches provided for that purpose. Older models of the 737 had this - one of the two switches would disable auto-control functions but leave the power to the stabilizer motors "on". Why that option was removed on the MAX will no-doubt be discussed at some length in upcoming lawsuits.

  • @cr10001
    @cr10001 5 лет назад +2

    There was a very similar circumstance of a safety feature the pilots didn't know about causing an accident with SAS 751. It was a DC-9 (MD-81) and SAS had fitted ATR - Automatic Thrust Restoration - to prevent pilots throttling back too much for noise abatement reasons. As 751 took off, ice came off the wings into the engines, damaging them, the pilots throttled back but the ATR (which they hadn't been told about) overrode them with full climb power, which caused the engines to fail completely shortly after at 3000 feet. They were incredibly lucky and managed to crash-land in a field with no fatalities.

    • @cr10001
      @cr10001 5 лет назад +1

      Actually I mis-spoke - the ATR selected takeoff power, which is worse (for a sick engine)

  • @Jjengering
    @Jjengering 5 лет назад +1

    Never can get enough of that mentour theme tune :) Thanks for answering my question on live stream. I may come and see you in Germany I am thinking of riding my motorcycle from the UK there.

  • @DemoEvolvedGaming
    @DemoEvolvedGaming 5 лет назад +62

    MCAS exists to "save" the plane from stalling when the pilot goes full thrust and pitch up, aka to prevent an unrecoverable stall.
    However now Boeing has added all these defeats to MCAS it is not likely to actually trigger when it SHOULD.
    So instead of having the plane crash because the MCAS is forcing nose down into the ground, we accept the risks of having the plane stall out in a climb.
    All of this goes back to: "Is it a good idea to take a design from 1967, patch on giant engines that require pontoons to move these behemoths forwards and up (and extend the front landing gear) so they dont scrape the runway, and then patch all the flight problems that result" --- INSTEAD of: actually designing a plane which is balanced for these engines in the first place, further back under the wing, with taller landing gear all round, and the right amount of fuselage ahead of the wings.
    All in the name of profit.

    • @henryford2736
      @henryford2736 5 лет назад +2

      Agree with you 100%. Explains why none of the other Boeing aircraft needs MCAS. Sad thing is they will issue "software fix" and say "have a nice flight." We all know it's not a properly designed and balanced plane for those new engines. It will always be a "dog" to fly with pitch up tendency. They have a chance to fix it now. As you say longer landing gear, move the engines where they should be, modify the wings and generally do a proper fix by balancing the plane better for the new engines.

    • @manaoharsam4211
      @manaoharsam4211 5 лет назад

      So do you think 737 Max has a pitch stability issue?

    • @DemoEvolvedGaming
      @DemoEvolvedGaming 5 лет назад +1

      @@manaoharsam4211 MCAS is the evidence that there is some issue at high thrust and high ANU. Airplane weight may also be a factor in this. Such as (either) takeoff (high weight due to having more fuel at start of flight) or more likely during a go-around (an aborted landing of an aircraft that is on final approach) (low weight aircraft).

    • @manaoharsam4211
      @manaoharsam4211 5 лет назад +1

      I agree with you. I find there were a lot of arrogant Engineers at Boeing when I worked there. Also management knew nothing about planes. Just bean counters.
      when I worked in area of aero elastic instability not one Engineer had a clear knowledge of subject. They were push computer button Engineers. In fact when I went to a professor class I could tell the skill level was very poor of students from all walks and companies . I told everybody be at Airbus or Boeing I am scared to get up on a plane. When companies pay you good I money my approach is do the best job of learning even on your own time in order to do correctly. This is fun work. Some Engineers I worked with they prefer fishing than aerospace. I say leave then.

    • @manaoharsam4211
      @manaoharsam4211 5 лет назад

      @@DemoEvolvedGaming is the issue on stability.

  • @jamesrindley6215
    @jamesrindley6215 5 лет назад +13

    Making a system that can fly the plane into the ground based on one erroneous sensor is negligent, but the worst aspect was keeping pilots in the dark as to the existence of this system. They should have been briefed on it and trained in a sim to recognize the angle of attack sensor failure and practice dealing with it. If every MAX pilot had done this it would be much more likely the crews would react in the right way instead of flying into the ground struggling to understand what's going on while consulting a manual that doesn't list the MCAS system's existence. From what I can see pilots were kept in the dark precisely to avoid the need for expensive sim training.
    And so it's probably management at Boeing and the airlines that, while not directly responsible for the disasters, they did set up the conditions which led to it. And every one of us who chooses an airline ticket based on price has contributed to those conditions being set up. In the end, there is a certain minimum cost associated with doing things properly.

    • @sharoncassell9358
      @sharoncassell9358 Год назад +1

      I flew these aircraft from mar to jun. They were fine but I had my heart in my mouth praying nothing would go wrong. AA uses 737s a lot and loads of people were boarding them. In Some cases you can't choose other brands. The destination is only accommodated by 737s. So you're stuck with it. I tried the train to Fresno . 4 days solid. Bus same thing. Just saying.enjoy the flight. ù can't take a boat.

  • @TheRaithadean
    @TheRaithadean 5 лет назад +2

    Appreciate your insights, as always!

  • @imensonspionrona2117
    @imensonspionrona2117 5 лет назад +2

    I think the problem might have been that once the sensor malfunctioned the MCAS pushes the stabilizer into a nose dive. If you switch off MCAS jack screw motor to compensate you also switch off the entire system controlling the stabilizer? This means that the stabilizer stays in nose dive angle? Does the MCAS software know the stabilizer is not moving because the jack screw motor has been switched off? Does it loose track of where it thinks the stabilizer is positioned at?
    How to get the stabilizer from nose dive state into a nose up state after you shut down MCAS motor? Continuous trim from the pilot until emergency landing I suppose? Can the MCAS enter a reset state when motor restarted? Can the MCAS handle motor restart at all? Maybe? That would require MCAS to be able to detect the current stabilizer jack screw position on motor startup and go into a default state. If MCAS cannot detect horizontal stabilizer position on motor startup it cannot know what to do, even if a faulty sensor fixed in the mean time.
    This could also mean every time you restart the MCAS motor the software could "authorize" the jack screw to move the stabilizer a certain amount of degrees again, possibly past a maximum amount that it forgot because of the restart? So every time you restart an MCAS motor under faulty sensor, it adds another 5 degrees to nose down or something. That is a very scary situation.
    These are all possibilities that I have not heard proper explanations for. If I was a pilot, those are the questions I would worry about.

  • @TheMrVicist
    @TheMrVicist 5 лет назад +3

    Always great videos here.

