The Boeing 747 Crash that CHANGED Aviation Forever (With Real Audio)

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  • Опубликовано: 9 май 2024
  • Find out how a miscommunication brought down a massive Boeing 747 Jumbo Jet.
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    Chapters
    0:00 Departure from Singapore
    1:30 Preparation for Landing
    2:05 Real Audio Communications
    3:40 Confusion
    5:00 Approaching Kuala Lumpur
    6:43 More Confusion
    9:51 Crash
    11:41 Investigation
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Комментарии • 1,6 тыс.

  • @80bbygrl
    @80bbygrl Год назад +1317

    Okay I'm certainly no airline pilot, but I would think that ignoring the plane telling you to pull up because there's terrain coming up ahead would probably not be something to ignore?

    • @carlosbarzottowirti1895
      @carlosbarzottowirti1895 11 месяцев назад +213

      Right??? "Man, I'm in the middle of nowhere, my altimeter reads 35,000 feet, this GPWS is telling me to pull up?", you pull up

    • @simpleman5688
      @simpleman5688 11 месяцев назад +28

      Zakly

    • @Incidental104
      @Incidental104 11 месяцев назад +178

      Under these conditions, pilots face high workload and experience tunnel vision, hindering their ability to hear warnings. It's easy for us, watching a reconstructed documentary, to criticize their actions. In reality, pilots are multitasking and dealing with a chain reaction of events, causing their brains to zone off after a certain point. Many crashes are not caused by a single factor.

    • @rebeltvr6046
      @rebeltvr6046 11 месяцев назад +158

      @@Incidental104 Not a good excuse. If pilots are dealing with these issues ,they should not be pilots.

    • @tochallengethehorizon6487
      @tochallengethehorizon6487 11 месяцев назад +197

      ​@@Incidental104 To the point of not hearing WHOOP!! WHOOP!! PULL UP!!
      ? 🤔

  • @BlueHelvetical
    @BlueHelvetical Год назад +622

    The fact that this is such an underrated flight crash that actually changed the way pilots and ATC communicates around the world, is interesting.

    • @andreirau
      @andreirau Год назад +15

      how is it underrated if it became an example and manual case?...

    • @BlueHelvetical
      @BlueHelvetical Год назад +48

      @@andreirau Most people never heard of it, they are unpopular among the public. Even people that lives in the place where it crashed (Malaysia) never heard of it, let alone aviageeks nowadays. Pilots and ATC may have heard of it since it is used in training video and etc. They are useful.

    • @alanhinkel420
      @alanhinkel420 Год назад +15

      @@BlueHelvetical that’s because 4 people died in the crash. No passengers.

    • @danielnovitadubin8272
      @danielnovitadubin8272 Год назад +16

      @@BlueHelvetical I think you should have chosen a better word other than "underrated".

    • @Ben-ks5bm
      @Ben-ks5bm Год назад +4

      @@danielnovitadubin8272 I think it’s appropriate

  • @obscurity3027
    @obscurity3027 Год назад +266

    When tower said 2400 ft, I heard it as “to 400 ft” as well. But then I immediately thought, “there’s no way that’s right.” I’m amazed that no one questioned it.

    • @markwallis7199
      @markwallis7199 11 месяцев назад +30

      I'm 100% with you. Nobody has ever cleared me to 400 feet, it just doesn't happen even in my tiny aircraft let alone a heavy and they surely would have known it.

    • @ElementsMMA
      @ElementsMMA 10 месяцев назад +32

      @@markwallis7199 The Captain had landed at this airport so many times you would think he would immediately realise 400 was incorrect.

    • @VPortho
      @VPortho 9 месяцев назад +12

      I find it mind bending that they never confirmed it from the ATC and just rolled with it. Even to me, who knows nothing about aviation, 400ft at that point sounds insane. Instead, they were talking nonsense in circles like a bunch of school kids doing a project.

    • @HesTNTonPMS
      @HesTNTonPMS 8 месяцев назад +3

      That's what I'm sayin . . . .
      especially the fact he did not understand the guy on the tower from the get go.
      "What did he say"

    • @tryingtotryistrying
      @tryingtotryistrying 7 месяцев назад

      2 7 0 0 was fine why was 2 4 0 0 not?

  • @pbjoutdoors6270
    @pbjoutdoors6270 Год назад +561

    It blows my mind how the crew didn't care about the GPWS blaring, no approach plate to reference, NDB approach instead of ILS with autopilot down to 400 ft (?!?!), ATC confusion, CRM breakdown... perfect "swiss cheese model" type accident. So many safeguards that were ignored, terrible loss...

    • @alanhinkel420
      @alanhinkel420 Год назад +36

      It seems like their experience was definitely working against them. If I were in the aircraft, I would’ve called ATC to double check the NDB and altitude. Especially since the Tower has an accent that is difficult to understand. I probably would have done the ILS approach to begin with. And the argument in the cockpit probably caused more confusion. I don’t understand what he means by “ No one has ever left this plane “

    • @yorkshirebikerbitsnbobs
      @yorkshirebikerbitsnbobs Год назад +20

      @@alanhinkel420 “ No one has "EVER" left this plane “? I don't get that either.

    • @Viking88Power
      @Viking88Power Год назад +11

      @@yorkshirebikerbitsnbobs They died in it... Whats so hard to understand.

    • @yorkshirebikerbitsnbobs
      @yorkshirebikerbitsnbobs Год назад +24

      @@Viking88Power People previously have obviously"left this aircraft" The title is incorrect and poor in my opinion. Unlike the video which was quality content.

    • @sarahmacintosh6449
      @sarahmacintosh6449 Год назад +7

      This one has enough contributing factors for TWO accidents. I'm glad we are at least learning from it though.

  • @RudeCustoms
    @RudeCustoms Год назад +616

    I'm not a pilot but I got chills hearing ATC telling him to drop to 400 ft. I would've at least confirmed the altitude ordered "Confirm you want me at 400 feet?". The confusion of To & Two is mind boggling. I also wondered why ATC didn't come back to the Pilots and say, "I notice you're below 2400 feet, please confirm?"

    • @hannamiros
      @hannamiros Год назад +49

      They reported their altitude each time, maybe the ATC didn't have in on the radar. From what I know in the 80s they used strips of paper to write down the altitude reported by the pilots along with the call sign and set those pieces in a column forming the arrival/departure queue

    • @schoolssection
      @schoolssection Год назад +10

      @@hannamiros Was the controller using radar? If so why were the Tiger crew asked for their position?

    • @virginiaviola5097
      @virginiaviola5097 Год назад +109

      What sane pilot would expect a drop to 400ft from the altitude they were currently at? In a 747? Logic alone should have made the pilot reaffirm with ATC.. ATC did nothing wrong. Two Four Zero Zero.

    • @uniqueurl
      @uniqueurl 11 месяцев назад +37

      ​@@virginiaviola5097 it was ATC fault. He said ' decent two........ Four zero zero . Who would use numbers like that when it costs your life.

    • @rogerhornby1149
      @rogerhornby1149 11 месяцев назад +65

      @@virginiaviola5097 Right. If someone told you to drink sewage, would you just do so without question? 400 feet is way too low. Even a non-pilot would think this made no sense.

  • @concankid4202
    @concankid4202 Год назад +383

    Why would the captain even think that 400 ft anywhere would be ok?

    • @andreirau
      @andreirau Год назад +51

      because in these kind of jobs 99.99% of people do not think. they rely on instructions to be accurate and execute them. sometimes, the 0.01% is split into the 0.0005% who disobey causing havoc and the 0.005% who save an unsavable situation.

    • @georgeconway4360
      @georgeconway4360 Год назад +51

      Because this crew failed by leaving their brains at home.

    • @intrstrnr
      @intrstrnr Год назад +9

      I was wondering the same thing...

    • @slayer8actual
      @slayer8actual Год назад +49

      Exactly! Even if the runway was on the beach, 400 ASL is too low to be cruising around looking for a runway in zero vis. Now put the runway inland, add in some low hills, towers, buildings, and tall trees, and you're dragging your landing gear across terrain, rooftops and knocking birds off of branches, and that's supposed to be believable instructions coming from ATC?

