NTSB Final Report Transair 810 737 Ditching Honolulu July 2021

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  • Опубликовано: 24 дек 2024
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Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @idanceforpennies281
    @idanceforpennies281 Год назад +105

    A very old Chinese saying is: "He who has made a mistake and doesn't realise this, has made two mistakes".

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Год назад +6

      Yes, exactly.

    • @joeg5414
      @joeg5414 10 месяцев назад

      not very inclusive of all pronouns

    • @sleepyman-h1p
      @sleepyman-h1p 10 месяцев назад

      like my 2 kids

    • @mickeysmiths
      @mickeysmiths 10 месяцев назад

      Not so old that it hasn't lasted the test of time 👍

    • @mickeysmiths
      @mickeysmiths 10 месяцев назад

      @@sleepyman-h1p Lol @ that 😁

  • @4n2earth22
    @4n2earth22 Год назад +484

    I was privileged to survive two seperate engine outs while passenger on a 737-200 configured as cargo/passenger. Both were out of Anchorage International. Both happened on departure after V1. Both were on the same aircraft. Both were on the same day, several hours apart. That sagging feeling you get when departing, the aircraft over ice-flo infested water, is pretty vicerial. And memorable.
    After the second attempt failed with the same engine failing, as we were departing the aircraft at the gate, the head flight attendant stated clearly and loudly what we were all thinking: "There is no way I am getting back on this damn airplane!"
    We were transferred to a brand new 737-800, and by that time there was only a small handful of passengers left. It was an open-bar flight.

    • @lizj5740
      @lizj5740 Год назад +70

      I don't know why I'm laughing, but I am. Glad you survived! BTW, *visceral.

    • @4n2earth22
      @4n2earth22 Год назад +32

      @@lizj5740 lixdexia strikes again

    • @sanfranciscobay
      @sanfranciscobay Год назад +20

      Get everyone drunk and they'll feel better.

    • @Robert08010
      @Robert08010 Год назад +6

      It would have to be. LOL

    • @bradleypeterson2208
      @bradleypeterson2208 Год назад +20

      Good ol’ Pratt & Shitney

  • @slMagnvox
    @slMagnvox Год назад +202

    oh man, imagine going thru all that while you've got a perfectly functional engine notched at idle the entire time

    • @Robert08010
      @Robert08010 Год назад +13

      I wonder what it did to their careers. I mean he did mention that teh company is no more.

    • @charlestoast4051
      @charlestoast4051 Год назад +14

      @@Robert08010 who would want to employ them after that?

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Год назад +23

      @@charlestoast4051 Maybe thi FO can reopen his lawyer-office. But the Captain with his age of 58 or now even 60 two years later and this story is probably a really beaten man today. All the best for both of them!

    • @Robert08010
      @Robert08010 Год назад +9

      @@charlestoast4051 I suppose I didn't state the question clearly. I was wondering more if they let you continue to fly (assuming you are still able) pending the outcome of the investigation. I mean with an 18 month investigation, during that time, nobody knows the outcome or whos fault it was.

    • @RunawayTrain2502
      @RunawayTrain2502 Год назад +5

      Like BMI 92 back in 1989.

  • @Havreflan
    @Havreflan Год назад +152

    The lesson here is that it can happen to anyone. Confirmation bias is extremely potent.

    • @axelknutt5065
      @axelknutt5065 Год назад +17

      My first thoughts were ‘what a couple of idiots’ but as I continued watching I began to think ‘that could have been me’.
      It’s easy to sit back and say ‘they should have done this or that’ but at night, over the ocean you can understand their panic.

    • @wilsjane
      @wilsjane Год назад +11

      @@axelknutt5065 Since the second engine that they had assumed faulty was still at idle and not showing high EGT, it baffles me why neither pilot thought to spool it up to get enough thrust to get back to the airport.
      After 25 minutes, I would have thought that they would have realised that they may have idled the wrong engine.
      I think that to a lot of pilots EGT is just a figure that they do not fully understand, On heavy marine diesels, the highest EGT on any cylinder is what sets the full ahead speed governor. If the cylinder has a blocked injector causing weak mixture to run hot, it is often shut down in order to increase RPM. On very large engines, repairs to the injectors can be carried out while the engine is running, by also shutting off the inlet valve to the cylinder.

    • @alanm8932
      @alanm8932 Год назад +2

      ​@@wilsjaneA bit off topic but I'm really intrigued about weak mixture causing high EGT on a diesel. Is this a peculiarity of big two-stroke marine diesels?
      As I understand it the mixture is always "weak". (Except if enough fuel is injected at max power to produce a lot of soot in the exhaust).
      You appear to know your stuff. Is there a quick explanation or can you point me to a resource?

    • @wilsjane
      @wilsjane Год назад +5

      @@alanm8932 The marine diesels, used on tankers, container ships, cruise liners and var ferries, run on heavy diesel, with a Redwood viscosity of around 3,000 seconds. This fuel needs to be stored at 50 degrees centigrade then further heated and filtered prior to injection. Almost all this heat is obtained from the engines, with a few isomantle heaters used on pipes and injectors, Being the residue of fractional oil distillation, it is cheaper but more importantly has around 20% higher calorific value per cubic metre.
      Cold engines are started on standard 35 second fuel, then switched over when everything reaches the correct temperature. Needless to say, the fuel is switched back prior to shutting the engine down. Due to pollutant exhausts, many countries do not allow heavy fuel to be burnt in port or their national waters, unless exhaust scrubbers are fitted. These are mostly used on short hop car ferries.
      These engines have a minimum design life of 30 years running 24/7, with a cylinder head valve replacement every 10 years.
      By comparison, an F1 racing car has a valve design life of 8 hours on the track.
      Back to the original point. To maintain the design life of the marine engine, EGT is absolutely critical to avoid rapid deterioration of the exhaust valve seats. Sensors on each port controlling the "full ahead" speed are the normal solution. Military vessels have a bypass system, for use when engaged in battle.
      I am sorry that it took such a lengthy explanation to put the whole thing into context.

    • @juliogonzo2718
      @juliogonzo2718 Год назад +5

      @@wilsjane I'm not a pilot, a mere terrestrial dick, but I wonder if they were nervous about increasing throttle on the engine they thought failed for fear of causing it to frag and puncture fuel tanks

  • @gregoryknox4444
    @gregoryknox4444 Год назад +28

    Man o Man, of all the times we practiced the engine out procedures ......when I had mine taking off out of SFO on AB321 in rotation it was like "back in the sim" ......... and then the dead engine re-lit at 600 ft (airbus does a self-analysis of the engine and will try 4 times to relight ..... but had severe vibration (normally 0.2, now at 10.4) so we left it at flight idle (in case we needed it). We came back for an overweight landing. We swallowed 40 seagulls during rotation bending 14 of the 36 blades on engine 2. TRAINING TRAINING TRAINING .... it pays off. Thanks for the report Juan ........

  • @brianhaygood183
    @brianhaygood183 Год назад +178

    Excellent work by the interviewing investigator in that transcript. Avoided giving an answer that could bias the interview without being dishonest and turned attention away from it, came back to it, didn't get confrontational, got the info and got out. Well done.

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Год назад +14

      Indeed, exactly.