  • @AP-qc9hi
    @AP-qc9hi 5 лет назад +22

    What I found revealing in your previous mcas video is that after cutting out the stab trim motor, it takes a great effort to manually turn the trim wheel. Imagine being in an extreme pitch down position, with the pilot needing to pull back on the yoke with great force to counter the trim, it seems difficult to manually trim back within the short time allotted before zero altitude.
    Add to that the alarms blaring, potentially lessened situational awareness with the pilot monitoring pouring through the manual to find the resolution, i dont see how they can recover the stab trim manually at such low altitude.

    • @henrydelana9317
      @henrydelana9317 5 лет назад

      You are very right! It takes two people on the flight deck who can exert strength when required. In at least one case that required strength when the plane was inverted. The Alaska Airlines jet crashed when it's stabilizer failed. All perished.

    • @towerrunner496
      @towerrunner496 5 лет назад +6

      @@henrydelana9317 The Alaska Airlines crash was due to poor maintenance on the Alaska's part to cut cost. The jack screw was actually stripped of its threads because they were not greased at intervals that McDonald Douglas put in their manuals. Also, a Alaska mechanic put in for the jack screw to be replaced, and was overruled by his supervisor on his next shift. So no manual use of the trim system would have made any difference in the Super 80 crash. That was improper maintenance of the jack screw that lead to it's failure, and the crash.

    • @verveblack
      @verveblack 5 лет назад +1

      FINALLY...someone who knows what they are talking about. Well done.

    • @frederf3227
      @frederf3227 5 лет назад +1

      The cutout switches are for when the electric assist is unreliable. It's a misapplication that it is the go to solution for automation logic fault when the physical assist functions just fine. It would be like if there was an ABS logic fault in your car the fix would be to disable the vacuum brake assist. Transparently-operating automation should fail safe and not require disabling powered assist.

    • @henrydelana9317
      @henrydelana9317 5 лет назад

      @@towerrunner496 Hi Tower. Yes you are correct on all points. Did you read the transcripts of the cockpit voice recorder (CVR)? If you did you would have heard the pilot flying coaching the pilot monitoring on a last attempt to flip the plane over prior to impact. Had it worked he might have saved some lives. Unfortunately the pilot monitoring could not reach the rudder pedals while inverted. He was unable to assist in the rollover maneuver that the captain wanted to try. The captain was firmly belted in and able to work the rudder pedals. The first officer couldn't help. Perhaps my choice of a physically challenging experience eluded some. Do you know the name of the Vice President for Maintenance who was fired for this accident? Was you wife and daughter present when the CEO went to Fairbanks for the funeral of a man I knew?

  • @twiki1559
    @twiki1559 5 лет назад +2

    No comment other than I really enjoy your videos. I've learned a lot. And I have zero involvement in the field of aviation.
    Good job sir.

  • @billyrayband
    @billyrayband 5 лет назад +34

    That was an excellent update. But Boeing needs to have an independent organization do some serious investigation as to how these very poor design decisions were approved and tested. It appears to be gross negligence. They are going to be sued, there is no doubt about that.

    • @kradius2169
      @kradius2169 5 лет назад

      Billy ... Should an independent organization investigate the PAN-PAN component of the 737 MAX story?
      _

    • @billyrayband
      @billyrayband 5 лет назад

      @@kradius2169 My understanding is that procedures were followed on that and resulted in a NTF on a return to service test after landing. Likely the NTF was caused as MCAS alternates on which AOA to use in each flight segment. So it had cycled to the good one after landing and the ground test then checked the good one. Then the next flight it had cycled back to the bad one and crashed. That is just a test procedure problem that is easy to correct, a little late though. But will be changed anyone since update uses both AOAs.

    • @kradius2169
      @kradius2169 5 лет назад

      Billy ... How did the pilots of the previous day's flight of the doomed Lyin' Air 737 MAX pull out of their PAN-PAN situation?
      _

    • @billyrayband
      @billyrayband 5 лет назад

      @@kradius2169 They probably don't have recorder data for that event, but I thought they determined through crew interview they pulled the power to the electric trim. In the crashes, they didn't have enough altitude or experience to figure that out. The recorders from both crashes should indicate that is why pilots could not recover.

    • @kradius2169
      @kradius2169 5 лет назад +1

      Billy ... Not enough altitude? I thought the Lyin' Air doomed "pilots" struggled with the plane, fighting valiantly against the flawed Boeing MCAS system, for minutes?
      How long would you struggle with the cruise control on your car before you tapped the brake or hit the switch? ... Minutes?
      _

  • @Roholi
    @Roholi 5 лет назад +5

    The best aviation channel, bar none.

  • @jerosq1186
    @jerosq1186 5 лет назад +4

    Fantastic videos as always

  • @dunxy
    @dunxy 2 года назад

    Really enjoy and learn a lot from your content, thank you! A great help for my simming! Lots of hours flying warbirds but just getting into airliners of late and theres so much to learn but i am having a great time, made my first butter landing using ils in a 747 this morning and it was great! Hand flown a fair few "ok" but it took me a fair while to understand these fancy autopilot systems.

  • @davidoickle1778
    @davidoickle1778 5 лет назад +1

    Very helpful information. Thank you!

  • @jacobbiton3928
    @jacobbiton3928 5 лет назад +4

    What do you think will be the timetable for returning the plane to normal service?
    Thanks for the detailed explanations.

  • @icspawn
    @icspawn 5 лет назад +6

    Both Lion Air and Ethiopian crashes' FDR points same software error. Publicly released today.

  • @megatech1966
    @megatech1966 5 лет назад

    Very well explained. Subscribed👍

  • @MaxMisterC
    @MaxMisterC 5 лет назад +2

    So they created an MCAS System for cargo which responded to pilot interventions and included redundancy values in response to bad input data from sensors
    Then went and made a version for passenger jets withdrawing all redundancy & pilot intervention options??
    Wtaf?

  • @wranther
    @wranther 5 лет назад +7

    Was nice hearing you mentioned by Juan Brown recently (Blancolirio Channel).

  • @TheBlueye13
    @TheBlueye13 5 лет назад +3

    I love your new outro

  • @sophieacapella
    @sophieacapella 5 лет назад +2

    Excellent video Petter !👌😎
    And I loved the puppies bonus at the end 😍!

  • @shaunbarrios1979
    @shaunbarrios1979 2 года назад

    I recently found your channel and just want to say that I love the content that you are sharing

  • @ratboygenius
    @ratboygenius 5 лет назад +4

    I like your content. I was hoping you would address the question of whether or not there is ultimately a fatal flaw in the 737 MAX design from putting engines that are too large on an airframe that was designed for smaller engines. It has been suggested in articles about the unfortunate crashes that the MCAS system was meant to rectify an aerodynamic design instability created by the positioning of the larger engines.