    • @joemanganese
      @joemanganese Год назад +47

      Not even a glider pilot would think 400 feet is a long final altitude!! Short final with a small plane but long final with a 747?? They were totally out of their minds.

  • @leokimvideo
    @leokimvideo 11 месяцев назад +375

    The crew chatter really shows off a crew why were tired and not willing to challenge poor decisions and weird altitude settings

    • @josephpacelli3691
      @josephpacelli3691 11 месяцев назад +27

      Along with the FO being angry either with the Captain or ATC or both

    • @steveleda7014
      @steveleda7014 10 месяцев назад

      v

    • @steveleda7014
      @steveleda7014 10 месяцев назад

      mm

    • @ernestkovach3305
      @ernestkovach3305 10 месяцев назад +12

      Crew seemed tired to me. Some irritation. Coarse words. Unawareness. Petty bickering . Symptoms of lack of sufficient sleep.

    • @humansrants1694
      @humansrants1694 10 месяцев назад +17

      @@ernestkovach3305 They sound like some fellas playing dominos in bar and they are ready to call it and go home.

  • @ArchTeryx00
    @ArchTeryx00 Год назад +186

    I'm a pilot (private, not commercial). There are certain VERY narrow circumstances where it is okay to ignore the GPWS - these usually involve degraded-control emergency landings where the runway is clearly in sight. (If you can't properly configure the aircraft for landing, the GPWS will activate). Any other time you hear that warning any commercial pilot worth anything would *immediately* pull up, try to get to a safe altitude (usually well above the MDA) and reassess the situation. Basic ANC: Aviate, Navigate, Communicate. Fly the plane to safety first, assess where you are, and then communicate with control.
    Coming into an airport with extremely limited and confusing NAV beacons and *no approach plate* is plain criminal. It made this tragedy virtually inevitable. Ignoring the GPWS was just the chef's kiss on this horrible scenario.

    • @bazoo513
      @bazoo513 11 месяцев назад +8

      "There are certain VERY narrow circumstances where it is okay to ignore the GPWS"
      Yes. As you say, it _might_ be OK if you know _exactly_ your situation, know what you are doing and know _why_ it is OK to disregard GPWS.

    • @mark5862
      @mark5862 11 месяцев назад +8

      This happened 35 years ago, some have pointed out that gpws were prone to false alarms. That 400 ft along with the alarm should have been a huge red flag.

    • @christopherweise438
      @christopherweise438 11 месяцев назад +8

      @@mark5862 - Even if it was a false alarm you still need to check it out to be sure. I couldn't believe they completely ignored it IN THE FOG. 🙄

    • @ArchTeryx00
      @ArchTeryx00 11 месяцев назад +4

      @@bazoo513 I'm hardly an expert on commercial aviation but I've read of several cases (and see them pop up in documentaries) of emergency landings where the pilot could clearly see the runway, but was dealing with degraded controls for one reason or another, so the GPWS activated during landing. I wouldn't be at all surprised if some emergency procedures *specifically* said to ignore the GPWS, but that's about the only circumstances I'd be doing it.

    • @bazoo513
      @bazoo513 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@ArchTeryx00 Precisely. If you know _exacly_ why you are ignoring the GPWS advice, go ahead and do what you have to do. But if it activates out of the blue, when you are low over unfamiliar terrain, you should better do as it says.

  • @zero1fifty8
    @zero1fifty8 11 месяцев назад +94

    Wow this is probably the most cockpit audio chatter I've heard ever in a fatal crash.

    • @SuperLordHawHaw
      @SuperLordHawHaw 11 месяцев назад +22

      It sounds like he recreated the audio to make it easier to hear or did it from a transcript. It sounds unnaturally clear.

    • @GlutenEruption
      @GlutenEruption 11 месяцев назад +9

      Yeah, definitely recreated.

    • @ronjones-6977
      @ronjones-6977 11 месяцев назад +9

      @@GlutenEruption Or else the First Officer just happened to sound like a bad actor... every time he opened his mouth. I actually laughed at him.

    • @Mash4096
      @Mash4096 11 месяцев назад +5

      They say "Real Audio" in the title. But the radio communication is completely fake audio. The radio calls don't contain any call signs or standard radio protocol. Maybe the cockpit voice recording could be real, but this sounds recreated too.

    • @popermen694
      @popermen694 10 месяцев назад +5

      @@Mash4096 wait dude. That was the issue. The ATC wasn’t using any standard call signs. That’s as one of the problems.

  • @M.S.44.44
    @M.S.44.44 Год назад +365

    I must tell you-I truly appreciate you and your efforts in making your videos so realistic and factual. Every single video is not only educational, but honors memories of those fallen in these crashes/accidents and brings light to these incidents. Thank you so much, from a very long supporter, I’ve seen a major evolution in your videos and they’ve been nothing short of amazing. I appreciate you and thank you for the work put in to every second, animation, story, and the love you have for aviation. ❤❤

    • @theflightchannel
      @theflightchannel  Год назад +81

      Thanks a lot man, I really appreciate your support! ❤

    • @delowarabegum5150
      @delowarabegum5150 Год назад +13

      ​@@theflightchannel🎉

    • @M.S.44.44
      @M.S.44.44 Год назад +17

      @@theflightchannel I’ve watched your channel for at least a year and it’s been amazing from the beginning. You really are graceful and proper towards even the monsters who do things like this on purpose (terrorists, when ATC makes mistakes, etc). You do so much research and it’s helped me realize my passion has always been in aviation. I’m currently working towards my Master’s in Astrophysics with a certificate in Spaceflight Aviation. I have loved the sky and flight sciences, aerodynamics, the science behind how airplanes work, so on, and when I stumbled upon your channel over a year ago (at least 1+ yr ago, if not longer), I got to see the inside stories from major aviation incidents I’ve learned of when growing up, in addition to learning all of the things that I think are amazing about flight dynamics in a concise, yet efficient and effective, way to learn about these incidents. You deserve so much credit for the work and time put into each video. I don’t think ppl realize the amt of work goes into each video, from the graphics to the accuracy of the facts. I watched several back-to-back the other day and it was unreal: you actually had people leaving the bus that took them to their flight and you see each person exit the bus and walk aboard the plane….every single person had different clothes, hair, briefcases, suitcases, carry-ons, everything. It blew my mind!! Thank you for what you do! There are many of us who appreciate you for what you do (more than you probably know)!

    • @renferal5290
      @renferal5290 Год назад +18

      @@theflightchannel All we all truly appreciate you

    • @RJDA.Dakota
      @RJDA.Dakota Год назад +7

      I’ve watched this channel for over a year and the quality has always been amazing and has only improved. These videos are educational and have informational and archival content. So excellent. 👍🏻

  • @northernsoutherngirl
    @northernsoutherngirl Год назад +81

    I am not a pilot. But I have watched this channel enough to know that when a plane is flying too low to the ground an alert will sound. That being said, at the 10:58 mark, I started saying out loud: PULL UP! TERRAIN! TERRAIN! PULL UP!!

    • @RindaJane
      @RindaJane Год назад +13

      You too 😂
      That has to be the most alarming sound to any pilot... except on this flight 🤦‍♀️

    • @johneyon5257
      @johneyon5257 Год назад +5

      @@RindaJane - when you watch more of these - you'll see that the alarm is often ignored - there must be many false alarms so that pilots get used to ignoring them - new designs are needed to reduce false positives - then pilots will react to the alarms properly

    • @RindaJane
      @RindaJane Год назад +2

      @@johneyon5257 I've seen many of these crashes. If pilots are ignoring the warnings I agree. Needs a definite Change !

    • @danielrn133
      @danielrn133 Год назад +5

      A GPWS can sound on many approaches. I was avionics crew chief in military and I heard them many times and it wasn't an emergency. Not saying they shouldn't; have listened, clearly they should have, but it is not always an emergency.

    • @romansenger2322
      @romansenger2322 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@danielrn133 great way to lose trust in a safety feature.

  • @Gusto0172
    @Gusto0172 Год назад +61

    400 ft (equivalent of less than 2 wingspans above the ground!) - that's a stupidly low altitude. How they went with that without questioning it is beyond me.

    • @cindyknudson2715
      @cindyknudson2715 Год назад +2

      I wondered if there was a reason the FO was flying rather than the Pilot. The pilot seemed cavalier about a number of things. A sort of "Don't worry about it, it'll be fiiiinne." Attitude.