    • @seandelaney1700
      @seandelaney1700 Год назад +3

      All that was impressive, but earlier he he led the interview in such a way and proposed answers that the captain knew what he was getting at. Much better to ask the questions almost as if they are a routine checklist to go through. I suppose somewhat like a psychological profile might be done ie. DSMV.

  • @EricMuller
    @EricMuller Год назад +125

    The "did we screw up" part kind of stung a bit. I get why they couldn't tell him, but imagine thinking you were doing everything right in a hopeless situation and someone is like "uhhhh....did you check this obvious thing?" It's ironically less stressful if someone is like "yeah man, you really screwed up" instead of just wondering about it.

    • @jmayer29
      @jmayer29 Год назад +9

      I imagine they did after the review was completed. The investigator can't ethically compromise the process. There have been several similar incidents with aircrews retarding the throttle on the good engine, and almost always with the same result - the loss of the aircraft.

    • @davidmichael5573
      @davidmichael5573 Год назад +5

      It’s natural to think “did I screw something up” even if you know everything you did was right that question still pops into your mind. I’ve had an emergency and questioned it for months did I do something wrong.

    • @EricMuller
      @EricMuller Год назад +3

      @@davidmichael5573 yeah, that's kind of what I mean. The doubt is really stressful. Everyone has made a mistake before. It's way easier if it's like "you messed up"
      "yeah, I did.... So what now?"
      Then you take the consequences and move on.
      I understand doing that would compromise investigating things.
      Even if it's a minor mistake and you know the punishment is going to be basically nothing, and even if you are pretty sure you did your part correctly, the doubt and stress is really rough.

    • @keithsmith5267
      @keithsmith5267 Год назад +18

      @@davidmichael5573 My first day as a captain at my first 121 ops, I had an engine fire. This was the 4th and final leg of the day. The first leg TSA had done a random audit and placed a fake hand grenade and fake knife in the the seat back pockets. We found it on the security sweep. Now my senses are heightened…..next leg I realize I have an illegal dispatch, weather was down to mins, but they didn’t add an alternate. Called DX and they fixed that. That turn down, was taxing out for T/O. It was a non standard day for this airport (the winds were not the normal direction and thus were departing the opposite runway) this required us to taxi to the far side. Normally it would have been a short taxi and then T/O. What happen next would have happened on T/O, probably after V1, but since we were taxiing to the far side…
      We got an engine fire.
      I still remember the the FO stating ‘MASTER WARNING’ and me almost nonchalantly saying ‘Cancel and Identify’ thinking he had said ‘MASTER CAUTION’
      His response was ‘RIGHT ENGINE FIRE’
      That snapped me back to reality.
      I looked up and saw the RED T handle lite.
      I stopped the taxi while calling Ground and stating we have an engine fire please roll the trucks and as soon as I had the aircraft stopped began going through the procedures. Completed I sent the FO to evacuate the PAX. I reviewed again the checks, concerned I did not do something but didn’t see anything. I left the flight deck, check the cabin and got out. The FO was with the PAX, all OK, and a fireman came up to me. He said didn’t look like any fire. I said OK, this plane is now yours and made a call to DX. I BRIEFLY stated what happened and would call back once the PAX were back in the Terminal. Next I called my Rep, who happened to be my best friend and whom I went to flight school with. I told him what happened and that I wasn’t sure if I did everything correctly. My nerves were pretty shot!
      I was going over the events with him, questioning all my decisions, very concerned I had messed up. He interrupted me trying to go over everything by repeatedly stating my name until I shut up.
      Then he asked ‘Is everyone OK?’
      I said ‘Yes’
      He said is the plane damaged or anything else?’
      I said ‘No, except the engine fire.’
      ‘He said then you did everything correctly when it comes to the big picture.’
      That REALLY helped me.
      To this day I am actually grateful for that experience and my friends support.
      I truly believe it has made me a better pilot.

    • @motorv8N
      @motorv8N Год назад +1

      Oh man - sounds like a truly shit day. Glad you had good support from your friend.

  • @frank_av8tor
    @frank_av8tor Год назад +185

    Every so often we practice a flamout during descent in the sim. It's a tricky one as both engines are at idle with little asymmetric thrust. Yes that red-lining EGT was the best clue they had to identify the bad engine, I think their belief that both engines had failed also shows how little trust the crew had on their aircraft and quite possibly on their company's ability to conduct proper maintenance. As always thanks for an excellent review.

    • @spikenomoon
      @spikenomoon Год назад +10

      That is really good insight. It would absolutely have an instant impact on your responses no matter how much training.

    • @brucejones2354
      @brucejones2354 Год назад +9

      They had 2 engines running although 1 was at idle because they thought it had failed, the other WAS failing. Before I would allow the plane to be lost, and be possibly be killed in the process, l definitely would have brought the other engine up to see if it possibly would last long enough to make it to the airport.
      While listening to these kind of reports I just wonder where is the common sense ! ! !

    • @tryste_mx
      @tryste_mx Год назад +27

      ​@@brucejones2354common sense is inaccessible in high stress, hence the importance of training, not sense.

    • @bldn10
      @bldn10 Год назад +10

      @@brucejones2354 On page 211 the interviewer asked him just that: ". . . was there any time in that time that you thought, you know what, let me just push the number 1 up just to see if there is anything." That's where he says no, I was busy w/ the stick shaker.
      I'm not a pilot and don't know what you are trained to do and not do when the stick shaker goes off but in that situation, where you already know you are going down, I would think it would be instinct just to shove the thrust levers forward w/o looking at them or even thinking about it. What do you have to lose? Surely you aren't concerned about finishing off the engine you think is going bad.
      Again, I'm not a pilot, but I did used to race cars, and I still do track days in fairly quick cars. If I had experienced poor braking during a race and decided that they were about gone, I would not, if someone spun directly in my path, have the mental thought process the pilot said he had: I know my brakes are gone and will not do any good so I am not even going to bother to hit them.
      Right after that the pilot said something not mentioned in the report or in Juan's narrative, that he thought the No. 1 was already at full thrust. Does this plane's FDR not record lever position?

    • @grafhilgenhurst9717
      @grafhilgenhurst9717 Год назад +3

      I'm guessing it's more subtle than you would think. Practicing engine outs in a piston twin, I expected the prop to stop dead in front of me, but it doesn't! It still spins and makes noise. You have to to through the "dead leg, dead engine" drill, and pull the power on what you hope to be the dead engine. And try to get it right, without running out of airspeed or altitude in the meantime.

  • @alantoon5708
    @alantoon5708 Год назад +30

    "Aviation, in and of itself, is not inherently dangerous. But it is terribly unforgiving of any incapacity, neglect, or error.."
    There was a lot of that on this flight.

  • @scottbeyer101
    @scottbeyer101 Год назад +38

    Confirmation bias is so insidious. Been there and done that (as a student pilot). Thankfully, the tower guys straightened me out without a number to call.

  • @wild_lee_coyote
    @wild_lee_coyote Год назад +61

    Sometimes it is the little things that can get overlooked that can save yourself and the plane. Checklists are there so you don’t forget that little thing. Glad the crew made it out and survived.

    • @JimMork
      @JimMork Год назад +3

      Human memory is fallible. I had IT jobs with so many details checklists were natural but not always used. My wife handles her medicine supply in her head and it just doesn't work. But a checklist is a "crutch". Pride is why checklists are as rare as they are.