    • @bgordski
      @bgordski 5 лет назад +2

      Bingo!! if a software fix is needed to correct an aerodynamic error the aircraft is unnecessarily defective. What is needed are aerodynamic fences mounted parallel to the longitudinal axis aft of the wing (center of gravity) that will help force the nose down with more nose down pressure the higher the angle of attack. This is an item that is benign at cruise (level flight) and active during climb and descend.
      What happens if the electrical system gets crowbarred? (massive short circuit)? The FADEC (full authority digital engine controls) engines account for this with their own power source (alternator) separate from the main electrical system.
      In the above scenario pilots will be busy flying the aircraft with one little battery powered instrument in the dark. MCAS won't work then.
      I understand the Boeing removed the vortex generators from the wings. These help improve lift at low (stall speeds). If they were needed on the previous B737 what was the justification for their removal from a potentially tail heavy aircraft at low speed?

  • @ns81
    @ns81 5 лет назад +13

    Is it slightly disquieting that Boeing didn’t, from the jump, install the same mcas safeguards in the max as in the military 76 variant?

    • @couldyourewindplease3653
      @couldyourewindplease3653 5 лет назад +1

      My question, can such conditions exist that no matter what happens aircraft will stall and crash because of high AOA and not enough speed alone, regardless if MCAS is there or not? These days companies will do anything to save money, including making pilots climb at max rate to get higher and increase fuel efficiency. And also pilots reliant on software/systems too much making them too bold. And it's not like one can practice stalling a commercial aircraft other than in simulator.

    • @ns81
      @ns81 5 лет назад

      @@couldyourewindplease3653 Meh - few false assumptions there. First, airplanes can easily outclimb the limits that ATC sets for them. They actually have to *reduce* thrust to keep from level-busting or over-speeding during a climb. I also think it's mostly a myth that airlines will skimp by encouraging practices that directly flirt with safety. ("I need you at level 340 in *minutes* skipper! You Hear Me? You better be climbing like a Bat Out of Hell!") More realistic/less sexy ways airlines try to save are *slowing down* a flight once it's at cruise, in order to optimize fuel burn, and by contracting with code share partners with very low margins who pressure their pilots to fly lots of circuits back-to-back like the Colgan Air pilots. Or by lengthening the time between maintenance as Southwest is reported to have done. But if you tried to climb a 7-3 fast enough to stall it during a commercial flight, you'd have a level bust from ATC and a visit from the chief pilot way before you risked a stall.

    • @henrydelana9317
      @henrydelana9317 5 лет назад +2

      The answer is the one you might guess first. They saved some money, and booked orders based on a risk. Would you want to fly on a plane that was sold this way? My guess is that Dennis Muileburg wishes he had silenced Sales and told Engineering to embed the dual AoA system and make it fail-safe. He could have done it as CEO. He chose to take the more risky approach. NASA did too when it chose to launch the Challenger. Flying is risky. Some risks can be managed, some cannot. Good companies excel in managing risks. If profit ever becomes the driver risk will rise.

  • @MrHimynameisdanny
    @MrHimynameisdanny 5 лет назад +1

    Back in September of last year, I flew on a 737 MAX from Ohio to Phoenix. It was great flight, and confidence I had knowing it was a brand new plane was huge. Who knew all this would happen though. Just greatfull that none of those issues happened on that flight. Still love flying though!

  • @Kinny202
    @Kinny202 5 лет назад +1

    Amazingly precise explanations!

  • @osbornyap45
    @osbornyap45 5 лет назад +25

    Thanks for the clear explanations, good work always !

    • @SanJuanIslandsTV
      @SanJuanIslandsTV 5 лет назад

      Great video. Boeing might equip all aircraft with single-button "PIC Override - Release Automation Controls"

  • @GerhardReinig
    @GerhardReinig 5 лет назад +8

    Now, the Wall Street Journal wrote, by information of a Ethiopian investigation insider, the pilots had 4 times the electric switch because MCAS disabled like Boeing said, tried to trim manual by the wheels like You demonstraded in your Video, and reactivated because it seam, the pilots wasn't able to get the machine under control by manual trim.
    Can it be, the Max is to difficult to trim manually?

    • @hank1519
      @hank1519 5 лет назад +1

      Great question!

    • @gordonrichardson2972
      @gordonrichardson2972 5 лет назад +1

      The answer is yes, all models of the B737 are difficult to trim manually (see Mentour's previous video). However the MAX and MCAS is the only case where this has become a safety critical situation.

    • @witblitsfilm
      @witblitsfilm 5 лет назад +1

      It becomes more difficult when you still have the throttles in TO and not pulled back to cruise/climb and you are constantly getting overspeed warnings because of your excessive airspeed at a low altitude in very dense air....

  • @simonblunden2151
    @simonblunden2151 5 лет назад +1

    I've decided because I have been binge watching these videos and they are so informative that I can now comfortably fly a commercial jet.

  • @responsez47
    @responsez47 5 лет назад +2

    Another Spectacular video!

  • @hhoebeke1
    @hhoebeke1 5 лет назад +3

    Great video, cutting through all the ‘noise’

  • @EveryTipeOfVideo
    @EveryTipeOfVideo 5 лет назад +5

    Awesome video!!

  • @ctbt1832
    @ctbt1832 Год назад

    Good video well explained. I’m starting to feel a little better about this plane and the safety features and corrections they made

  • @rodgerwiese2790
    @rodgerwiese2790 5 лет назад +2

    I believe that Mentour explained what needed to be said and understood by the flying public and those that are interested in aviation... I believe that those in the media were not capable of explaining in layman's terms what Mentor said very clearly and jumped to conclusions without understanding how planes fly and how pilots fly them.!!!

    • @2adamast
      @2adamast 5 лет назад

      I disagree, he has more conviction (the 737 is a fantastic plane) than knowledge (the mcas is just there to ??)

    • @sexynelson100
      @sexynelson100 3 года назад

      disagree.. he's making excuses for boeing

  • @TheYoyozo
    @TheYoyozo 5 лет назад +51

    I want to accept your endorsement of the 737 Max, however I just don’t believe that Boeing has actually come to identify the problem. Their unwillingness to ground them after the Ethiopian crash demonstrates their intransigence.