    • @Gusto0172
      @Gusto0172 Год назад +5

      @@cindyknudson2715 It's standard op procedure to mix the flight component tasks around, so the FO flying, rather than the pilot, is not unusual. Cavalier - indeed, 400 feet is essentially skimming the dirt, & they're doing that in a Jumbo!

    • @lebojay
      @lebojay Год назад +5

      Reminds me of when Michael Scott drove into a lake because GPS told him to. “400? Sure, if you say so.” 🤷‍♂️

    • @richhiner5156
      @richhiner5156 11 месяцев назад +5

      If I was in a Cessna and cleared to 400 feet I'd have questions.

    • @Link2edition
      @Link2edition 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@cindyknudson2715 Unfortunately altitude doesn't care about your attitude!

  • @zephyrsky__
    @zephyrsky__ Год назад +160

    The flight engineer was born in 1919! He probably had WWI pilots in biplanes as inspiration; crazy the aviation advances he must have seen/been apart of

    • @RatPfink66
      @RatPfink66 Год назад +14

      "Jennys to jets to space"

    • @harpomarx7777
      @harpomarx7777 Год назад +10

      " .. been a part of."

    • @BlindSquirrel666
      @BlindSquirrel666 Год назад +14

      Orville Wright got to ride in a B-52.

    • @M_SC
      @M_SC Год назад +7

      I think it was 64 years between the first airplane flight and the first step on the moon

    • @rallymaster001
      @rallymaster001 Год назад +11

      @@M_SC Yes JUST 64 years! Less than a modern lifetime!

  • @russellb5573
    @russellb5573 Год назад +80

    Tragic! Such a shame the Captain wasn't "familiar" enough with the airport to remember the 2,400 MDA on approach and the FO wasn't more forceful when things just didn't feel right to him. Another classy video. Thanks

    • @josephpacelli3691
      @josephpacelli3691 Год назад +10

      The FO was too busy being annoyed with ATC

    • @georgeconway4360
      @georgeconway4360 Год назад

      The MDA is the minimums for a non precision approach. The 2400’ was the Final Approach Fix minimum altitude which they were cleared to by ATC. After they passed the FAF they would then descend to the published MDA.

    • @MrAcer4
      @MrAcer4 Год назад +2

      Always towers fault. They never told them they decent was too low on radar etc

    • @georgeconway4360
      @georgeconway4360 Год назад +1

      @@MrAcer4 Bull Sh**! Pilots fly airplanes, not ATC. They were far too low for the whole descent until impact. You can can include the substandard of how American pilots manage their descents. Since ATC kept asking their distance and radial from VBA they clearly were not under radar control. It’s sad when people die because they were not doing their job.

  • @thomasskodzinsky3255
    @thomasskodzinsky3255 11 месяцев назад +67

    While listening to the cockpit chatter, i get the morbid sense of nobody wanting to be wrong and the captain wants to be right and now is not the time to argue and let's get this over with so we all can go home.

    • @damkayaker
      @damkayaker 5 месяцев назад

      It sounds like my father as the captain and me as co-pilot. He's never wrong and will argue to no end trying to prove so.

    • @thewhitefalcon8539
      @thewhitefalcon8539 5 месяцев назад

      They train this now. You've probably heard of it a lot already, but it's called Crew Resource Management.

    • @nikumimito3164
      @nikumimito3164 4 месяца назад

      Thats exactly the vibe they gave off.

  • @mikedeal3466
    @mikedeal3466 Год назад +54

    When I was flying right seat at United, I don't think I had a Captain not brief the entire approach, and reinforce the MDA. I never did an approach without the plate in front of me, pre Ipad days. Captains usually always said if the GPWS goes off, we're going around. NOW. Fortunately , I never heard that warning except in the sim. As a Captain, this crash was taught and studied in recurrent training at length. We learned a lot. Sad loss of the crew and the airframe.

    • @zephyrsky__
      @zephyrsky__ Год назад +4

      Thanks for sharing. It's tragic but also good to know such crashes are studied by pilots

    • @johneyon5257
      @johneyon5257 Год назад +6

      what i don't get is that the F/O was obviously bothered about not having the plate - why wouldn't he have it - or obtained it at that moment - would it have been too late

    • @mikedeal3466
      @mikedeal3466 Год назад +4

      @@johneyon5257 good question. I've shot some approaches hundreds of times, but never once without the current plate in front of me. There are good captains and not so good ones. I was very fortunate to have some outstanding ones to train and guide me.

    • @lunayoshi
      @lunayoshi Год назад

      @@mikedeal3466 Are there any other incidents that are taught in great detail about what not to do? Anything TFC has covered? I'd be interested to know what crashes were so catastrophic, they use them as teaching cases now.

    • @hannamiros
      @hannamiros Год назад +1

      ​@lunabuna I don't think it is as much of catastrophic as it is avoidable. The main conclusions drawn from crashes are what to improve, it doesn't even need to be a catastrophe. Like the first plane to lose both engines in flight, a TACA Boeing 737, where no one was injured and the plane flew off to an airport after an engine change. They didn't even have a checklist for that cause it was considered impossible. Now there are such checklists. But I'm curious which accidents are used in official training as well

  • @paullacey2999
    @paullacey2999 Год назад +24

    Aircraft pull up warnings going crazy and got ignored.......Such a tragic tale.

  • @worldcomicsreview354
    @worldcomicsreview354 11 месяцев назад +46

    The RAF nearly lost a Vulcan while training for the Black Buck raids on the Falklands in a similar way. I remember reading in a book about it that they locked the altimeter to 400ft for whatever reason. As they were flying back the pilot thought he was at 400ft, while the co-pilot, who was the only one using night vision, thought the pilot was showing off and said "I'm looking the sheep right in the eyes!". The pilot had no idea he was actually more like 4ft off the ground.

    • @fidelcatsro6948
      @fidelcatsro6948 11 месяцев назад +3

      Sheep 👀

    • @jorgesuarez7073
      @jorgesuarez7073 8 месяцев назад +2

      What you refer to as Falklands are the Malvinas Islands in Argentinian territorial waters. It is as if Argentina claimed the isle of Wight belonged to Argentina.

    • @maurvir3197
      @maurvir3197 8 месяцев назад +7

      @@jorgesuarez7073 Other than a brief period where Argentina mined the crap out of them, your country has never possessed the Falkland Islands. In fact, Argentina didn't technically exist until well after the initial settlements. Thus, if anyone has cause to complain, it would be the French, who built a settlement there first. As it is, the people who have lived there for a century are British and wish to remain British. So, they are the Falklands - though you are certainly welcome to your opinion.

  • @tobydz
    @tobydz 5 месяцев назад +24

    There’s one major factor at play here I didn’t see mentioned. Extreme fatigue. If memory serves, that crew was on one of its last legs (pun intended) of a very, very long trip that bounced through many time zones. After that accident, one of the changes made were policies governing how much down time pilots were given between legs, and how long the “lines” were. My pops was a 747 line check captain for Flying Tigers. I was lucky enough to have gotten to spend most summers as a kid in the full motion simulator with my dad giving check rides and recurrent training. Those Tiger pilots were a special breed… some of the best pilots of their time. Just goes to show you not only tragedies can befall you no matter your skill or experience, but also as the saying goes, “every aviation regulation is written in blood”.

    • @secondskins-nl
      @secondskins-nl 4 месяца назад +1

      Extreme fatigue can do a lot and while I'm no pilot I think that a clearance to 400 ft is something you will never get from ATC. Simply because that's the last part of the landing and the communication is not something you have during that fase with ATC. So it's beyond me someone actually dials the AP to 400 ft that action alone should, tired or not, have to make all three think this can't be right. Even without a map in front of you, 400ft wouldn't even be enough to fly over The Netherlands where I live. Well, mainly because of the wind turbines which weren't there in the 80s but still. Three people and not one wake enough to either question the 400ft or take some notice of pretty clear warning signals. That's indeed a special breed of pilots but not the best pilots of their time.

    • @Sushi2735
      @Sushi2735 4 месяца назад

      Yes fatigue, but you always follow protocol and charts! No matter how exhausted. I get it, but this was awful!