    • @jasoncarswell7458
      @jasoncarswell7458 Год назад +2

      Many years ago in the service, somebody gifted our C.O a carved plaque bearing the old line from Ben Franklin: "Beer is proof that God loves his children and wants them to be happy". This was a gag gift, as he was a bookish sort and a teetotaler (but a good sport).
      A couple of weeks later, we see the plaque on display: he'd taken a chisel and a paintbrush to it, and it now read "Checklists are proof that the Air Force loves her children and wants them to be alive." The point was taken!

    • @JimMork
      @JimMork Год назад +2

      @@jasoncarswell7458 Imaginative. The Franklin joke is a favorite. And, yes, a good checklist can INSURE vital items are remembered.

  • @kristensorensen2219
    @kristensorensen2219 Год назад +9

    If there is confusion which engine is working simply advance both throttles to full power. Identify the good engine by performance. Then use the good engine. Go through the shutdown checklist for the disfunctional engine! Fly the airplane!!

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Год назад +4

      Yes, indeed, and don´t waste your time with a chaotic attempt to explain to an overworked and distracted ATC thant you´re in trouble.

  • @russell3380
    @russell3380 Год назад +19

    Reminds me of the distraction over a gear indicator on Eastern Flight 401. I'm glad both survived.

  • @flyer5769
    @flyer5769 Год назад +75

    I flew for Rhoades Aviation, I believe it was 1986. If you look closely at the name on the airplane in my icon. Had the same thing happened to me, without the crash. I forget who we were subcontracting for, but it was our first flight for them. From Syracuse to Philadelphia. Taking off out of Syracuse climbing through 3000 feet we suddenly had a red light for the low oil pressure . The captain reached over and grabbed the right throttle and retarded it back to idle and then move the mixture to idle cut off. After he did that I grab the quadrant and told him I'd verify and communicate, said he needed to fly. With a quick check I found he had shut down the wrong engine. I returned mixture to auto rich brought the throttle back up to its last setting. The prop hadn't been touched yet. I proceeded to shut down the left engine. The correct one. We flew back on one engine without a problem since we had plenty of altitude, it was a gradual descent all the way back to Syracuse. We had to start the left engine back up on landing, because of snow and ice and it was very difficult to taxi. the next morning the engine was frozen when we came out to check. Couldn't even move the propeller. had one of the mechanics with us that trip. He pulled the oil screen and it was full.
    I did leave some stuff out.
    Seems like they haven't changed much.
    Sorry guys I was flying a DC-3 at the time. Rhoades Aviation only had DC-3's and Beech 18,s at that time.

    • @Britcarjunkie
      @Britcarjunkie Год назад +6

      And those planes are as basic and simple (read - safe), as they can get!
      That's why so many cargo outfits ran them - and some still do.
      737-200's are still great planes, but the problem these days seems to be, pilots are taught glass cockpits nowadays: throw analog instruments at them, and it's a whole different world. There are little tricks & quirks to flying older planes, that don't have computers to tell you everything you want to know.
      Kinda like taking a new pilot that was taught in the latest aircraft, then putting them in a Curtiss Jenny: they'll figure out how to fly it, but may complain about trying to figure out what direction the wind is coming from on an app on their cell phone, all while bitching about that damn rag that the mechanic left on one of the wing struts!
      Same thing in my present line of work- truck driving: new drivers don't learn with manual transmissions anymore, only automatics. Put these new drivers in snow with automatics, and watch the accident rate skyrocket.

    • @billcallahan9303
      @billcallahan9303 Год назад +5

      Beech 18s! Good Gobble Goo! I flew scheduled for old Emery Air Freight. So you lived to tell the tale of flying 3s & 18s! Congratulations! You & I are probably the last two survivors. Everybody else is d e a d. Except for Britcarjunkie up there.

    • @Britcarjunkie
      @Britcarjunkie Год назад +2

      @@billcallahan9303 I've flown in all kinds of fun stuff, even Traumahawks, ScareCoupes.

    • @flyer5769
      @flyer5769 Год назад +2

      ​@@billcallahan9303 I cheated! I didn't fly the 18's. There was no way, my dad had a bunch of time in them (he's 91 has a smidgen over 30,000 flying hours). So there is no way I was going to fly 18's. Used to fly with him when I was a kid. He would fly baby turkeys in DC-3's back East somewhere. I hadn't really thought about how many of us that were left.

    • @billcallahan9303
      @billcallahan9303 Год назад

      @@Britcarjunkie Mr. Britcar, we have a 2,580 foot grass airstrip. Two idiots overshot the runway on landing! Yes, overshot it in a Scarecoupe! You really have to work at that to do it in a Scarecoupe! They ate several trees for dinner but lived to be embarrassed for life & still have splinters in their asses. Two more pea brained idiots, Undershot the runway (same one) had trees for supper that were over-cooked as a fire destroyed them, their Scarecoupe & the poor innocent trees they hit. Both true Scarecoupe stories. North Florida. 2JO.

  • @commerce-usa
    @commerce-usa Год назад +55

    They do fly fine on one good engine, however it is vital to have it spooled up. 🙄👍

  • @WrightCycloneR1820
    @WrightCycloneR1820 Год назад +12

    This reminds me very much of the Kegworth accident here in the UK, similar model of 737 and they shut the wrong engine down. Crashed on approach to East Midlands trying to fly on the bad engine, hitting a freeway embankment. Many passengers killed and injured. Thank goodness this incident caused no loss of life.

  • @skydive1424
    @skydive1424 Год назад +7

    Very interesting human factors case. IMHO it shows that if you start off disorganised, confused or distracted, a crew rarely recovers from it. The FCO accident and Turkish in AMS were similar. The fact that the F/O was PF AND doing the radio at take off was the first sign that the captain was out of the loop for one reason or another. Not adhering to checklists, unable to decide which one to use, then grabbing control when things were getting dicy was a sign of disorganisation or panic; that’s when the reverted to seat of the pants only.
    Man! That F/O was lucky that he wasn’t knocked unconscious or got trapped when the seat broke on impact! Glad they both made it out safely! Quite an ordeal! Great review Juan!

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Год назад +1

      A very good point, indeed. "Admiral Cloudberg" made shortly a very good blog about this accident, too, with very interesting additional informations - really worthy to read.

  • @brandonsimunac
    @brandonsimunac Год назад +32

    Well this one is going to be used as a Human Factors case study for years. Glad they lived to teach all of us the benefits of good crew coordination and communication.

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Год назад +2

      Indeed. It has clarly this potential.

  • @Yojibby
    @Yojibby Год назад +27

    Juan, if you ever get tired of RUclips, you’d make a great aviation book narrator! You had me on the edge of my seat reading the events from the CVR.

    • @evan010101
      @evan010101 Год назад +1

      Drama! It reminded me of a Brian Lecomber novel, where the hero is nursing a Beech 18S into an island airport with one blown up engine, the other running out of oil.

  • @jonbeno9926
    @jonbeno9926 Год назад +13

    Thank you for the follow-up on this one. It's been a bit of a head scratcher, and honestly still is. I had believed they would have had both engines limping along with whatever they could have gotten out of them. Crazy to think all they had to do was push the throttle forward on the good engine. Tunnel vision is a very serious thing. Several very good lessons here, thank you.