    • @henrydelana9317
      @henrydelana9317 5 лет назад +13

      Boeing identified the problem and started working on fix in 2018. The fix required that they get FAA review. Donald Trump shut down the US government in December. No FAA employee could assist in getting the fix approved while Trump refused to budge. The FAA is culpable, as is the Department of Transportation and it's Secretary who is the wife of Mitch McConnell. If you wish to inform those who are responsible for the Ethiopian accident do please include Elaine Chou (Secretary of Transportation), Mitch McConnell (who refused to halt the government shutdown), and of course Donald Trump whose shutdown materially interfered with the solution that could have saved lives. Please note the use of the term "materially interfered".

    • @Rob2
      @Rob2 5 лет назад +15

      Having identified the problem and then, after the second accident, claiming that nothing is wrong and the plane is safe to fly, only makes the matter worse for Boeing.

    • @henrydelana9317
      @henrydelana9317 5 лет назад

      @@Rob2 You are correct.

    • @henrydelana9317
      @henrydelana9317 5 лет назад

      @Röhrich Oak It is unfortunate, but there is a lot of history behind what has happened recently. The US FAA has been encouraged by the US Government to hand over regulatory responsibility for airplane certification to the companies involved. The implication was reduced budgets for certification. The FAA caved, and the US Government cut their budget (which had to have the approval of the Secretary of Transportation, a Presidential appointee). This was not Trumps doing. Think of the last Republican President who proposed spinning Social Security out to the private sector prior to the Great Recession (that his economic "let the banks do what they want to do" created). That former Republican President is safe from harm in Texas. Meanwhile Boeing chose to finesse a training dodge that would assist sales. The dodge backfired with the Lion Air accident. With certification already in place Boeing was forced to propose a solution that required FAA certification. The current Republican Administration shut the FAA down for other than "mission critical" functions. The current Secretary of Transportation could have challenged the situation by stating that the FAA team working with Boeing needed to stay on the job so as to prevent another accident. If that protest was made it was kept very quiet. Her husband was assisting the President in holding the FAA hostage. This is not to say that Boeing is not most at fault. Boeing stuck to the "no simulator training required" mantra that their Vice President had pressed to Muilenburg as an important hook for sales. Muilenburg was also getting briefings from legal side of the issue. Any admission of guilt would be used in lawsuits which were sure to come. The Legal Department knew their only best choice was to negotiate settlement out of court. Their worst fear was a class action. So now you know what Muilenburg is dealing with. His sales-oriented solution was blocked by a Republican Administration's obsession with holding the government hostage for whatever reason. The Legal Department told him if you ground the aircraft it will be an admission of guilt. To some it may seem ironic that a Company who gained sole control of the US commercial airplane market could find themselves in such a predicament. A competent manager would never have accepted the Engineering decision to use a single-point-of-failure solution that could put the plane in peril. A competent manager would not have accepted the Sales suggestion that training for the single-point-of-failure was not required. A competent manager does not run the Boeing Corporation. In order to gain the industry's trust Boeing's Board will have to show that the Boeing Company is better than it has shown itself to be recently. They can start by firing the CEO.

    • @henrydelana9317
      @henrydelana9317 5 лет назад +2

      @Röhrich Oak You are getting dangerously close to the truth.

  • @johng9399
    @johng9399 5 лет назад +8

    So, if the "upgraded" system was up and running in the tanker, why was it not installed in the
    Max in that format?

    • @ainzooalgown7589
      @ainzooalgown7589 5 лет назад

      Probably made classified by the military hence not made public.

    • @henrydelana9317
      @henrydelana9317 5 лет назад +1

      No not classified at all. But the software build for the KC-46 is secured. It could not be shoved into the MAX flight control model without major problems. Boeing chose a simpler (and cheaper) solution. And now they regret that decision.

  • @just.robban
    @just.robban 5 лет назад +2

    You are a true legend!

  • @mosca3289
    @mosca3289 5 лет назад +1

    Kudos for tackling these difficult questions.

  • @bobbyn5627
    @bobbyn5627 5 лет назад +5

    Thank you for your motivation sir

  • @ekinz7286
    @ekinz7286 5 лет назад +7

    Yes love your videos 👍👍👍 today is my birthday 🎂 expecting your dog to appear any moment😂😂😂😂😂

  • @laszloperesztegi
    @laszloperesztegi 5 лет назад +2

    15:55 Finally - more dog 🐾 show than ever ✈✈✈

  • @jsomiller44
    @jsomiller44 5 лет назад +5

    First question, your response is only partially correct. The AOA display may not be necessary for safety but the disagree indicator is necessary for safety. If you had this indicator before the software upgrade it could have told you to disable the Auto Trim before your plane took a nose dive. Even in the event of emergency the warning light could have pointed you in the right direction to disable the system sooner. Especially if Boeing had told you about the MCAS system and had a procedure that directly told you to disable the electric auto trim if this indicator is on. If they had told the pilots about this system and had a procedure for it many lives could have been saved.

    • @ReflectedMiles
      @ReflectedMiles 5 лет назад

      If you are a pilot and have to have an indicator light to know when the trim is running against your input on the yoke, I have zero interest in flying with you. Boeing had warned the Ethiopian pilots about MCAS and reminded them of procedures. Maybe you're right--maybe they needed an indicator. Are you sure you want to go there?

  • @dihydrogenmonoxid1337
    @dihydrogenmonoxid1337 5 лет назад +3

    How can you keep your good videos up so active? I mean twice a week is insane. Keep it up. I enjoy them very much. Thank you👍

    • @mattesrocket
      @mattesrocket 5 лет назад +1

      I am sure he has at least 2 doubles 😂

    • @iBreakAnkles4Fun
      @iBreakAnkles4Fun 5 лет назад

      Im trying to figure out how he's been flying jets for 18yrs and he looks about 36yrs old...

  • @ckutner1
    @ckutner1 5 лет назад

    As always, most informative

  • @TheMot616
    @TheMot616 5 лет назад +1

    Fantastic Information
    Thank you

  • @SueBobChicVid
    @SueBobChicVid 5 лет назад +23

    I love his level headed, rational explanations.

    • @gfuterfas
      @gfuterfas 5 лет назад +4

      Sure, I guess. But he pretty much ignores all the dead people from two accidents due to design flaws in the Max.

    • @buffdelcampo
      @buffdelcampo 5 лет назад

      @@gfuterfas So Graham, if you were trying to understand what happened and how to prevent further accidents, what would you do about the dead people?

