I wouldn't let that get in your way, it sure ain't stopping anybody else.of all the things I'm an expert on.. air traffic control and piloting aircrafts are not one of them so I will be offering no retarded opinions on this one.
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I wouldn't let that get in your way, it sure ain't stopping anybody else.of all the things I'm an expert on.. air traffic control and piloting aircrafts are not one of them so I will be offering no retarded opinions on this one.
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I suspect that we'll find that this was what commonly gets called a "perfect storm" but is actually a coincident set of negligent oversights.Internet now says FAA has announced that ATC tower was seriously understaffed.
I have to throw this question out:I wonder, as I have heard of pilot bravado and over-confidence before… did the Helo pilot believe, he could get through that “intersection” before the commercial flight and he miscalculated?
Do military flight crews also defer to the pilot alone, or is their flying and awareness a team effort (?) i.e., would anyone within that crew speak up if they knew the pilot was “ racing” the airliner?
That kinda flying will get your wings clipped, and it did.
🥺😢🥺Crossed my mind, I said something smellsI have to throw this question out:
What was the faith of the Pilot? (Military Helicopter - Remember the 2009 Fort Hood guy?)
Also, which political view he had?
I have watched the video so many times and what pops in my mind is just "seems that was a suicidal flight."![]()
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Brother, you are a pilot and served so many years... My son is an APACHE Pilot and he always tells me, how are the procedures of the entire flight. Either the Pilot or the co-pilot saw the entire thing, and just kept on going, that's what I believe. The FAA and the Army won't ever say anything if this is true!!!Crossed my mind, I said something smells
It was and still is common to combine positions when traffic was slow or the shift was short staffed. The problem comes in when the person that can barely work one position alone is required to work two. They lowered the standards for certification so more minorities could get certified and these controllers, who would have never been hired must less certified prior to 2008, are hanging on by their fingernails during normal traffic times and they get swamped when there is weather or things go sideways.Internet now says FAA has announced that ATC tower was seriously understaffed:
“The preliminary crash report detailed that the lack of staff meant the controller monitoring and directing helicopters near DCA was also instructing planes landing and departing on the runways.
Usually, two controllers would handle these roles, as staff use two different radio frequencies to talk to planes and helicopter pilots.”
A bunch of that is incorrect.from X
Spoke to someone who served in the same unit as the Army Black Hawk crew, knew them personally, and flew those routes. He made the following points:1) That it was a training flight was not unusual at all. Those flights are flown everyday.2) The co-pilot was going through her annual evaluation for night flying. Night vision goggles can magnify light, making it easier to confuse aircraft lights with ground lights.3) Runway 33 -- where Air Traffic Control told the passenger jet (CRJ) to land -- is "rarely used." This person said in his four years, he saw it being used 10 times. It is a much shorter runway than the main one used, which is Runway 1.4) The Black Hawk appeared to confuse the passenger jet with another plane landing at Runway 1 — which is why the pilot-in-command confirmed seeing the CRJ and requesting “visual separation,” or essentially saying he would avoid it.5) The CRJ was circling to land and making a left turn at the time. The Black Hawk was in its blind spot.6) The crew was experienced: The instructor pilot had just under 1,000 flying hours. He was former Navy. The co-pilot had around 500 hours, and the crew chief — who served on multiple combat tours — around 1,000 hours. They flew these same routes for at least three years.7) It was not unusual to have three crew members on a Black Hawk. There’s only four for certain mission sets. Whether the crew chief saw the CRJ would have depended on which side he was sitting on.8) It was a dark night, with no moon.9) Air Traffic Control could have told the Black Hawk to hold north, or diverted it.10) Potential changes could be to change the route, altitude, or hours during heavy air traffic.“All these things, they all made for the perfect storm.”