  • @alstruck8063
    @alstruck8063 Год назад +3

    This is a beautiful example of "Murphy's Law" and you can bet Mr. Murphy is just waiting for the next unsuspecting crew. High work loads and night flights, even in paradise will throw in a curve ball now and then.
    Thanks again Mr Brown, play safe.

  • @SilogramVids
    @SilogramVids Год назад +25

    Great review! As a former USAF aircraft accident investigator, with a military/GA/airline flying/instructing career that began 40 years ago, I am always amazed when “Fly the Damn Airplane” is still a failure point and found causal. And yes, I’ve been there, done that. I lost a dozen T-38 engines over the years and two in the 727 - different days, and one was a real no kidding uncontained fire. I cannot even imagine NOT reaching back for that “spinning spare!!” What the heck are you saving it for? It was not even shut down!! That scenario is exactly why it (believing it had a problem) was not shutdown - or would not have been had they run the checklist. Sinking into the dirt/water… Balls to the wall as they say. Oh well. Glad they survived the severe breakdown. Not the engine breakdown - that’s why there are two engines. But the horrible breakdown of CRM, communication breakdown between the pilots, failure of the captain to follow established procedures and time-tested techniques, and the failure to use common cockpit sense.
    Damn glad there were no passengers or cabin crew aboard…

    • @Tony_glorified_bus_driver
      @Tony_glorified_bus_driver Год назад +1

      You nailed it . I was thinking the same thing, SilogramVids

    • @TenGreenRangers
      @TenGreenRangers Год назад +1

      These pilots are the one's who asked Honolulu tower for "a vector away from the airport so we can run our checklist" ... then didn't run them. They flew away from the airport and out to sea when they were clear to land ..with a return over open water no houses or buildings to people to jeopardize. Their planed flight was less than 60 minutes to another Hawaian island.. couldn't have been over on fuel much if at all.

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Год назад

      @@TenGreenRangers Yes, exactly. Thank you very much for this reminder!

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Год назад

      You nailed it, indeed. It remembered me in the first moment to the Kegworth Disaster in the UK back in 1989 - but after a closer look it was much worse. They were really damn glad that they were flying a Cargo Aircraft without Passengers and Cabin Crew. But the whole situation at this Airline was messy at that time and it can be questioned how the relationship between this Breakdown and the broader situation in their Company was.

  • @erikhahn3647
    @erikhahn3647 Год назад +17

    I was on Maui about a month before this accident, on a beach near OGG watching planes while the kids were playing in the surf. Saw a plane takeoff that had much darker engine exhaust than all the others so I looked it up on Flightradar24. I remember noting to myself that was probably the oldest 737 I had ever seen. It was crazy that it was the same airplane involved in this accident the next month.

    • @dabda8510
      @dabda8510 Год назад +1

      I remember reading about a DC3 running cargos between the Hawaiian Islands. About 10 years ago.

  • @x--.
    @x--. Год назад +2

    Man did I feel that "Did we screw up?" -- That's so helpful. Like you know this guy didn't want to crash into the water, his instincts took over and not his training -- or their airline didn't value training the way that they needed to prevent this accident.
    Glad no one got killed that night and we all got a great lesson.
    Thanks for including that very humanizing element of the transcript.

  • @baomao7243
    @baomao7243 Год назад +17

    28:50 I felt a sinking feeling in my stomach hearing what appears to be the captain suddenly realizing that he may have been a major factor. Glad they both survived.

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Год назад +2

      Yes, I, too - with this questions around Engine Number 1 he probably started to realise that they "screwed up" - but astonishingly only then, eight month after the Crash with much time to think through what has happened.

  • @davidpeterson7197
    @davidpeterson7197 Год назад +2

    Despite his clouded tunnel vision, I still have empathy for the 55 year old captain, as he has clearly "lost a step or two" in his thought processing. It happens to all of us at different ages in our lives. He is lucky to be alive. Thank you for this program, and I don't understand why, but there were no ads in the ad tracker for this one.

  • @ericcox6764
    @ericcox6764 Год назад +62

    Juan, Thank you so much for doing this update. I remember when you covered the accident right after it happened. Also, thanks for taking the time to explain the graph from the FDR. I’ve always wondered what information was captured and how that information was displayed. When I first saw the graph, I couldn't make heads or tails out of anything, but your explanation was top notch!!
    I've been watching you and Mentor for many years. Both of you are a blessing to the RUclips community!!

  • @lyleparadise2764
    @lyleparadise2764 Год назад +19

    The CFI that gave me training for my CFI ticket taught me that , if you take over the controls of an airplane during flight, ALWAYS physically touch all the controls, ie- yoke, throttle, trims, flaps, etc. , and assure they are in the correct positions before resuming the flight as necessary. Never assume the pilot that was flying......was doing it right. Had the captain practiced this when he took control, this may not have happened.

  • @wdhewson
    @wdhewson Год назад +20

    If you've ever felt pure panic. then you know it causes you to lose your mind.

  • @homomorphic
    @homomorphic Год назад +36

    737 looks to be a better submersible than titan...

  • @MattyEngland
    @MattyEngland Год назад +55

    A 50 year old engine with over 100k cycles!..... I can't think of a single thing that could go wrong lol

    • @coolasice2187
      @coolasice2187 Год назад +2

      Don't these engines get completely rebuilt after a certain number of hours ?

    • @ne2i
      @ne2i Год назад +1

      Shocking!

    • @zoso73
      @zoso73 Год назад +16

      @@coolasice2187 The two blades that failed don't appear to be rebuilt. They seem to be original, judging how aged they look from the photograph. LBJ was President when the right engine came off the assembly line!

    • @coolasice2187
      @coolasice2187 Год назад

      @@zoso73 ok. But I'm still wondering...

    • @MattyEngland
      @MattyEngland Год назад +2

      @@coolasice2187 They get torn down inspected and parts changed, but AFAIK not the main fan or turbine assembly, that would all be original.

  • @FlywithMagnar
    @FlywithMagnar Год назад +38

    The investigators turned every stone to be sure they came to the correct conclusion. Kudos to them. This accident clearly shows that we humans have limitations when it comes to cope with high stress situations, regardless of flight experience. This captain had experienced engine failures before, and still this happened. I really feel with the crew and hope I will never been put in a similar situation. Not discussed in this video is the fatigue element. Working when the body is programmed to sleep has a detrimental effect on human performance.

    • @foowashere
      @foowashere Год назад +1

      Hi Magnar! Will you do a commentary with your take/lessons from this accident? Your perspective is always interesting. :)

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Год назад +1

      @@foowashere Indeed.

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Год назад +4

      This Final Report must really be horrible for them to read. But I found it really astonishing that the Captain was even eight month after the accident absolutely convinced about the actions he took and obviously got only doubts when the investigators started to focus their questions onto Engine Number One.

    • @TenGreenRangers
      @TenGreenRangers Год назад +1

      It doesn't show "we humans have limitations to cope" .. It shows these Pilots screwed up. Stop giving the Pilots outs on resposibility. When you practice activitities.. you become skilled at those activities. I bet you can tie your shoe in the dark... because you've done it 1 million times. You practice response to the most dangerous posibilities.. over and over.. that's what makes you calm and familiar with the steps and able to do it easily when the real thing happens. A Pro is practiced up.