    • @gfuterfas
      @gfuterfas 5 лет назад +1

      @@buffdelcampo Obviously, you can't do anything for the people killed by the accident, and I am a big fan of this channel, but I do think Mentour could express a little more gravity. It's not like an iPhone update that Boeing is releasing -- this likely caused two crashes, and after the first one, they were already working on the fix while allowing their aircraft to fly. They were also apparently allowed to self-certify the safety of these aircraft by the FAA, and I think there should be some outrage expressed. How can he say that he thinks it's one of the safest airplanes in the sky if the certification process is flawed? I heard on the news that the FAA can't afford to hire the necessary people to do the safety certifications, so they allow Boeing to do it themselves, which obviously has a conflict of interest. It's more than just a "PR Nightmare". The sad part is that the grounding of all these planes is costing the airlines (and Boeing) tons of money, so there will probably be a rush to lift the ban on the 737 Max. There's so much pressure to have a hasty update that could still have problems, and the full accident investigations may not even be complete.

    • @buffdelcampo
      @buffdelcampo 5 лет назад +2

      @@gfuterfas Instead of watching the idiots on the news, dig into this. Do some real research. Most major manufacturers self certify. It's been that way for at least thirty years. So how many airliner designs are self certified? Probably all.

  • @bobp1016
    @bobp1016 5 лет назад +15

    It’s nice to hear a real pilot explaining everything. The news took this story and ran wild. Thank you for giving the facts.

    • @verveblack
      @verveblack 5 лет назад +1

      How did they run wild?

    • @bobp1016
      @bobp1016 5 лет назад +1

      Have you watched the news? They ran wild because they took the story and started talking about how unsafe the MAX was. Instead of talking with real pilots who fly the plane they just used talking points that were not the whole truth it were flat out false. The new has been reporting how Boeing charged extra for safety equipment. That is not the whole truth. That is how the news ran wild. We need all the facts in a story, not just part of the story.

    • @jacklabloom635
      @jacklabloom635 5 лет назад +3

      Reporting on two plane crashes within five months on the same aircraft is not going wild. The plane was extremely unsafe, the way MCAS could cause the plane to crash. It has now been documented that MCAS relied on a single input.

    • @compulsiverambler1352
      @compulsiverambler1352 5 лет назад

      It's nice compared to hearing various aviation experts on the news with more relevant expertise and detailed knowledge of the MAX 8 than pilots who've never even been trained to fly them have? It's not going wild to report the fact that experts are able to foresee situations in which having the AoA disagree light would indeed be helpful to MAX 8 pilots both without this software update and after it. MAX 8 and 9 pilots should have this light so that they know when MCAS is no longer available to help prevent a stall, because in emergencies knowledge that they're more prone to stalling than usual could influence their decisions. Most pilots haven't received the updated MCAS training as most airlines don't have the planes anyway.

    • @ReflectedMiles
      @ReflectedMiles 5 лет назад

      @@jacklabloom635 Not especially, at least based on what we know so far. The software did need correction, as items often do in newer models, but when the malfunction occurred, nothing we have seen so far indicates that it needed to be a fatal event. The crews needed to respond to a runaway stab trim event, whatever the cause. That has been standard training on 737s for decades. Other airplanes have similar risks and similar procedures. That is why Mentour Pilot indicated that he had no doubts about the safety of flying the MAX in the future. The media relies on drama and sensationalism and that often means doing less than cautious, accurate, or knowledgeable analysis, not to mention the breathless tones of panic and fear. Spikes in viewership and ad revenue are strong incentives.

  • @Danehavenlane
    @Danehavenlane 5 лет назад +2

    As a MAX driver myself, what about the stab cutout switches and fly the plane first. There’s been no mention in the press that Lion air had the same problem the day before and they used trim cutout switches, manual trim. Easy to say since I do have the advantage to Monday morning quarter the situation.

    • @kradius2169
      @kradius2169 5 лет назад

      Dane ... Holy crap.
      Like you're the only person so far today & most days lately that I've come across that seems to be aware of the MAGA / free press Juicy Smellitt schwindle being perpetrated against Boeing.
      Not a single member of the bloodthirsty Boeing carve-up mob that I've challenged knows about the PAN-PAN call the day before the doomed Lyin' Air 737 MAX took a swim ... not to mention the unchanged since Day 1 in 1967 and likely to remain unchanged till 2067 process for a 737 pilot to actually start flying their plane.
      _

  • @LeifNelandDk
    @LeifNelandDk 5 лет назад

    Does the AOA work at rotation speed?
    Does the AOA read zero or max at standstill, i.e. is it a vane which "fall down" in standstill?
    If so, it should be able to let it autocalibrate, what ever it reads at rotation speed is zero.

  • @igorb6542
    @igorb6542 5 лет назад +51

    As always - fantastic! Very informative videos!

    • @MentourPilot
      @MentourPilot  5 лет назад +7

      Thank you! I’m so happy you like them and find them interesting.

  • @nerdydrew6818
    @nerdydrew6818 5 лет назад +52

    Stay safe Mentor. If you end up flying the 737Max I’m confident your training will keep you, your crew and your passengers safe 👍

    • @MentourPilot
      @MentourPilot  5 лет назад +28

      I will be flying it soon and I will sure do my best

    • @sebastiannikkolas8497
      @sebastiannikkolas8497 5 лет назад +2

      @@MentourPilot Congratulations mentour! Wish you all the best and I know you can handle the Max safely. I've seen your simulator training and it was an absolutely wonderful to execute those problems..

    • @jwilde801
      @jwilde801 5 лет назад +6

      I have no doubt that you will be flying safely, because of your experience, m but ALSO because the MAX is already a safe aircraft. You will be flying the safest aircraft in the sky, especially after all the scrutiny after these tragedies. I have no doubt that if you were flying one even before the upgrades, even if you had the same situation, that you would have done your checklist and turned off the MCAS system, and safely landed.
      @@MentourPilot

    • @mikaluostarinen4858
      @mikaluostarinen4858 5 лет назад

      I wonder if there ever are stall situations, which MCAS can handle, but pilots couldn't. At least they would be rare, I assume.

    • @Wunaladreaming744ER
      @Wunaladreaming744ER 5 лет назад +1

      Hi Mentor!
      I have never been a fan of the Boeing 737. Still prefer flying the ‘Mad-Dog’ and Airbus. However after looking at your videos, I have a better impression on the 737 system.
      Do hope to see you flying the 787 Dreamliner one day! Keep up your great videos. :)

  • @brucekendall52
    @brucekendall52 5 лет назад

    Excellent info,thks.

  • @ltfuzz1
    @ltfuzz1 5 лет назад

    I enjoyed flying the -200 for Western Airlines in 1969- for many years! We had just got them and I was actually an S/O for a time before they agreed to a two pilot crew !!

  • @american1911
    @american1911 5 лет назад +5

    Did you know how to turn off the MCAS system before the first crash?