    • @B3Band
      @B3Band 4 месяца назад

      You intended a pun about this trip being their last? wow, what an asshole

  • @user-pc5uq5ye5x
    @user-pc5uq5ye5x Год назад +92

    The kind of work they put in their videos is unmatched... hats off

    • @ronjones-6977
      @ronjones-6977 11 месяцев назад

      Somebody has a native speaker proofing his stuff now and it has really made a difference. These vids are better than ever. Quality job.

  • @raptorclans
    @raptorclans 11 месяцев назад +82

    There's now a little township where the plane crashed back then, I pass through it practically every day and it still brings me chills whenever I think about how a 747 crashed into here years ago. May the crew rest in peace

    • @Heart2HeartBooks
      @Heart2HeartBooks 11 месяцев назад +1

      Pieces....Not Peace.

    • @jonothedudeguy
      @jonothedudeguy 11 месяцев назад +21

      @@Heart2HeartBooks grow up

    • @BillGreenAZ
      @BillGreenAZ 11 месяцев назад +6

      Thanks for the local perspective. Oftentimes we see these crash videos happen in lands far, far away. People who are affected by them every day like you, bring us back to how everyone in the local area is still affected.

    • @fidelcatsro6948
      @fidelcatsro6948 11 месяцев назад

      The town should be called "Bandar Pull Up" in recognition of the humble avionics computer heroic attempts to warn the imbeciles

    • @johngaskell2199
      @johngaskell2199 11 месяцев назад

      You live in Singapore?

  • @reggierico
    @reggierico Год назад +62

    This accident did indeed cause many changes in the industry. I was still in the Air Force when this happened and can remember reading a safety report about it. Even though we practiced NDB approaches and often flew them on check rides, I can honestly say I've only HAD to fly two NDBs in my flying career, once near minimums. The key to all of this, and this crew was complacent several things, was a thorough approach briefing, checklist discipline, communication amongst themselves as a crew and with ATC. Questions are free. This was a long time ago, but many have learned valuable lessons from their costly mistakes. RIP

    • @ronaldfischer1195
      @ronaldfischer1195 Год назад +3

      I'm in the Air Force now, on a multicrew aircraft, and we reference this crash during our yearly CRM refresher.

    • @Link2edition
      @Link2edition 11 месяцев назад +1

      I am not a pilot so I have to ask, why would you do a NDB if you didn't need to? They had runways with ILS available.
      Was it just stubbornness or is there some kind of policy behind it?

    • @reggierico
      @reggierico 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@Link2edition That would depend on the weather, specifically the winds. If the winds, tailwinds, were out of limits, then they would have to come in on the NDB. I would have checked and definitely would have requested the ILS if it was legal. The time I flew an NDB to minimums was in Portland. The weather was 600 foot ceilings and we were landing to the west because the winds had swung around. We did request the ILS but were told that the ILS antenna was malfunctioning and that the only available approach was the NDB. Luckily, the wind was right down the runway.

    • @Edgy01
      @Edgy01 11 месяцев назад

      When in flight school we RARELY practiced NDB approaches. Just fly what you are most familiar with like an ILS!!

    • @reggierico
      @reggierico 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@Edgy01 What if the NDB is the only available approach?

  • @bripez
    @bripez Год назад +600

    Imagine being a pilot, dying in a plane crash, only to have the cockpit recordings played repeatedly in flight schools to show people how not to fly because you did such a terrible job. 😬 (edit: I really appreciate how many people are replying about how the guy is dead and therefore can’t care. I was not aware thats how it worked!!)

    • @erwinschmidt7265
      @erwinschmidt7265 Год назад +44

      Brionyx - I doubt it woulda bothered Capt at all....remember he ignored shtload of Whoop-ti-dos telling him to pull up, but still did nothing!!!

    • @fredblahblah.6352
      @fredblahblah.6352 Год назад +10

      Not that he is watching that!

    • @leagueG5
      @leagueG5 11 месяцев назад +9

      Yep. His legacy is forever tarnished...

    • @jasoncentore1830
      @jasoncentore1830 11 месяцев назад +24

      I have to say you have an excellent point even being dead i'd be embarrassed

    • @anthony3295
      @anthony3295 10 месяцев назад +11

      Imagine surviving and that happening!

  • @Blovi-qd4lh
    @Blovi-qd4lh Год назад +40

    Neither pilot nor FE had the approach plate out…..incredible.

    • @K1OIK
      @K1OIK Год назад

      FE?

    • @zuflis
      @zuflis Год назад +4

      @@K1OIK i assume its Flight Engineer, the third person on the jumbo jet cockpit

    • @bsdrvr1
      @bsdrvr1 Год назад

      @@K1OIK flight engineer

    • @K1OIK
      @K1OIK Год назад

      @@zuflis I wonder what he did with the time he saved not typing light ngineer?

    • @K1OIK
      @K1OIK Год назад

      @@bsdrvr1 what did you with the time you saved not typing ight ngineer?

  • @gusmc01
    @gusmc01 Год назад +11

    Listen to the prior altitude calls from the KL Tower ATC and he uses the same phrasing each time. "Descend five five zero zero, descend three five zero zero, descend two seven zero zero". Never does he say "descend to" followed by the altitude. Not to mention 400 feet would be unusually low for an approach. The FO was clearly uncomfortable with the whole situation but the Captain kept pushing him to continue. Tragic mistake.

  • @auriptide
    @auriptide Год назад +32

    This is not the type Captain you want flying your airplane. WOW

    • @robertmog4336
      @robertmog4336 Год назад +3

      He never flew again.

    • @fidelcatsro6948
      @fidelcatsro6948 11 месяцев назад

      please understand..they didnt have Uber back then

  • @mauricesfascinatingmodeltr8657
    @mauricesfascinatingmodeltr8657 Год назад +25

    It is so unimaginable how much views you get in within a small time like 7 minutes . Truly great man .

  • @theivory1
    @theivory1 Год назад +27

    They reported to ATC descending to 400 after mis-heaing the ATC 2400. Why did the ATC not make a clarification?

    • @nomadpiloting
      @nomadpiloting Год назад +10

      Because the ATC is just as crap and contributed to this accident, its Malaysia after all with a reputation of demonstrated negligence and poor training

    • @tiadaid
      @tiadaid 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@nomadpiloting This video, from which the recording came from, shows that the pilots didn't actually read back the instructions to the ATC. ruclips.net/video/AWcfcEHkUEo/видео.html
      The clue is in the background noise - whenever the pilots talked to ATC the background noise would be muted, however when the captain read back 400 in this case the background noise remained which meant that he was saying it only for the crew onboard.

  • @godarkertilldeath
    @godarkertilldeath Год назад +47

    Wow, just incredible the lack of not only situational awareness, but to let this sequence of events to play out like we just seen in this video is just plain crazy in my eyes. The first officer knew with his whole chest that this wasnt right, but yet he still chose to only verbalize his worry (terror) instead of taking control. Its accidents like this and Tenerife that we can clearly see why CRM training is so important and necessary in flight.

    • @RatPfink66
      @RatPfink66 Год назад +6

      He could've at least hauled out the damn approach plate...

    • @godarkertilldeath
      @godarkertilldeath Год назад +5

      @@RatPfink66 I agree. I'm just literally still in shock after listening to this crew and all the extreme chances they took all the up to their death. It's actually very, very sad. My heart goes out to them no matter what. The F/o to his credit had the captain in his ear the whole time saying that the f/o was wrong and just paranoid. 🙄. Poor fellow new in his heart something wasn't wrong. But the crew literally just dismissed everything he said. He needed to scream at them both saying "give me the plate RIGHT FUCKING NOW OR IM GOING AROUND". And if I was the first officer I wouldn't have taken no for an answer.

    • @JESCO58
      @JESCO58 11 месяцев назад +1

      Teneriefe even more crazy, since visibility was terrible and jackass pilot was in a hurry. Bad combo.

    • @deepthinker999
      @deepthinker999 10 месяцев назад

      @@JESCO58 Well Said !

  • @daraghmorrissey
    @daraghmorrissey Год назад +18

    Great video and I love the effort to overlay the actual audio. A lot of these accidents seem to be a combination of things and the checklists are there for a reason. Great to use it as a training video.