  • @mkm1225
    @mkm1225 Год назад +106

    Ya know..... This is the first jet I checked out in as an FO and also as a Captain. This whole scenario makes me shake my head. Now I'm not the sharpest knife in the drawer, but holy crap, these guys really effed up.

    • @octagonPerfectionist
      @octagonPerfectionist Год назад +16

      at least nobody died!

    • @WestAirAviation
      @WestAirAviation Год назад +20

      Amazing ditching skills, terrible CRM / ADM skills.

    • @deans178
      @deans178 Год назад +30

      easy to say. until you are in a circumstance you've never experienced, panic is at your finger tips, and your brain convinces you that something is happening that really isn't, and you efff up, and go down the rabbit hole yourself.

    • @perwestermark8920
      @perwestermark8920 Год назад +14

      Not being a pilot but with one engine glowing and not delivering enough power, I can't see why I would not try to coax some power from that other engine - the one *assumed* broken. Just 10% power from that one would have made a significant difference.
      And as we know from the report - it would have surprised them by delivering way more than 10% thrust. They would suddenly have had all the power needed to safely land.
      History already have lots of planes surviving with engines not delivering full power. So why not check and dual-check and tripple-check the thrust lever position of the non-glowing engine???

    • @saito125
      @saito125 Год назад +12

      ​@@octagonPerfectionistOnly because it was a cargo plane, with just 2 crew onboard. Were it a pax flight the outcome would've been much worse.

  • @colinmiles1052
    @colinmiles1052 Год назад +29

    Great video as always. So glad you did not denigrate the aircrew. Very easy to do when you are not in that situation.

  • @gerardmoran9560
    @gerardmoran9560 Год назад +21

    Great analysis Juan. It reminds me of the 73 crash in the UK (British Midlands?) where they shut down the operating engine and crashed on a highway short of the airport.

    • @vernicethompson4825
      @vernicethompson4825 Год назад +2

      There have been other incidents like that where the pilots shut down the wrong engine. RUclips has videos of some of them.

    • @ridbanner1407
      @ridbanner1407 10 месяцев назад

      From memory I think the engine instrumentation had been wired wrong for left and right ?

    • @gerardmoran9560
      @gerardmoran9560 10 месяцев назад

      @@ridbanner1407 I don't think so. That would be evident upon engine start.

    • @ridbanner1407
      @ridbanner1407 10 месяцев назад

      I think you are correct , it featured as a possible theory at the time. turned out cabin air on old model came from left engine ,new model right engine which pilots did not know ,so smell of smoke triggered wrong side shut down.@@gerardmoran9560

  • @sarahmacintosh6449
    @sarahmacintosh6449 Год назад +22

    Great video, thanks! I felt sorry for the captain by the end of the interview, when the truth was starting to get through. So glad they both survived!

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Год назад +1

      Yes, I, too. Probably he´s today a beaten man.

  • @Paragoth
    @Paragoth Год назад +35

    Ditching at almost 2 in the morning? Granted, they put themselves in the position to have to ditch but that's still a mighty impressive thing to swim away from.

  • @lawrencedavidson6195
    @lawrencedavidson6195 Год назад +7

    I'm so glad they survived to talk about it. Thanks for the update Juan, and greetings from MBJ airport Jamaica.

  • @georgemartin1436
    @georgemartin1436 Год назад +10

    Glad no loss of life. This is a learning experience for the industry.

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Год назад

      Indeed.

    • @__WJK__
      @__WJK__ Год назад

      Indeed, but the "what can we learn going forward" part is the kicker, given this is not the only time something like this has happened.

    • @SteamCrane
      @SteamCrane Год назад

      Maybe not. Industry hasn't learned from all the other times.

  • @vernicethompson4825
    @vernicethompson4825 Год назад +2

    You are so right, as always. Misidentifying the bad engine has occurred several times before, sometimes with the pilots recognizing their mistake in time while at other times failing to realize their mistake and resulting in disaster.

  • @jockojohn3294
    @jockojohn3294 Год назад +31

    Maybe checklists should have a line item near the top of the checklist that says "if all else fails push both thrust levers to max. or 3/4 thrust" or something like that as an item that could save the flight, or bring the crew out of tunnel vision. Would there be any downside to do that?

    • @tymcfadden8496
      @tymcfadden8496 Год назад +8

      it could conceivably cause an overheating engine to catch fire. But I agree with you, push em to the stops and figure it out after you get speed back.

    • @Milkmans_Son
      @Milkmans_Son Год назад +8

      A checklist by nature can only assume all prior steps were completed correctly, otherwise it becomes something other than a checklist.

  • @rueliotube
    @rueliotube 10 месяцев назад +1

    I thought it would be cool to get a pilots license. After watching your videos, I realize I don’t think I have what it takes to be a safe and effective pilot. I love your reviews, they are so interesting. You sir, are a true expert in your field. It’s nice to know people like you are educating people and taking things so seriously.

    • @consortiumxf
      @consortiumxf 2 месяца назад +1

      Probably one of the best comments I've read on RUclips honestly. I love aviation but know that operating an aircraft just isn't for me. Self-awareness saves lives in aviation!

  • @richardschindler8822
    @richardschindler8822 Год назад +17

    I’ve flown many ROUND gauge airplanes in my day, only had one engine shut down in flight, Lear35 with Garrett 731’s, but going through the quick look see, red fire warning light, bell, go down the column of gauges and see the egt going up, the epr gong down, just to be 100% sure which one was bad. Hit the fire bottle. Shut down checklist completed, decided to land at nearest airport.
    Change underwear.
    But this was done in the daytime, crew had plenty of rest, also crew worked well together. I flew, he did everything else. Landed safely with zero issues.
    To be under extreme stress and a not so well maintained aircraft, guess it was a totally different game.
    At least they lived to tell there story.

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Год назад +2

      Indeed. Thank you for sharing your experience. And you´ve probably not confused communicate with aviate and distracting yourself by a chaotic radio communication with an overworked and itself distracted ATC.

    • @Milkmans_Son
      @Milkmans_Son Год назад

      @@NicolaW72 I thought she did a pretty good job.

    • @firstielasty1162
      @firstielasty1162 9 месяцев назад

      EPR gauge on a Lear 35? That's different.

  • @richardp1522
    @richardp1522 Год назад +21

    Great summary of the NTSB report appreciate your depth of knowledge and experience as a pilot. With all due respect to the caption and his flight hours. Amazing how a stressful cockpit incident once again resulted in tunnel vision. Very interesting how after all that time post accident the captain didn't recognize the error. But certainly wanted to know if the flight crew were responsible. I am grateful there was no loss of life.

  • @julzb7165
    @julzb7165 Год назад +39

    A similar situation happened with British Midlands years ago.

    • @trafficsnitch3505
      @trafficsnitch3505 Год назад +7

      Aircraft failed to reach the runway and crashed on the M1 embankment

    • @julzb7165
      @julzb7165 Год назад +7

      ​@@trafficsnitch3505was it at Kegworth?