    • @petep.2092
      @petep.2092 5 лет назад

      It’s a trick question-MCAS cannot be turned off.

    • @yassm
      @yassm 3 года назад

      @@petep.2092 Yes you can stop it from moving the trim with the stab trim cutout switches on the throttle quadrant

  • @emt271
    @emt271 5 лет назад +9

    Great Vid. It's amazing the you an Juan Browne (Bloncolirio) are so similar in your approach. His vid yesterday also talked about the AOA indicator in almost the same words.

    • @tatoute1
      @tatoute1 5 лет назад

      same words? because provided by the same source? 8-O

  • @kaikai114
    @kaikai114 5 лет назад

    Great video, i have always thought that the angle of attack is pitch, now i am properly informed.

  • @ravensrulzaviation
    @ravensrulzaviation 5 лет назад

    Ravensrulz says you are always wonderful. Thank you Petter!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @vernyjm
    @vernyjm 5 лет назад +7

    I would like to go, but from Latin America it’s quite a trip, would you do a live stream? Bless!

    • @Joaking91
      @Joaking91 5 лет назад +1

      De donde sos amigo?

    • @vernyjm
      @vernyjm 5 лет назад

      Joaking Hola, de Costa Rica 🇨🇷 saludos!

  • @dennisdonovan4837
    @dennisdonovan4837 5 лет назад +7

    As Steve Blue has noted (see below - chronologically) … The fact that two AOA (Angle-Of-Attack) sensors were available as part of the design-build is the crucial (and fatal) design flaw in Boeing’s initial MCAS implementation. What ever Boeing’s says (or most telling - doesn’t say) about how safe their revision is, there is no escaping the humbling fact that Boeing and the FAA made an incredibly bad analysis and decision to allow the MAX to fly off the assembly line with a SPOF (Single-Point-Of-Failure) that, as was so tragically demonstrated, caused these airplanes to crash with a total loss of passengers and flight-crew.
    Just my opinion but … I feel very strongly about this and hope that lessons will learned and things will (hopefully) change for the better. 🙏🏽

    • @paavobergmann4920
      @paavobergmann4920 5 лет назад +1

      Especially regarding the fact that a similar system that uses input from both sensors, plus indication to the cockpit, was already installed in a military airplane, when military and civilian world tend to give slightly different priorities to safety vs. performance. That´s point one.
      Why there even was the possibility that the pilots did not get to know, there was a subsystem installed that could actually assume trim authority in certain circumstances, and how and when and why it does so, is beyond me. If it is true what sensationalist media tell me.
      In addition, it would be a nice feature to give some kind of indication to the cockpit that the system has been engaged, so the pilots know what they are dealing with. I fully understand, that de-cluttering the cockpit of irrelevant notifications is a safety feature in such a complex machine, to not distract pilots from flying and let them keep focus and situational awareness. However, my totally uninformed layman´s guess would be, that it would be a nice feature to have at least an LED labeled "MCAS", or, for multiple susbsystem input, "AoA warning, auto-trim engaged", or something like that. If that goes on, the plane essentially says "Listen guys, I feel I need to do something to the trim, because my sensors say, you are about to drop the ball here!", so the pilots would at least know what´s going on, and could react following a) " yes, that´s normal und to be expected right now, please switch off", b) "Oh, woops, we didn´t notice, we were busy, thanks for the heads-up!", c) "thanks for the help, we were getting worried, too" d) "what are you talking about? We are nowhere near the situation the sensors tell you we are in. something seems to be off, stop it!"
      In principle. If the reports are true. If it turns out after the investigations, that MCAS was actually involved in the chain of events that led to the loss of lives and 2 airframes, that would only strengthen the importance of your point. The possibility alone should be enough reason for concern.

    • @q.e.d.9112
      @q.e.d.9112 5 лет назад

      Paavo Bergmann
      I think that the fact they had installed a safer system on the military version is going to be very costly for Boeing. I visualise multi-billion dollar lawsuits sticking to them like confetti to a bride.

    • @paavobergmann4920
      @paavobergmann4920 5 лет назад

      @@q.e.d.9112 probably. But then again, hindsight is always 20/20, and what do I know about planes? Also, military aircraft are expected to pull crazy stunts that commercial aircraft wold never think of attempting, so of course they get all the assistance there is.

  • @ethanfairweather8736
    @ethanfairweather8736 2 года назад +1

    I flew on the max at least two times before the second crash and I loved flying in it. Hindsight is always 2020 and what happened is it in the two crashes was extremely unfortunate. Boat crashes were a combination of bad luck and lack of foresight on Boeing‘s part. Despite the rocky start the max has done its job relatively well whenever I have been on board

  • @mukherjeeamitabh3
    @mukherjeeamitabh3 5 лет назад

    The last few seconds of your video was all I was waiting for

  • @jeffspicuzza7665
    @jeffspicuzza7665 5 лет назад +21

    I might be dating myself but I thought the main difference between Airbus and Boeing commercial planes was the fact that Boeing pilots, at anytime could take full authority of the aircraft, negating any automatic systems. The MCAS system seems to invalidate what I was told some 20 years ago. Are pilots, both Airbus & Boeing, getting too comfortable with software?

    • @gordonrichardson2972
      @gordonrichardson2972 5 лет назад +4

      There are always detail differences between the philosophy of manual control, and the actual safety and stability systems implemented. The B737 has long had something called speed trim, which operates in part of the flight regime (fast speeds), opposite to MCAS (slow speeds). Whether both systems were operating simultaneously during the MAX crashes is a disturbing possibility, with faulty AOA data and not anywhere near stall.

    • @borninjordan7448
      @borninjordan7448 5 лет назад +6

      Airbus pilots can take full control at any time.

    • @ReflectedMiles
      @ReflectedMiles 5 лет назад +1

      @@borninjordan7448 Only theoretically. The reality has caused a number of incidents and accidents, as you probably know.

    • @ReflectedMiles
      @ReflectedMiles 5 лет назад +5

      It is a very common opinion in the industry that automation has had a negative effect on stick-and-rudder flying skills. I would go further and say that I think it has probably been causal or contributing in a number of tragedies. However, so far as what you were told about pilots being able to take control as necessary, we have still not seen anything that demonstrates otherwise from these MAX accidents. Boeing has generally maintained more mechanical control connections and backups than Airbus, even within their FBW systems. I have never been rated on the 737 but I still know how to stop a stab trim runaway event on that airplane, whatever the cause of it may be (whether a bad servo motor switch or MCAS, presumably), as it has been common to the model for decades. Other crews who experienced this malfunction, including other Lion Air crews, did not crash the airplane as a result. As for misinformation, the media make fantastic sums of money from sensationalism and public panic due to the ratings and ad dollars which result, so speculating and suggesting the worst even in their ignorance is highly incentivized. It is best to listen only to the evidence put forward by the NTSB and their counterparts as well as discussions among those who actually fly the airplane.

