by Suff » 17 Dec 2019, 20:22
All true WM, but there are some fine points.
The MAX 8 is more expensive because it is bigger and carries more passengers. But Base Price is BASE. As we both know the base model comes in multiple variants and the number of sensors, layout of the cabin, seat types, etc, are custom specific orders.
Planes which operate under the FAA and CAA rules have to live up to different standards. For instance if you have two sensors and one is not functioning, you have to get it fixed or the plane can't fly. But they'll let it fly with 2 for a limited period of time. Other areas in the world have different standards to that. So planes in the FAA/CAA areas tend to have 3 sensors. It makes sense as it keeps them in the air longer.
Lion Air had 10 of the planes, Ethiopian had 4. Yet hundreds had been sold around the world, mainly in the US and China. Yet the airlines with less planes saw the issue. This goes against the law of averages. Except when you factor in airworthiness standards and the specs of the model bought.
As for the training. The "recommended" training is the base. Most airlines have their own training programmes. Ask any air accident investigator and they will tell you that the number of accidents (without manufacturer issues), is almost 1:1 with the level of training and simulator time that the airline gives the pilots.
Granted Boeing screwed up big time with the software, the way it operated, the training requirements and the laborious method of disabling the MACS module. But, then again, we cannot ignore that fact that an off duty pilot, hitching a ride, was able to talk the flight crew through disabling MACS. It might be bloody difficult but it is not impossible.
Yes, you say it was operating as designed. It's useful to know where this design comes from and why. I follow up air crashes to see what the final report was, especially where the route is one I take. Take for instance the Air France flight that went down in the Atlantic. The plane flew into weather which exceeded the FBW capabilities and the plane handed back full control to the #1 pilot. Unfortunately the captain had gone to bed to sleep, the #2 pilot had decided to stay where he was and the #3 pilot was in the captains chair.
The #3 pilot tried to fly the plane over the storm and exceeded the ceiling of the plane. At which point, at over 500 knots it stalled. Over about 15 minutes, the plane continued to stall, the #2 pilot tried to override but the plane was designed to give the #1 pilot overall control and kept the nose up and the tail down.
The plane stalled into the sea at about 500mph tail first. All lives were lost.
So when you say "operating as designed", yes it was. One of the air speed sensors told the software that the plane was stalling. It ignored the sensor which was working and put the nose down. Exactly what you do in a stall. Except the plane was not stalling and the pilots hadn't had enough training or knowledge transfer to disable the MACS system and it was bloody difficult to do.
This situation is slightly different from what we are reading in the press. The FAA are in full CYA mode and will not allow the plane back into the air until all feelings of guilt are assuaged. Just like NASA did with the SpaceX crew dragon when it blew up. SpaceX knew, within a few weeks, exactly what was wrong. NASA went into spiral control mode and SpaceX just got on with building their Starship until NASA grew a spine again.
I guess this will go on until the FAA are assured that Boeing have learned their lesson, the FAA has control back and the politicians on the hill can't blame them for letting the MAX back in the air.
Until then.... Money is being lost. Bucketloads. But at least people are not dying. Which is a good thing.
There are 10 types of people in the world:
Those who understand Binary and those who do not.