    • @cageordie
      @cageordie Год назад +10

      @@trafficsnitch3505 Known as the Kegworth Disaster. Crashed short of the M1 actually, then slid over and onto the M1 and hit the west embankment. They only needed to make a it about another 200 yards to miss the M1. I was in Bedford at the time and drove up there on my way to Newcastle on the following Friday, I worked near J13 on the M1. By then the only sign of the disaster was some new landscaping on the other side of the M1. Every scrap of clear evidence was gone.

    • @martinhicks6020
      @martinhicks6020 Год назад +6

      And the pilots only had to ask the cabin crew to look out of the windows to see if there was any signs of an engine in distress. Even better, one of them could have walked back into the cabin to look for himself. But that was too simple!

    • @pfp200
      @pfp200 Год назад +5

      And the short section of new metal barrier in middle of the motorway.

  • @hotbug597
    @hotbug597 Год назад +15

    Excellent evaluation and report Juan. I really appreciate it when you put these reports into English for us. Your reporting is also a great and valuable training aid to illustrate the importance of procedures. Thanks so much for all you do for us.

  • @davidhoekje7842
    @davidhoekje7842 Год назад +4

    It's amazing how often this has occurred. Whatever caused neither pilot to think of attempting to operate the remaining engine is worth a close look as well.

  • @NesconProductions
    @NesconProductions Год назад +2

    Story a bit reminiscent of the TransAsia Airways Flight 235 out of Taiwan. Thank for the detailed rundown Juan!

  • @kevinmalloy2180
    @kevinmalloy2180 Год назад +9

    Great reporting as always! You gotta feel for these guys, handling crappy old equipment and then getting themselves into a losing situation and mentally not being able to get out.

  • @NicolaW72
    @NicolaW72 Год назад +4

    Thank you very much for picking up and discussing the Final Report of this Accident! I was hoping for it because it wents in the way as it unfortunately wents often: When the Final Report is out and there´s the ability to take a really closer look nobody does it - if in such cases where it was a news really worldwide.
    Such a mistake as hear happened not the first time - it remembers much to the Kegworth Disaster back in 1989. But it is really astonishing, too, how strong the confirmation bias was. Thank you very much for going through this Report step by step - that makes plausible how easily and quick things can go out of control - by a simple error: put communicate in front of aviate.
    I wish all the best for the two Pilots. They crashed not only their Aircraft but eventually also their Airline. Maybe the FO can re-open his Lawyer-office. But the Captain in his age and with this story is probably a really beaten man today.

  • @ADHJkvsNgsMBbTQe
    @ADHJkvsNgsMBbTQe Год назад +4

    Thank you for your continued focus on safety. It could happen to any of us on a bad day. We have probably all had confirmation bias tunnel vision at some time in our lives, but we are usually fortunate enough not to be in such a critical situation. Learning to take a deep breath and look at the gages (literally and figuratively) can save you and others from a lot of trouble.

  • @kansaimike
    @kansaimike Год назад +1

    “ …having your head in the game 100% for every single takeoff.” I’m a paraglider pilot and so I try to keep this in mind every single time. You never know what can go wrong.

  • @dave1ahc
    @dave1ahc Год назад +6

    Once again, Juan, great Shell really had a very detailed in touch. It’s so sad though that they just didn’t go back to the basics and check on the left-hand engine. So sad.

  • @johnmehaffey9953
    @johnmehaffey9953 Год назад +1

    Thank you Juan for reading out this report, it reminds me of the accident here in the UK when the pilots shut down the wrong engine only over here one of the investigators said shortly after the crash that the wrong engine was shut down, unfortunately lives were lost on this occasion, just shows that pilots are not learning from previous accidents, I think it was a new aircraft in the UK accident showing that the age of the engine doesn’t mean failures can’t happen

  • @neuropilot7310
    @neuropilot7310 Год назад +9

    Wasn't one of the significant questions of Capt. Sully when Flight 1549 landed on the Hudson river was if there was any thrust coming from one of the engines (left engine?) that was running, but with a sub-idle RPM, and later confirmed to have no thrust whatsoever? FO Skiles still continued the restart attempts on both engines, until shortly before ditching in Hudson.

  • @RyTrapp0
    @RyTrapp0 Год назад +5

    Classic example of "there's a reason why we do things the way we do"

  • @joshmaddren4088
    @joshmaddren4088 Год назад +6

    Love this channel been watching for over 4 years now i remember when this mishap happened

  • @jmayer29
    @jmayer29 Год назад +2

    Great analysis, Juan. Target fixation/tunnel vision has nearly killed me a couple of times on two wheels. As you probably know, the motorcycle goes where the rider looks... Focus on the obstacle, and damned if you won't hit it every time.

  • @skyepilotte11
    @skyepilotte11 Год назад +6

    Thanks Juan for your excellent analysis of contributing factors to this accident. We as humans always want to place blame somewhere else...it has to be a learning experience.

  • @hack1n8r
    @hack1n8r Год назад +4

    Thank you for this breakdown and explaination -- very useful info & instruction.
    Confirmation bias & tunnel vision go hand-in-hand, which is one reason checklists exist. However, separation of roles broke down at the behest of the captain, and objectivity was lost. The only way to mitigate is through proper training, which *must* include "startle training". Without startle training, it can be difficult to recognize your own compromised mental state/thinking, which can lead to incorrect problem identification & appropriate response(s).
    One critical thing that must be done is to maintain current separate roles, because switching roles introduces significant increased workload and confusion, which greatly diminishes ability to identify and take proper corrective action. The only exception to this is if one of the pilots are/become incapacitated.
    In my training I was taught to "take a beat" when something unexpected happens -- meaning, don't react right away, take a breath, then assess and respond. As with all generalizations, there are exceptions.
    There were lessons learned from this incident, and training overall has been made better from this.
    I'm glad both pilots were ok, and I hope they continued to fly after this.

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Год назад

      👍 - This Final Report must be dreadful for them to read.

  • @richsarchet9762
    @richsarchet9762 Год назад +98

    Years ago, when I was in flight school, a Seminole was being flown by 2 instructors, one learning to be a multi-engine instructor from the other. The one instructing shut off the fuel selector for Number 1, when it quit running the one flying feathered Number 2. In the ensuing helmet fires the fuel was turned back on to number 1, with all the levers full forward, it lit off and severely over-speeded, damaging the prop governor which locked at the fine limit, so it could only make a little power. Emergency declared they went to work an trying to restart number 2, which takes awhile, without unfeathering accumulators. Meanwhile I and everyone else was sent out of the pattern by the tower to clear the way. I think they did get number 2 restarted. They flew it over to the airport and set it down with the gear still in the wells and slid to a stop in the intersection of the only 2 paved runways on the field, closing both runways. No body was hurt and the airplane flew again. Months later, I took my Commercial, Multi-Engine check-ride in it the day it came back on the flightline. Back to the big day, because I had experience landing on dirt in the wild west, I asked tower if the grass runway parallel to one of the closed runways (usually only used for taildraggers and gliders) was available, or if the whole field was closed. They decided the grass could be used for landings only, so a whole bunch of people got to land Cherokees, Mooneys and Seminoles on the grass that day, but the school didn't have to recover all its planes from all the nearby airports.
    Young me took the lesson to identify, verify, think about it and then slowly move the lever to feather to heart. Older me (now) thinks piston twins sometimes, not often, can try to kill you very quickly during takeoff, and my superior airmanship may be insufficient due to slowing reflexes...so I choose not to operate them anymore. They at least twice as likely to have an engine failure (maybe more, since attitudes about having a spare can influence what condition seems tolerable) and just as likely to be fatal after an engine failure as a single. In a single the next steps are clear when the fan quits - put the nose down and choose where the landing/crash is going to be.