    • @jeffspicuzza7665
      @jeffspicuzza7665 5 лет назад

      Well said sir.

  • @Paul1958R
    @Paul1958R 5 лет назад +4

    Mentour Pilot/Petter,
    Great questions, great answers - thank you!! I have so much respect for you as a pilot and your expertise.
    God bless
    Paul

  • @markusekegren804
    @markusekegren804 5 лет назад

    Hi Petter! I have a question of less importance but still interesting to hear what you think. I am interested in aviation and I take part of discussions and follow all intruction videos of how to fly comersial jet. I have masters in engineering so I am aware of basic physics and so on. Now, if a situation came where I have to fly a comersial jet with absolutely 0 hours of expersiance of flying, would I in your opinion be able to get the aircraft flying and even land it again? I know by hundred of videos how to take off in theory and also to land it again but I understand that in practice, its not that easy. Jsut to get a feeling of the aircrafts behaiviour in the air must be difficult in the beginning but the warning system can also help me in some situations. I mean, if the aircraft was prepared for flying it cannot be impossible for me to get it to the runway and make full thrust until the V1 signal comes and rotate in order get it airborn, right? This situation will off cource never come but still intresting to know what you think. To be able to land it again I understand is much more difficult but maybe a crashlanding where the passengers have a possibuility to survive is my best hope. What to you say about this?

  • @WRALdirector80s
    @WRALdirector80s 5 лет назад

    Excellent post. Excellent discussion. Professionalism on display.

  • @drakbar5957
    @drakbar5957 5 лет назад +91

    Great answers with solid explanations. Unfortunately we live in a sound byte era and anything as complicated as aviation can’t be reduced to one sentence. If you want to understand, you must be willing to listen. I found this video to be very helpful to my understanding 👍

    • @sssri1122
      @sssri1122 5 лет назад +2

      But do you understand an aircraft knows when to nose down but not nose up? I find it strange.

    • @leexgx
      @leexgx 5 лет назад +6

      @@sssri1122 the powered trim System can go faulty witch puts the plane into a nose up or nose down
      it's why you have to remember off by memory when you have a runaway trim situation, outside of native English speaking seems to be where this issue comes from where they are failing to follow basic runaway trim situation and letting the powered trim crash the plane
      which is what happened with the Estonia flight and Lion Air they failed to cut trim and was actively fighting the trim system (witch you should never be doing) by pushing trim back up when the system was trimming back down
      I Believe When Boeing are saying that airlines pilots did not have the correct training they may have been referring to runaway trim situation training which these pilots were failing on (not specifically relating to the MCAS system this is just the runaway trim situation which they should be trained for the last 40 years)

    • @currentbatches6205
      @currentbatches6205 5 лет назад +2

      @@sssri1122 "But do you understand an aircraft knows when to nose down but not nose up? I find it strange."
      As Peder mentioned, the MCAS was designed (and required by the FAA) for a very specific instability. If you tried to design counter-control systems for every possible instability, we''d be back to flying affordable by the upper 1%. Spending unlimited amounts of money trying is a fools game.
      Flying is already the safest possible mode of travel; perfection is not attainable in design or function.

    • @JonnyD3ath
      @JonnyD3ath 5 лет назад +1

      ss sri it is due to the design of the aircraft and engine position. It is described better in another video, the engine thrust has a greater tendency to force the nose up in the max variant, thus this system is in place to counteract this in a specific extreme scenario

    • @milantrcka121
      @milantrcka121 5 лет назад

      @@leexgx Ethiopia? Otherwise this would have been a third one...

  • @60trickpa
    @60trickpa 5 лет назад +4

    Great video and explanation. I wonder why the Lion Air plane was even flying the day after it had troubles and a third pilot has to help control the plane

    • @sparkplug1018
      @sparkplug1018 5 лет назад

      No real mystery there. They identified the issue, and repaired it. To an airline a aircraft sitting not he ground doesn't make them any money, and thats unacceptable to them.
      Was it fixed correctly? Were the parts used to spec? Why did the pilots not perform the runaway trim checklists? Those are the real questions.

  • @OlivierGodart
    @OlivierGodart 4 года назад

    Hi, thanks for these videos. I wonder why, with all the switches that you have in the cockpit, there is not one to disable the MCAS (without disabling completely the trim motor).

  • @RobertHollander
    @RobertHollander 5 лет назад

    Great explanation about the angle-of-attack indicator.

  • @eager6874
    @eager6874 5 лет назад +72

    When you’re early enough for Mentour to maybe see your comment, but he explains so well in the video you’re left with no questions 😂😂

    • @MentourPilot
      @MentourPilot  5 лет назад +42

      Hahaha! There are ALWAYS more questions my friend. Have a great evening.

    • @ChiDraconis
      @ChiDraconis 5 лет назад

      @@MentourPilot Okay lets to Astana on approach to SFO set to Baritone Boogie with Ground Dispatch reading the Spreadsheet for Frieght to Atlanta Harts-field → Roll new Grad from American Eagle ( my chosen flag for now ) → walks from terminal operations; Just slightly proud our featured PM / Observer does not realize this will be the ride of a life-time and will be lucky to keep all his papers in the same Flight Bag 3 days later
      777-200 or 300 or any of the later that do not have the MAX issue to confound as literally no-one is going to get corrections via reading the handy manual on deck ♦♦ Not to be even slightly facetious I loaded the hearings on C-SPAN and nothing technical correct was seen so I went back to work with Juan saying that we really at this time just not know if the 2 toggles take the MACS out of the control loop leaving power for the split-trim on Boeing Control Yoke

  • @michailbelov6703
    @michailbelov6703 5 лет назад +37

    Another blunder of Boeing: new information indicates that the Ethiopian pilots followed the procedures set up by Boeing for disabling MCAS after Lion Air crash.

    • @ericbedenbaugh7085
      @ericbedenbaugh7085 5 лет назад +1

      No they did not. That's what the headline said, but about half way down the article you receive critical information. Yes, they flipped the switches to disable MCAS, but the then for some reason no one can explain--They turned it back on!! There is speculation that something struck the sensor on take off--a bird or an object from the run way.