  • @Seventh7Art
    @Seventh7Art Год назад +93

    "Screw this stuff, let's go over and do an ILS". When you feel this is wrong and unsafe and potentially fatal. He did not insist though... Also, when I hear pull up at Flight Simulator, I always pull up, without even thinking. Pulling up will not kill you. Ignoring the message might kill you though.

    • @deepthinker999
      @deepthinker999 Год назад +8

      If something does not feel right, that indicates that questions need to be asked and answered. Even to me guidance to 400' does not make sense.

    • @johnmarksmith1120
      @johnmarksmith1120 11 месяцев назад

      From the time the landing lights painted the top of that ridge until impact was milliseconds. Even if they were looking out of the airplane, nothing could be done. Their fate was sealed long before that. There are lots of links on this one and enough blame to go around.

    • @ronjones-6977
      @ronjones-6977 11 месяцев назад +2

      I'm not a pilot and my only knowledge is from RUclips, but I do know TWO things. When you stall, you push the damn stick forward and when you hear "PULL UP," you pull the stick backward. And yet, I still see pilots crashing by doing the opposite. It's actually kind of amazing... and sad.

    • @SluteramousSkankboard
      @SluteramousSkankboard 11 месяцев назад

      Does anyone remember where the township was or its name?

    • @fleurdewin7958
      @fleurdewin7958 11 месяцев назад

      @@SluteramousSkankboard You mean the crash site of the aircraft ??? If you mean that, then it is Puchong.

  • @DrBozoEinstein
    @DrBozoEinstein Год назад +17

    Aircraft as well as the sky can be very unforgiving with brutal results. It's best not to horse around, be complacent, or to not ask questions if you are confused. Ignoring the terrain warning in the case was sheer lunacy. Very good that the fight was not full of families headed home.

  • @yankeetango
    @yankeetango Год назад +42

    At least it was a freighter and not a plane full of innocent souls.

    • @eddyriley2055
      @eddyriley2055 Год назад

      my new PS4 console still has not been delivered, or refunded. sorry, im a bit drunk, looking for the ILS for home.

    • @fredblahblah.6352
      @fredblahblah.6352 Год назад

      Yeah, they had it coming, didn't they!

  • @johnmorris7815
    @johnmorris7815 Год назад +28

    This was an accident waiting for somewhere to happen, no proper approach brief (doesn’t have a plate out), thinks he’s cleared to 400’ never ever will ATC clear anyone to 400’, and the tin hat, no reaction to a GPWS warning at all after several precursors warnings. We used to use this as a training tool to reinforce CRM procedures, but it still grates on me that this was an incident that should never have happened even if they had reacted to the first GPWS warning they would have avoided it, but no the crew continues in an unprofessional manner right up to impact…..

    • @TrapKingz.
      @TrapKingz. Год назад

      Its not a plate lmfao. It’s a chart that’s called the approach plate.

    • @ElectricPics
      @ElectricPics 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@TrapKingz. It's called a plate in the cockpit.

  • @RomNYC
    @RomNYC Год назад +18

    I'm clearly not a pilot but how many videos do I have to watch where the "whoop whoop pull up" alert is triggered... and no one actually even tries to pull up? Man... Great channel as always.

    • @johneyon5257
      @johneyon5257 Год назад +2

      if the pilots did pull up - they would never make it to this channel - which is a happy thing

    • @enzy6434
      @enzy6434 Год назад +4

      Veteran pilots could become desensitized to the warnings due to false positives and it going off during safe runway approaches. So hearing that to this captain was basically just another day of business as usual and nothing to be alarmed over. (There were also more frequent false positives back then when equipment was less reliable).

    • @Cadence-qt2ux
      @Cadence-qt2ux Год назад

      MOrons dead

    • @PySnek
      @PySnek Год назад

      ​​​@@enzy6434 But when you know that alot of false positives exist, than why aren't you taking a look on the MDA?? My god they are so lazy about this its crazy

  • @melattar163
    @melattar163 Год назад +9

    I am not a pilot but I am astonished at how many crash videos I saw with the airplane yelling PULL UP yet the pilots somehow deem it is ok to stay course. In particular when visibility is poor, if I hear PULL UP you bet I would instantly grab the yoke and pull the hell up THEN start to assess everything else. Planes do not joke and when it screams PULL UP you bet it is serious and you must take it seriously.
    No wonder the new planes automatically pull up when terrain is approaching and push down when nearing a stall… because pilots sometimes somehow ignore these warning.

  • @AndreA-ke2id
    @AndreA-ke2id Год назад +50

    Why on earth would any pilot ignore a GPWS warning ??
    Also, you would think that with such an experienced crew everything would be fine. But sometimes experience can be detrimental in terms of over confidence, complacency, and reluctance to question seniority in the cockpit.

    • @jackierobertson1528
      @jackierobertson1528 11 месяцев назад +2

      You hit the nail on the head.

    • @OneTequilaTwoTequila
      @OneTequilaTwoTequila 4 месяца назад +1

      They didn't ignore it. They didn't hear it. Whenever someone is overloaded, the first thing to go is their hearing. It's a human physiological thing that affects practically everyone. You can hear it because you're in the comfort of your home without any stress. You wouldn't hear the pull-up call on your computer either if all of a sudden you were presented with a stressful event like someone unexpectedly breaching your front door with a shotgun wearing a Michael Myers mask. Your hearing goes to shit when you're overloaded. It's not in your control. The pilots made the mistake of allowing themselves to get overloaded in the first place. Never allow yourself to be pushed into something that you're not ready for.

    • @AviationIsNice
      @AviationIsNice 4 месяца назад

      *​@OneTequilaTwoTequila* they went silent when the gpws played tho.

  • @restojon1
    @restojon1 Год назад +28

    And their voices will forever live on, to hopefully prevent others from making the same mistakes they did and saving many lives and the heartbreak of those left behind.

    • @reshpeck
      @reshpeck Год назад +2

      Wasn't their voices, those were obviously actors reading the lines from the transcript (and doing a poor job of it).

    • @restojon1
      @restojon1 Год назад

      @@reshpeck read the title of the video, then revisit your comment.

    • @07foxmulder
      @07foxmulder Год назад +1

      @@reshpeck I thought the same thing.

    • @expert_fretwork
      @expert_fretwork Год назад +1

      @@restojon1 Just because it says "real audio" doesn't mean it's the actual cockpit audio. The audio is too clearly recorded, especially for the time period. There's also too many unnatural pauses and breaks in the speaking cadences. It doesn't flow like normal conversation at all. When they interrupt each other, there's a distinct pause where one man's voice ends and another starts a beat later, instead of an actual interruption.
      These guys were in their mid-50's and the engineer was in his 70's. These voices sound like men in their 30's.
      Actors reading a transcript.

    • @whyyat3470
      @whyyat3470 Год назад

      Just because it says "Real Audio" doesn't mean all the audio is "real". The voices supposedly off the CDR definitely sound recorded later. Probably most the controllers' voices are real.

  • @josefmd
    @josefmd 11 месяцев назад +9

    This accident/CVR tape has been shown in just about every CRM program I have been through as a new hire first officer. It's a really great example of non existense of CRM.

  • @alanwilliams9310
    @alanwilliams9310 11 месяцев назад +11

    Unbelievable, these three pilots had no idea where they were!

  • @jun_suzuki42
    @jun_suzuki42 Год назад +10

    Currently the crash side is a mountain reserve, and lots of residential and commercial around. Ayer Hitam Forest Reserve, Wawasan Hill near Bandar Puteri Puchong.

  • @mdaniels6311
    @mdaniels6311 11 месяцев назад +48

    These guys were suicidal.. I cannot conclude anything else. The sheer magnitude of incompetence is beyond my comprehension. They hadn't decided on anything, brakes, flaps, anything. 400 ft is absurdly low for a 747.. a simple wind sheer wiull throw it to the ground.. Just insane... they must have been drunk.

    • @dc10driver1
      @dc10driver1 11 месяцев назад +12

      I'm a retired B-777 pilot, and I agree.

    • @ronjones-6977
      @ronjones-6977 11 месяцев назад

      @@dc10driver1 When some non-pilot moron, like me, can tell that 400 feet is WAY too low, you gotta wonder... exactly how STUPID were these guys. Could that possibly be why they were flying cargo aircraft and NOT passenger planes? Just not good enough to be trusted with OTHER people's lives?