    • @WestAirAviation
      @WestAirAviation Год назад +17

      Agreed. Losing the critical engine right after rotating on some aircraft will lawn dart the craft into the nearest hangar if the PF doesn't quickly feather the bad engine. It should be simple: If your right foot is all the way at the stop, feather the left, and vice versa. But reality is that when shit goes bad, it takes a while to process it. Taking it slow might kill you in the rare engine failure after rotation, but it'll save you in 99% of all other engine failures. I'd go with your slow but measured type of aviating. Especially as you get older.

    • @tenpiloto
      @tenpiloto Год назад +12

      Part of my briefing as a wide-body pic was "no fast hands"

    • @bwalker4194
      @bwalker4194 Год назад +1

      Nicely stated and very thoughtful. On many light twins after engine failure and the ensuing helmet fire, the second engine only functions to take the crew to the accident sight.

    • @davidbaldwin1591
      @davidbaldwin1591 Год назад

      I got noggin fire reading this, in the comfort of my twin mattress.

    • @jmayer29
      @jmayer29 Год назад

      @@tenpiloto What's the saying? Slow is fast, fast is good.

  • @Silo-Ren
    @Silo-Ren Год назад +2

    Yup, seen this one before. British Midland Airways brand new 737. Just 12 weeks old. Thnx Juan. 😊

  • @danschreck834
    @danschreck834 Год назад +9

    Outstanding again , Juan keep up the great work!

  • @flymachine
    @flymachine Год назад

    Your channel is by far my favourite fact reporting aviation channel on YT thank you!

  • @michaelimbesi2314
    @michaelimbesi2314 Год назад +110

    Ah yes. The ol’ “isolate the wrong engine” type of accident

    • @fuzzy1dk
      @fuzzy1dk Год назад +11

      it has happen quite few times, at what point does doing nothing and just letting what ever engine is failing burn it self up, become the better option?

    • @walkingman9171
      @walkingman9171 Год назад +20

      Sound like zero common sense again. Even if they had idled down the failing engine, if you are going to go down into the water because of not enough thrust. What the hell have you got to lose bringing up the thrust on the bad engine? In this case it would have been the good engine and it would all have been good. No common sense.

    • @ThePwig
      @ThePwig Год назад +5

      It's just ALWAYS this problem. Or maybe it's because if it gets this bad, then we hear about it. But dang, shutting down the wrong engine. Oof

    • @fuzzy1dk
      @fuzzy1dk Год назад +13

      @@walkingman9171 some times the brain works in mysterious ways that later seems to make no sense. The objective must be to find procedures that avoid that

    • @Relkond
      @Relkond Год назад +2

      Are the gauges arranged sensibly? Engine one on the left two on the right? Or is this another case of confusing gauge layout? Did conditions (say, a violently shaking engine) make reading the gauges difficult?

  • @zbare-tech
    @zbare-tech Год назад +1

    I would also argue this helps show how the modern instruments and computer systems in newer aircraft help reduce the stress and workload of the pilots during an emergency and help make it much more obvious what the current configuration of the aircraft is. I wonder if this aircraft had updated instruments if the outcome would have been different.

  • @FlyingShotsman
    @FlyingShotsman Год назад +3

    Regarding the First Officer reading back the takeoff clearance, it does make sense. The Captain would have been taxiing the aircraft when the clearance was received (VERY few 737s are delivered with a steering tiller on the right side), so the First Officer would have been handling the radio. About the only time you'll hear a 737 Captain read back a takeoff clearance is when the aircraft has been given a "line up and wait" clearance and is holding on the runway, waiting for a takeoff clearance. Then the Captain may have already transferred controls to the First Officer.

  • @hgbugalou
    @hgbugalou Год назад +2

    You and Petyr from mentorpilot are the very best aviation aviation content creators on here. Always a pleasure to watch your ntsb report summaries.

  • @gabrielg8826
    @gabrielg8826 Год назад +5

    As a pilot about to do my multi training, I will now start calling out the failed engine when my instructor simulates a engine failure so that both crew let that info sink into their heads.

  • @ross4
    @ross4 Год назад +1

    Glad that people are understanding it’s not about blaming the pilots, but understanding the human psychological factors that made them fail.

  • @TheGospelQuartetParadise
    @TheGospelQuartetParadise Год назад +5

    Rhoades Aviation / Transair email to flight crew. Due to the NTSB final report, we have just amended your retirement age to 110. That aircraft is coming out of your pay.... Great report Juan.

  • @larrybe2900
    @larrybe2900 Год назад +8

    This job included a multiple repitition schedule. Adjusting the brain from out of the ordinary after an upset at night when the brain says it should be asleep is tricky. I have not flown but have operated machines at night and there is a challenge to the effort as anyone that has done it would tell you. I applaud those who thrive in this time environment. As computers take over more of the attention of the operator there is less for the brain to handle and nature is what it is.

  • @golfbravowhiskey8669
    @golfbravowhiskey8669 Год назад +6

    Good Lord, that old
    pack mule had some hours on those engines.
    Just glad they both survived.

  • @ElinT13
    @ElinT13 Год назад +1

    Thanks Juan for this report review. I am glad that the pilots survived.

  • @brianbob7514
    @brianbob7514 Год назад +12

    The interview with the coast guard helicopter kids was great on this one.

    • @blancolirio
      @blancolirio  Год назад +9

      Do have the link? I’ll add it to the description.

    • @MattyCrayon
      @MattyCrayon Год назад +6

      @@blancolirio Search - KHON2 speaks with USCG crew who performed rescue

  • @neptune4167
    @neptune4167 Год назад +2

    Wow! Great review. This sounds so similar to the C5 accident at Dover AFB in Delaware back in 2006.

  • @pilotjcm
    @pilotjcm Год назад +6

    Excellent report! Thanks, Juan

  • @johnmorykwas2343
    @johnmorykwas2343 Год назад +3

    With engine failure in a multiple engine aircraft, the first thing we would do is verify which engine has a problem, and that is performed by gauge check and slowly jocking the throttles to definitely verify who is working and who is not. This is on pre millennial aircraft that does not have a computer to tell the pilots everything that going on. Making sure the engine is broke also prevents CNDs.

  • @flyjarrett
    @flyjarrett Год назад +4

    Reminds me of the C-5 accident from years back. They had an engine failure, but idled a good engine, leaving two engines to keep a fully loaded airplane in the air.

  • @alexanderlacy4005
    @alexanderlacy4005 Год назад +2

    [Fun fact] I am a Commercial aviator with 13,491 total flight hours in the business class industry of aviation mostly. I was sitting here thinking “they shut the wrong engine down? 🤔 how could they have done that? There is no way that would ever happen to me!” Then this whole time I would have sworn I was subscribing to your channel, because I watch every video when they come out. But I went to like your video, and noticed that I was not subscriber. So now I’m rethinking “would I really shut the wrong engine down?” Fact is, we don’t know how we are going to preform when we are put in their situation, until we are faced with it! You get a lot of uneventful hours over a period of 20-40 years, then you get comfortable with it over that X amount of time, and even though you train for it many times, then all hell brakes out, then your entire life, and the lives of all the other souls on board depends on what decisions you make within the next 5min to an hour, then you are going to preform much differently then when you did it in the simulator, because you can’t afford to mess up, when it is real LIFE that depends on you, and what decisions you make from that moment, to the threshold of that runway!