    • @norbertmayer7005
      @norbertmayer7005 5 лет назад +2

      @@ericbedenbaugh7085 there is an explanation. They were in overspeed and low altitude situation with nose down trim. The forces on the horizontal stabilizer was quite high, and the pilots couldn't manually reset the trim (they have to move it in opposite direction of the forces exerted on the stabilizer). Hence they reactivated the electrical system hoping it would assist them. Instead it trimmed even more down and their fate was sealed.

    • @1969bogdi
      @1969bogdi 5 лет назад +1

      Eric Bedenbaugh because the manual trim was impossible, that’s why! There was nothing else to do. They re engaged in order to activate the electric manual trim ! You

    • @ericbedenbaugh7085
      @ericbedenbaugh7085 5 лет назад

      @@norbertmayer7005 There is a pilot by the name of Juan Browne who has a video on this very topic. Sorry I don't have the link but he gives a very good explanation of proper procedure.

    • @luckydogjunction2120
      @luckydogjunction2120 5 лет назад +1

      MCAS was back on. But are they sure whether is by the pilot or the system kicked on by itself

  • @briancork9980
    @briancork9980 5 лет назад

    Oh there they are ...great to see them

  • @Valy18
    @Valy18 5 лет назад +2

    Great video

  • @JohnSmith-oc9iw
    @JohnSmith-oc9iw 5 лет назад +6

    The pilots was helpless,fighting against the system..which switched on 4 times..that wasn’t lack of skills ,that was something else

    • @henrydelana9317
      @henrydelana9317 5 лет назад

      You appear to accept what Ethiopian is saying. If this came from the NTSB, or the BEA, or the AAIB you should consider it as well thought out. It may not be fact (many air accidents are never truly understood, M370 being a classic example). Do not assume that an airline operating a plane that suffers an accident that claims the lives of all souls on board can be trusted to tell the truth about what happened. Ethiopian will have to demonstrate that it's pilots were properly briefed on the MCAS after the FAA directive went out in 2018. There are good sources of information about what is going on. You should seek them out.

    • @tomthomas3499
      @tomthomas3499 5 лет назад

      That was HAL9000 taking action on it's own lol xD
      JK, yes the preliminary report are out, and the investigators said that the pilot already followed Boeing AD procedures, but still can't help them out of dangerous situation leading to the doomed flight, this should put to rest Pilot lacks of training as well, since they were aware of the MCAS after Lion Air, they also have been noticed about how to deal with it by following the trim cutoff procedures involving MCAS runaway.
      Idk about others..but if the Pilot did knew about what caused the nose down then followed by the correct procedures on how to dealing with it based on the manufacturer checklist but still can't save them out of the dangerous situation, to me the blame isn't on the pilots..it's something else...

    • @gordonrichardson2972
      @gordonrichardson2972 5 лет назад +1

      Read the report, and the FDR data and CVR transcript released today. Is very clear.

    • @JohnSmith-oc9iw
      @JohnSmith-oc9iw 5 лет назад

      Gordon Richardson -According to reports the pilots switched off the “Anti -Stall”system 4 times in 6 min.but the system turned on every single time.Here:”Ethiopian authorities, in a press conference Thursday disclosing findings from their preliminary crash probe, stopped short of drawing any firm conclusions about the causes of the crash. But they confirmed a flight-control system triggered repetitively during the six-minute flight, pushing the nose down. They recommended Boeing review the system, and said regulators should then test it before lifting a global grounding of the MAX fleet.”

    • @gordonrichardson2972
      @gordonrichardson2972 5 лет назад +1

      John Smith The press conference was unofficial and completely misleading. Read the report published online.

  • @Stealt707
    @Stealt707 5 лет назад +3

    Thank you Mentour for this video. Your explanation about how the MCAS installed in military aircraft has more resilience than the single AOA sensors in the 737 Max adds weight to the argument that Boeing overlooked an important quality issue here. Which is to build quality into the engineering process rather than troubleshooting. I agree that we dont know the cause of the accident and we have to wait for the investigations but these 737 Max 8 aircraft in both recent accidents were falling out of the sky, nose dive into the sea and nose dive into the ground killing all passengers. No wonder Boeing has gotten bad press.

    • @Stealt707
      @Stealt707 5 лет назад

      @dothemathright 1111 The MCAS system in both the military application and commercial application are used to stabilise the aircraft so they have a common purpose. My point is that building redundancy in to the 737 MCAS is just as critical for passenger safety and preventing airplane crashes that lead to loss of many lives. Thank you.

  • @bkailua1224
    @bkailua1224 5 лет назад +2

    Again a very well done video about airliners. Amazing the press could ever get anything wrong in reporting on aviation. :) We also do not navigate with iPads but the iPad might have the digital chart on it. Yes pilots use iPads for learning about the aircraft, and before iPads we used paper books, large pictures, movie projectors and overhead projectors to learn about the aircraft. But we still use real aircraft or simulators to learn how the fly the aircraft.
    I think it is accurate to say that all jet airliners have AOA vanes and AOA is used by the aircraft systems, but pilots who fly the aircraft do not need to have an AOA indicator to fly the aircraft safely. We had the AOA vanes on the 757 and 767 that I flew for 20 years and never had the ability to read actual AOA in the cockpit. We could indirectly have an idea of AOA with some of the indications but could not know what AOA was at any given time.

  • @drewpknutz1410
    @drewpknutz1410 5 лет назад +2

    Hah, at 0:48 shows MAX flying almost vertically with zero problems. A couple of other pilots had the same problem and just turned the system off...a couple others just crashed the plane. Shawn White can jump a snowboard, but I can't...should we blame the snowboard?

    • @bananamamamia
      @bananamamamia 5 лет назад +1

      I thought that was a flight test? With zero passengers and flown by Boeing pilots who probably are a lot more familiar with the system. You really can't blame the pilots for the ill fated Lion and Ethiopian planes. My friend is a pilot for Delta and has said many pilots are disappointed with Boeing.

    • @zimfan101
      @zimfan101 5 лет назад +1

      Drew P Knutz My thought exactly! The 737 MAX was successfully flown over 41,000 times for over 120,000 hours delivering over 6.5 million passengers but now it is the most dangerous machine ever invented and Boeing delights in killing their customers!

  • @cvhawkeye6255
    @cvhawkeye6255 5 лет назад +11

    No Dog! No Good! I am here to see them in action! Flight information is Secondary.

    • @epzapp
      @epzapp 5 лет назад +1

      You didn't wait for the very end!

    • @dogphlap6749
      @dogphlap6749 5 лет назад +1

      A dog makes an appearence at 16:52, at 16:12 two dogs through to 16:26.

    • @cvhawkeye6255
      @cvhawkeye6255 5 лет назад +1

      Yes! What a teaser at the very end! Ty.