    • @Fiberglass_Insulation
      @Fiberglass_Insulation 11 месяцев назад +6

      Fr, how could you think 400 ft is normal approach??

    • @cll1639
      @cll1639 11 месяцев назад +11

      I thought the same thing. 400 feet is ludicrous. And listening to the "whoop whoop, PULL UP!" as everyone simply and nonchalantly carried on totally unrelated conversation had me yelling "CAN YOU NOT HEAR THAT!?" Pull up, for God sakes, and figure out the reasons why later.

    • @Adeon55
      @Adeon55 9 месяцев назад +3

      I'd have to say it's very likely that at least the captain was drunk, considering he was "very familiar" with the approaches at this specific airport, but thought absolutely nothing of having his 747 told to descend to 400 ft. 🙄

  • @rgarlinyc
    @rgarlinyc Год назад +14

    Wow. tragic story, the complacence shown was astounding! Great job again TFC👏🏻👏🏻

  • @jeffreywilliamson4863
    @jeffreywilliamson4863 10 месяцев назад +12

    I worked as a mechanic for the company when this happened. We couldn't believe it at first. I didn't know the mechanic who was onboard but we heard he was standing in the cockpit doorway upon impact perhaps coming to see if there was a problem after hearing the multiple GPWS warnings.

    • @Chatta-Ortega
      @Chatta-Ortega 7 месяцев назад +1

      I had planned to jumpsuit on that flight to see a woman I met in Paris. Luckily, my sister's wedding prompted me to cancel my plans.

  • @HiDesert004
    @HiDesert004 Год назад +114

    So the alarm is blaring pull up and they ignore it, ok😮

    • @stephenturner6075
      @stephenturner6075 11 месяцев назад +7

      Exactly! And it's pitch black outside so not as if the pilots can see if the GPWS is sending out an erroneous message.

    • @fidelcatsro6948
      @fidelcatsro6948 11 месяцев назад +2

      maybe they thought it was a false burglar alarm

    • @Lilinator81
      @Lilinator81 11 месяцев назад +1

      this is a indicator, that they where at maximum stress level... so the brain allows no more input....only a good training can help to react in such situations

    • @lisapatino955
      @lisapatino955 11 месяцев назад

      That's scary and alarming 😢😢😢😢😮😮😮😮😮🥹🥹🥹🥹

    • @onasismuskita4065
      @onasismuskita4065 11 месяцев назад

      7 year old kids: THEY COPUED JAL123!1!

  • @patriciamariemitchel
    @patriciamariemitchel Год назад +21

    Well, the Captain lied when he said he was familiar with the airport because the ATC would have never told him to descend to 400 ft.

    • @dalereed3950
      @dalereed3950 Год назад +5

      That's the key. Captain thought they were cleared TO 400, not 2400. The correct number is TWO THOUSAND FOUR HUNDRED.

    • @shojinryori
      @shojinryori Год назад

      And surely he’d be familiar with everything being labelled KL/kayell etc, so he’d ask for specifics? Pilot sounded grumpy so maybe he hadn’t had his coffee yet 🙄

    • @Bren39
      @Bren39 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@dalereed3950 correct icao (this is intl) is 2-4-0-0. You read out the individual digits. You just have to use some common sense.

    • @Adeon55
      @Adeon55 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@dalereed3950 Yes, but the OP is saying that if the captain was so familiar with the approaches at that airport, then he should've known that having his 747 told to descend to 400 ft was very, very wrong.

  • @deepikaravi637
    @deepikaravi637 Год назад +10

    One of my favourite channels! Thanks a lot for doing what you do keep growing 🙌💕

  • @user-wj2yz5ky7x
    @user-wj2yz5ky7x Год назад +22

    Im a kid who dreams to become a pilot and i live in Puchong . Learning about this incident happened close to my hometown is genuinely terrifying

    • @HaziqCTID
      @HaziqCTID Год назад +1

      Dulu Subang airport (SZB) Memang kapal banyak approach dari Puchong (South). Sekarang dah berubah, approach dari Rawang (Utara).

    • @AmriTiBriOlym
      @AmriTiBriOlym Год назад +3

      @@HaziqCTID Ya sbb masa tu approach pathway dari south tak banyak bangunan tinggi2 & kurang padat mcm sekarang so aircraft masih boleh land runway 33. Tapi sekarang area Puchong, Shah Alam & Subang Jaya dah sangat padat, bangunan tinggi2 & banyak residential area so 98% landing kat SZB memang dari runway 15 je. Baki 2% biasanya aircraft yg lebih kecil mcm Firefly & Batik Air (Malindo) jenis ATR72 yg kena land runway 33 jugak utk elak tailwind kalu land runway 15.

    • @fredblahblah.6352
      @fredblahblah.6352 Год назад

      You are not a kid. You are a BOY.
      Do not be afraid of saying it like it is.

    • @Alexander_Grant
      @Alexander_Grant 9 месяцев назад +3

      @@fredblahblah.6352 What the hell is this comment?

    • @fredblahblah.6352
      @fredblahblah.6352 9 месяцев назад

      @@Alexander_Grant About your sexism.

  • @leondraw1766
    @leondraw1766 Год назад +9

    I bet that was an interesting conversation when they arrived on the other side.

  • @justincase9463
    @justincase9463 Год назад +9

    This old saying fits pretty well. There’s old pilots and there’s bold pilots, but there’s no old bold pilots.

  • @MojoFromMempho
    @MojoFromMempho 11 месяцев назад +8

    I remember when this occurred. It was about 6 months prior to our (FX) take-over of Tigers. This audio, along with a video simulation of the accident, was shown in many of my maintenance systems classes. An example, as stated in this video, of miscommunication (non-standard terminology) between ATC and the crew as well as non-situational awareness inside the cockpit.
    The downward spiral into a tragedy, in many cases, begins with a miscommunication between the parties involved. If that is not noticed and corrected immediately things only get worse from that moment until there is no time to recover safely.

  • @renferal5290
    @renferal5290 Год назад +12

    I really appreciate all your effort you put into these videos and for how much I learn. I will actually think of you while on my fight to London in a couple of months.

    • @restojon1
      @restojon1 Год назад

      "Fight" to London? You'll be flying with Jet2 then?

    • @Melissa-JC
      @Melissa-JC 11 месяцев назад +1

      I hope you have a good & safe flight.

  • @docteurgreene
    @docteurgreene Год назад +23

    I'm not a pilot but I play MSFS2020 very often and when setting an altitude of only 400ft for a waypoint (not even the actual airport) it makes me nervous and I check twice or three times if this 400 ft is the correct one. I am surprised that pro pilots didn't even try to make the ATC repeat the 400 ft request, just to be sure....😔

    • @ronjones-6977
      @ronjones-6977 11 месяцев назад +6

      There were at least 2 dozen, I repeat, TWENTY-FOUR buildings in Kuala Lumpur by 1989 that were over 350 feet tall. How dumb do you have to be to know that 400 feet is too low for a long final? I'm gonna go out on a limb and say that nobody in that cockpit was good enough to fly actual PASSENGERS in a plane and that's why they were flying a cargo plane. A couple hundred people probably got incredibly lucky.

  • @virginiaviola5097
    @virginiaviola5097 Год назад +4

    That F/O sounded like a real piece of work. If the Captain hadn’t been so focussed on cajoling him, and keeping him calm he might have twigged that 400ft didn’t seem right.

  • @gaztastic
    @gaztastic Год назад +18

    TFC, I've been watching your channel since 2019. You've really improved, and inspired me to start my own series, and you've also given me a lot of insight into these disasters. Thank you, keep making these awesome videos. Love from Pennsylvania! (P.S., the disaster of China Airlines Flight 611 would probably rake in quite a bit of views since it's 21st anniversary is just days away)

    • @fredblahblah.6352
      @fredblahblah.6352 Год назад +1

      Green Dot Aviation is head and shoulders above this channel!!!