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Год назад

      Indeed, exactly - that´s the point: It IS a difference if you´re sitting in a simulator, from which you can walk out every time and where you´re prepared to be checked, or if you´re sitting in a real Cockpit in a real Aircraft in a dark Night over an Ocean - and in a few seconds the Situation changed from anpther night at work to "Get it done NOW or dy".

  • @roadgeneral
    @roadgeneral Год назад +3

    Key words here: Tunnel Vision. Thx Juan.

  • @noonehere1793
    @noonehere1793 Год назад +2

    Great update….weird issue to complicate a flight but at the same time just fly the plane first then sort out the problem calmly and efficiently……

  • @johnslaughter5475
    @johnslaughter5475 Год назад +4

    Thanks, Juan. As you stated, this could happen to almost anyone. The flight crew were both very experienced and still reacted wrongly. Even months later the pilot still did not understand what had happened.

  • @howebrad4601
    @howebrad4601 10 месяцев назад

    Pilot has to be putting 2 and 2 together and guessing that maybe number 1 was fine. Imagine his surprise when he learned that number 1 was ok and it was idled. Holy cow. Love your channel.

  • @peterredfern1174
    @peterredfern1174 Год назад +3

    At least there was no fatalities,another top report Juan,👋👋👍👍🇦🇺

  • @peggyh8937
    @peggyh8937 Год назад +1

    Glad they survived. Thanks, Juan!

  • @JT-1969
    @JT-1969 Год назад +9

    I looked up Rhoades Aviation out of Hawaii, it’s the same company I worked for in the late 80’s in my hometown of Columbus Indiana before going to college. They flew cargo out of the municipal airport using DC3s, Beech 18s, and had a Super Constellation before it crashed in the early 80’s on takeoff, killed the crew. They also had a KingAir C90 and a Citation. Not sure when they closed up shop in Columbus, they had a lot of problems.

  • @razorcatshark3223
    @razorcatshark3223 Год назад +2

    What a wild story: thanks for the thorough treatment!

  • @insylem
    @insylem Год назад +30

    It's possible that in their pilot training, they always only ever trained for the #2 engine failure. So when #1 failed they went to their training and acted as if #2 failed, just like in their training. I've heard of that happening before. The FAA calls it "Norms" as part of the dirty dozen of human factors

    • @DowncastParadox
      @DowncastParadox Год назад +5

      Wait... really?? Who TF doesn't alternate between engines when training for engine failures?

    • @richwightman3044
      @richwightman3044 Год назад +6

      These guys were in their 50s with tens of thousands of hours of flight time and you think it’s plausible that they only EVER experienced an E2 failure? Also, E2 IS the bad engine in this story. E1 was good the whole time. Baffling logic.

    • @georgewchilds
      @georgewchilds Год назад +6

      Yes, #1 is the one everyone trains for because it is typically more deadly. That’s why dead foot, dead engine comes before identify, verify, feather.
      The captain knew they effed up during the second questioning.
      I hope he’s ok.

    • @nocalsteve
      @nocalsteve Год назад +2

      @@georgewchildsI didn’t realize jets had a critical engine, or that you had to feather a turbojet engine.

    • @Milkmans_Son
      @Milkmans_Son Год назад +1

      @@nocalsteve Now you know.

  • @parker02311
    @parker02311 Год назад +1

    Moved to Oahu about a month or two after this incident, incredible that both pilots made it out alive. Hearing the ATC transmissions showed how stressed they were

  • @sanderruscigno
    @sanderruscigno Год назад +26

    As an inexperienced private pilot, I wonder if there is anything in the checklist that can help the pilots identify these types of mistakes? That would be great learning for me.

    • @blancolirio
      @blancolirio  Год назад +24

      EICAS….

    • @vanstry
      @vanstry Год назад +14

      crosscheck crosscheck crosscheck. And unless the engine is going to blow up, leave it alone until you're landing.

    • @reefsandrunways
      @reefsandrunways Год назад +4

      @@blancolirioECAM😂

    • @tenpiloto
      @tenpiloto Год назад +17

      There are several ways to identify a dead engine. Use your rudder pedals (step on the ball) to put the ball in the middle. Dead foot dead engine. Not to mention engine instruments.

    • @Robert08010
      @Robert08010 Год назад +4

      Maybe a normal flying checklist: 1. ) Engines running? 2.) Keep your cool.

  • @White-Wolf687
    @White-Wolf687 Год назад +1

    Thanks!

  • @GlideYNRG
    @GlideYNRG Год назад +3

    A reminder of the human factors involved and possible outcome regardless of how good we think we are. Two lucky pilots with a story for all to hear and learn from. Thank you for your well presented in-depth follow up /break down Juan.

  • @chrisgossman6512
    @chrisgossman6512 Год назад +1

    Oh yeah, I am subscribed. Long time now. Pretty much like every video. Well, to be truthful, I like them all. You are my go-to source for aviation incidents. Very Happy subscriber 😊!
    Thanks for your report on this one. Unimaginable that they shut down the wrong engine.

  • @stay_at_home_astronaut
    @stay_at_home_astronaut Год назад +3

    Juan, early in the video you state that one of the crew 'took a break from aviation' and worked as a divorce lawyer. HOW IS THAT LINE OF WORK "OUTSIDE" OF AVIATION??? At worst, going from the cockpit to divorce lawyer is a "Lateral Move", but is still working well within 'the aviation industry'.

  • @gritsngranola
    @gritsngranola Год назад +2

    Wow 😮 it's amazing how stress can really mess things up.
    Another awesome report Juan!

  • @johnkoral888
    @johnkoral888 Год назад +17

    After reducing number one to idle, the F/O forgot which engine was the good one when he needed to add power again. With both engines at idle and no other obvious indication as to which one is bad…no fire warning, loss of oil pressure,etc (and no dead foot) and not yet having secured the bad engine he just grabbed the wrong thrust lever.

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Год назад +5

      Indeed. And the Captain was distracted by the radio communication chaos.

    • @brinkee7674
      @brinkee7674 Год назад +3

      They both had a terrible case of CRS(can't remember shit) or CRAFT(can't remember a fucking thing) as they both knew which engine was bad

  • @geoffquickfall
    @geoffquickfall Год назад +3

    I did quite a few hours on that fin in the 90’s when it was at Canadian Airlines International. Sad to see it at the bottom of the ocean. Geoff Quickfall BSc, MSc, PhD candidate with 28,000hrs; DC10, B737, B757, B767, B777, B787, DHC2, DHC3, B18

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Год назад

      Sad end of an ancient Aircraft, indeed.

  • @stephenreese5921
    @stephenreese5921 Год назад +3

    Identify, verify, fix or feather! Basic twin engine procedures.

  • @motorTranz
    @motorTranz Год назад +1

    Thank God these pilots got out alive! Thank you Coast Guard for your service! A lot will be learned from this I'm sure. Thank you Juan for your analysis!