    • @gaztastic
      @gaztastic 11 месяцев назад

      @@fredblahblah.6352 Well yes, Green Dot also inspired my camera styles

  • @georgiefarr1094
    @georgiefarr1094 Год назад +10

    Another Flightchannel video two days in a row!?!?! Awesome 👌

  • @RindaJane
    @RindaJane Год назад +26

    With a crew like this thank goodness it wasnt full of passengers...
    Still loss of life 😢
    Rest In Peace to the 4 men whose lives were lost

    • @fredblahblah.6352
      @fredblahblah.6352 Год назад

      ... to the 4 MEN whose lives were lost.
      Afraid of saying it like it is? Have you been told not to use that word and are sheepish enough to comply?

    • @RindaJane
      @RindaJane Год назад

      @@fredblahblah.6352
      Ha. I'm about the least sheep you will come across. The noun and pronouns is such bs. I do not follow the Woke Crowd/or The Leftists
      Ohh I comply with my beliefs No One else.
      You have a wonderful evening sir. This woman is calling it a night. Bye 👋

  • @JMcdon1627
    @JMcdon1627 Год назад +15

    The Captain was careless and insisted the he was in full control. I know that is a harsh thing for me to say, but his attitude created a dangerous cockpit situation. He was the pilot monitoring when this happened, but his harshness to the pilot flying was grossly negligent. The First Officer, pilot flying, was somewhat assertive but not enough so. If I had been the First Officer, I would have keyed the mic as I added power and announced to the tower, "Unstable Go Around"! Safe and Happy Landings.

    • @deepthinker999
      @deepthinker999 Год назад +1

      "There are bold pilots and old pilots, but there are no old bold pilots". Another reason to stick with main line carriers if possible when flying.

  • @highlevelzone
    @highlevelzone 4 месяца назад +3

    The First Officer, Jack, was my step father. I've heard this transcript many times over the years, but this one is very clear. My mom was on the phone with Jack the night before and she had a terrible feeling and asked him not to fly the next day. When the phone rang in the early morning the next day, she answered and said "I know." For those of you wondering why they didn't listen to the ground proximity warning, I was told by another Flying Tiger that the "old school" pilots would unconsciously block it out because when it was first developed it had a lot of bugs and would go off all the time.

  • @AlexEwan1
    @AlexEwan1 Год назад +27

    Of course this sort of situation is unlikely to ever happen in modern times due to improved training, crew resource management and clearer instructions from ATC. That said a few things should have rung alarm bells for the crew and avoided this incident. Surely no ATC is going to clear a flight to 400ft? If I thought I was cleared that low I would want to check with ATC before inputting that low an altitude. Also who the heck would ignore a loud alarm shouting at you to pull up, not just once but multiple times?! The arguing between the crew certainly didn't help the situation either. No wonder this incident is used as an example of what not to do! Totally avoidable and 100% the crews fault.

    • @virginiaviola5097
      @virginiaviola5097 Год назад +1

      Exactly

    • @catscanhavelittleasalami
      @catscanhavelittleasalami 11 месяцев назад +1

      Right. I was thinking they should have at least confirmed it was 400ft by repeating it to ATC. It was quite a big drop and should have raised a few eyebrows.

  • @drakecoleman9364
    @drakecoleman9364 Год назад +23

    I llok forward to all of your videos BUT, I do have to say, you have been lately skipping the ending, as in , what happens when it crashed, how it crashed (nose first, wing tip ect), which passenegrs died and where they died, the clean up, ect. This would add a lot mroe value in the video.

    • @tiadaid
      @tiadaid 10 месяцев назад

      It could just be that there's no details about it.

  • @yerunski
    @yerunski Год назад +4

    Yet another superb video by TFC, as expected. Keep it going please 🙂
    Somehow though I keep thinking the audio is reenacted, it doesn't sound like it's from the actual pilots but more like from a movie.

  • @canuck_gamer3359
    @canuck_gamer3359 Год назад +29

    It's obvious to me that it didn't matter which pilot was flying the plane at the time of the accident because the Captain clearly would not have done anything differently. In fact, had the Captain not been there, it's likely the First Officer would have changed to the ILS approach runway.

  • @littlespinycactus
    @littlespinycactus Год назад +3

    When your GPW is screaming Pull up! Pull up! best assume it's not joking.

  • @Infiniteflightpilot187
    @Infiniteflightpilot187 Год назад +4

    As a flight enthusiast and active flight simulator pilot (infinite flight), I highly aprecheat your channel, having helped me understand ATC communication while implementing it in the server based game. Also, all cockpits layout are 1:1 in the game, so when I watch your movies I always think ahead what I would have done in each situation. I even replayed some of the different flight scenarios (i.e. engine fire, faulty flight configuration and so on). I am now a level 3 pilot in the game, enabling me to fly on the expert server with real human ATC communication (approach, departure, tower, ground). My favorite airplane to fly is the A350 and the 777-200LR, as well as the new Embraer series. The CRJ family is my least favorite, as it is very hard to fly without AP on (1000 series in particular)...I learned all different flight approached (ILS, VNAV, etc) and flight planning while watching hours of your channel. By the way, my favorite airport to fly in is Lukla / Tenzing near Mt Everest - its also the hardest airstrip to approach - also, Auckland airport is beautiful to fly in.....
    Keep up the great work!

  • @dreiistein
    @dreiistein Год назад +5

    when the plane goes whoop whoop pull up. you better go whoop whoop pull up

  • @abhinayudnur3885
    @abhinayudnur3885 7 месяцев назад +2

    Earlier the ATC had said "Tiger 66, descend 2700". Then the captain replied back "Roger, cleared to Two Thousand Seven Hundred". There was no confusion regarding TO & TWO during this communication. Then why did the confusion creep up with the captain when the ATC said "Descend to 2400"? Clearly the captain had misunderstood this message from the ATC.

  • @darrencourtney7510
    @darrencourtney7510 11 месяцев назад +1

    I've never seen the GPWS ignored quite like this. Usually that "Pull up! is the last thing heard before the screaming starts.

  • @TheAikenHead
    @TheAikenHead Год назад +10

    I notice most pilots do not immediately "pull up" when that ominous sound alarms... They seem to initially disregard it, often until it is way to late.

    • @aidancoutts2341
      @aidancoutts2341 Год назад +7

      You'd think they'd at least do so when they know they haven't seen a runway at any point and can't see outside at all. Of all the errors to assume, how about the one that will kill you if you ignore warnings. "Pull up" with no visibility should be an automatic reflex.

    • @RobertLinthicum
      @RobertLinthicum Год назад

      full power and hard climb, immediately.

    • @pirate3599
      @pirate3599 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@RobertLinthicumfull power, 20 degrees nose up, no configuration changes

  • @alanburge2725
    @alanburge2725 Год назад +4

    Also I start feeling nostalgic as well. Flying Tigers. I would see the 747 cargo plane at times as it came into Sydney Airport back in the day. Such a great looking beast. Silver or chrome coloured. The red and blue lines running down the middle of the fuselage. Awesome. Just stare up at it......

    • @pearl-pf6xz
      @pearl-pf6xz 11 месяцев назад

      Always thought it was a travelling circus, seeing it fly out of Sydney, didn't realise how close to the mark I was.

  • @antoniokastrocarlisledemel6617
    @antoniokastrocarlisledemel6617 11 месяцев назад

    I don't understand how mistakes like this are even possible...much respect to them and I hope they're resting peacefully but really wtf were they thinkin?..I love these videos man especially with the cool visuals where u actually change things according to what part of the story is being told like the altimeter down to 400... much thanx for all your hard work

  • @wilsonle61
    @wilsonle61 Год назад +1

    In the early eighties, I caught a flying Tigers 747 out of Travis AFB in CA. I Flew to Alaska, then Japan, Then onto the Philippines (Clark, AFB) where I awaited onward transport at Subic Bay for 2 weeks. The 747 had an Anne Murray channel on those old acoustic headphones. I listened to it as the sun rose over the South China Sea. The song "Snowbird" reminds me of that flight to this day. Good times!

  • @desdicadoric
    @desdicadoric Год назад +74

    A 70 year old flight engineer, wow

    • @sarahalbers5555
      @sarahalbers5555 Год назад +14

      One of my first thoughts, too.

    • @ToeInMyJam
      @ToeInMyJam Год назад +7

      @@sarahalbers5555 Same, I thought there was an age limit for commercial flight, but this may have been before that?

    • @rostrom8
      @rostrom8 Год назад +20

      @@sarahalbers5555 He was only two days away from retirement, poor fellow!

    • @lot6129
      @lot6129 Год назад +9

      So, give me experience EVERY time

    • @fabmyride5181
      @fabmyride5181 Год назад +8

      😂 70 ! I was thinking, I still have a chance to make it

  • @StevenBanks123
    @StevenBanks123 Год назад +4

    It is horrifying to see at 9:50 the actual inexorably approaching terrain with the obscuring clouds digitally removed.

    • @PySnek
      @PySnek Год назад +1

      they weren't digitale removed, the scene was rendered with different weather and time settings

    • @StevenBanks123
      @StevenBanks123 Год назад

      @@PySnek “digitally removed” was just faster to say, but yes, of course.

  • @RelaxingMusic-gp3st
    @RelaxingMusic-gp3st Год назад +2

    This is equivalent to hearing Smoke & CO2 alarms in one’s home & goin’, “meh” - goin’ nite Nite…PERMANENTLY!

  • @Sushi2735
    @Sushi2735 4 месяца назад

    Being a flight attendant for 18yrs, married to a strictly by the book Captain, the stories I heard before he was in the left seat. He was no nonsense but well like and friendly. He kept a sterile cockpit and briefed his flight attendants prior to the trip.
    What a comfort to know he was by the book. He loved to laugh and have a good time, but when it came to safety and his passengers and crew, there was no joking. Other pilots liked flying with him because of this, of course few didn’t. No dirty talk in the cockpit, professional behavior at all times. Two beers max, at hotel.
    RIP. He never put a scratch on a plane.
    He was 20 years my senior. But, still miss him. A fine fine man!

  • @michaellicko2746
    @michaellicko2746 Год назад +8

    That has to be the clearest CVR recording I have ever heard.

    • @K1OIK
      @K1OIK Год назад

      CVR?

    • @las2665
      @las2665 Год назад +1

      @@K1OIK Cockpit Voice Recorder

    • @K1OIK
      @K1OIK Год назад +1

      @@las2665 The irony here is this crash happened in part due to the overuse of abbreviations. What did he do with the time he saved not typing ockpit oice ecorder?

    • @robhorsey9906
      @robhorsey9906 Год назад +5

      It doesn't sound like original audio, sounds like they're reading from a script. The cut-off sentences, inflections, etc. Plus the audio quality from 1989(!) tells me this was an audio re-enactment.

    • @reshpeck
      @reshpeck Год назад +1

      ​@@robhorsey9906 You are exactly right

  • @kdub1242
    @kdub1242 Год назад +10

    Evidently, it's important to have one's ducks in a row when landing an airliner.

    • @Adeon55
      @Adeon55 9 месяцев назад

      Who'd a thunk?

  • @micathedachshund5921
    @micathedachshund5921 Год назад +10

    When everything is called KL, you know there will be a problem

  • @sheilasembly-crum8447
    @sheilasembly-crum8447 Год назад +8

    Heart breaking on many levels.

  • @eldiablo3794
    @eldiablo3794 Год назад +6

    It feels like i'm listening to an inexperience crew rather than a veteran crew.

  • @failed_physicist
    @failed_physicist Год назад +11

    This is by far one of the best short-documentary channels I've come across. Keep up the great work!

  • @muriloninja
    @muriloninja Год назад +16

    When he misinterpreted 2,400 as 400 and turned the dial to 400 I said out loud "Oh fuck!"

  • @curbyourshi1056
    @curbyourshi1056 Год назад +4

    Excellent video once again. That blasé Captain was grinding my gears.

  • @user-xz9hu4rd2v
    @user-xz9hu4rd2v 11 месяцев назад +8

    The chain of bad decisions was never broken. We have come a long way from those days but it still happens once in a while.

    • @romansenger2322
      @romansenger2322 11 месяцев назад +1

      Yeah, I still dont get why we dont use sophisticated technology, AI and modern visualisation

    • @pamc4217
      @pamc4217 11 месяцев назад

      @@romansenger2322, because it was 1989.

  • @pablorubio8287
    @pablorubio8287 Год назад +9

    Why did you delete your last video? It was so good like all the other ones. Love your channel and appreciate the amount of work you put into each video.

    • @ElectricGalaxy
      @ElectricGalaxy Год назад +2

      I was wondering the same thing

    • @Sweetthang9
      @Sweetthang9 Год назад +5

      Maybe to change the thumbnail art since it didn't reflect what actually happened in the incident.

    • @nurullfateen
      @nurullfateen Год назад +2

      when i click the link, its already change to private video.. so i missed it. i learnt - not to ignore notification anymore 😂

    • @ahyaan2552
      @ahyaan2552 Год назад

      @@Sweetthang9 yeah but he could have done it without taking the vid down

    • @Sweetthang9
      @Sweetthang9 Год назад +2

      @@ahyaan2552 It probably takes time to do and he didn't want to content up as he finished it.

  • @bpogueg2
    @bpogueg2 7 месяцев назад +1

    Did they really ignore the “whoop whoop pull up” warning?! That sound should be every pilots worst nightmare.

  • @Almepoint
    @Almepoint Год назад +5

    Amaizing video. I would like to suggest you other accident that was very controversial in Spain: On May 26, 2003, 62 servicemen died in the crash of the Yak 42, the plane in which they were traveling home from a four-month peace mission in Afghanistan.

  • @user-rn5ri7nk6w
    @user-rn5ri7nk6w Год назад +4

    Good video as always.❤

  • @bestboy138
    @bestboy138 Год назад +4

    the flight channel is good to help my little sister and i learn to read.

  • @effkay3691
    @effkay3691 8 месяцев назад +1

    I’m not a pilot but “pull up” sounds like a pretty direct and clear instruction.

  • @InternationalCBalls
    @InternationalCBalls Год назад +2

    I know i might be late but the effort put into these videos is beautiful. Keep it up!🔥 you are 🔛🔝

    • @fredblahblah.6352
      @fredblahblah.6352 Год назад

      Great effort indeed, yet Green Dot Aviation beats him by a large large margin!

  • @simonandrew283
    @simonandrew283 Год назад +8

    Always so impressive to watch. Thank you.

    • @fredblahblah.6352
      @fredblahblah.6352 Год назад

      I personally find Green Dot Aviation far superior in every possible level.

  • @StrongandStable17
    @StrongandStable17 Год назад +3

    Great vid per usual.

  • @richcarrCCC
    @richcarrCCC 9 месяцев назад +1

    Once I heard the Pilot Flying say "screw this stuff, let's go over and do an ILS" (after already saying he didn't have the plate in front of him) I was like "yes!" Then hearing the Captain dismiss the FO's concerns immediately set off my desire to punch the Captain in the face. My belated condolences to the families, friends, colleagues and loved ones of those who died from this accident.

  • @josephconnor2310
    @josephconnor2310 Год назад +2

    Thank you top-notch work

  • @ricbarker4829
    @ricbarker4829 Год назад +6

    It seems weird that when the terrain warnings went off, the crew had no reaction at all, not even a mild curiosity as to why it maybe going off.

    • @TargAK
      @TargAK 11 месяцев назад

      It depends, I flew with NAC in Alaska for 6 years and places like red dog mine and approaching from within the bowl the GPWS goes off nonstop, plus the view out of the cockpit is nothing but terrain. Of course, that's an exception, flying into Kodiak and hearing the GPWS go off would indeed get everyone's attention.

  • @willk7184
    @willk7184 11 месяцев назад +3

    Captain rejects the ILS option at 6:09, I guess since he didn't want to waste time coming in from the opposite direction. But at that point they already had enough confusion that it seemed warranted.

  • @rodcoulter997
    @rodcoulter997 11 месяцев назад

    Excellent video…feel like I’m sitting on the “Cockpit Jump-seat” ..amazing. No matter what else, when you get the GPWS “PULL UP” you GO-AROUND and get away from MotherEarth as fast as possible and figure out what is “Not Right.”

  • @ecclestonsangel
    @ecclestonsangel Год назад +2

    TFC, are you clairvoyant? Last night I was thinking about cargo planes, and thought wasn't there one called Flying Tigers? I remember their commercial jingle. Lo and behold, youupload a Flying Tigers incident to your channel! I swear, you were reading my mind!