OregonMaule wrote:From AVweb
http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archives/a ... tml#205304AP: Pilots "Forgetting How To Fly"
The airline industry is suffering from "
automation addiction," Rory Kay, co-chair of an FAA committee that is examining pilot training, said in an Associated Press story published on Tuesday. "We're seeing a new breed of accident with these state-of-the-art planes," said Kay. "
We're forgetting how to fly." Pilot skills have been cited by investigators in two recent major accidents, the Buffalo crash of a regional airliner in 2009, and the 2009 Air France crash of an Airbus A330. How pilots respond to the sudden loss of automated aircraft systems "is the big issue that we can no longer hide from in aviation," Bill Voss, president of the Flight Safety Foundation, told the AP. "We've been very slow to recognize the consequence of it and deal with it."
Voss said the solution will require changes in cockpit procedures, not just in training, where pilots spend just a few days a year. Paul Railsback, operations director at the Air Transport Association, told the AP that airlines are aware of these issues. "We think the best way to handle this is through the policies and training of the airlines to ensure they stipulate that the pilots devote a fair amount of time to manually flying," Railsback said. "We want to encourage pilots to do that and not rely 100 percent on the automation. I think many airlines are moving in that direction." Kathy Abbott, an FAA researcher studying these issues, found last year that "pilots sometimes abdicate too much responsibility to … automated systems." She added that sometimes pilots don't get enough practice in hand-flying and will hesitate to take control away from the computer in an emergency.
OreganMaule,
It never fails to amaze me that the "powers to be" ignore reality for years and then suddenly come to the appropriate conclusion decades later. This"old hat" pilot and his contemporaries understood the relationship between technology and basic pilot skills as airliners began to seriously automate over 30 years ago. But everyone in position of authority just laughed at us, called us dinosours and bought into the snake oil being promoted.
I spent the first 14 years of my career with a small airline which had 50 DC-9/MD-80 aircraft. During my airline's 36 years of existance we suffered only one "act of God" fatal accident..... despite flying from 6 to 13 legs per day and making millions of take off and landings. Our safety record was second in the nation. Second only to the original Frontier airline which never had a fatal accident in it's 35 year history. Our pilots were aviators first. Stick and rudder guys who could match the skills of anyone in the industry. In 1986 we were bought by and merged into a major airline with a vast domestic and international network. It was a great airline with a glamorous history: flying many B-747's, L-1011s and the like. None the less it's pilots were trained to use and rely upon automation to a far greater extent that my original employer. Within a few months of combining the pilot groups....as we all progressed through training and check rides an accurate and very telling observation became a common mantra of the training center.
"When the pilots from "big airlineA" get into trouble....they turn on the automation." "When the pilots from the "small airlineB" get into trouble...they turn the automation off." A more true statement could not have been made. Animosity between the two pilot groups lasted for years. But everyone from the Vice-Pres. Of Flight down to the junior line copilot always admitted....."never met a pilot from that SMALL AIRLINE that couldn't fly!"
Well 15 more years passed, another merger occured and I found myself flying B-767s for what was the world's largest airline at that time. During my first days of training with the newest employer we were treated to a training film . During the training film the Vice President spoke of today's airline pilots(2000 era) as being....CHILDREN OF THE MAGENTA LINE. Magenta line is that little navigation line that will lead you any where in the world for which it is programed. The pilot doesn't have to have the foggiest notion of where they may be. It will take you there. The automation will fly the airplane and land itself in zero/zero conditions with minimum pilot inputs and programming. The Magenta Line, as a nomenclature, has become synomous with automated aircraft and robotic pilots.
The Vice Pres. warned.....CHILDREN OF THE MAGENTA LINE are making burning holes in the ground all over the earth." "Guys CLICK..CLICK..... turn off the autopilot, turn of the autothrottle.....fly the damned airplane!!!"
I nearly stood up and cheered! No one had to convice me. Despite a long career flying many sophisticated airliners, including those with full automation capability, I hand flew almost all of the time below cruise. I made all manual approaches and landings without use of the autoflight systems on every approach and landing for which automation was NOT REQUIRED. Dinosour indeed!!
Yet even today I was reading on my former airline's pilot union discussion board. The airline has ordered dozens of new B-787s and the FAA has just declared the B-777 and B-787 to be a common type rating, with only 4 days of differences training required.. There was a lot of discussion among 777 pilots about what BS that was and how different the aircraft really were. Then one of the Children of the Magental Line chimed in.......
....."who gives a crap." The 787, like the 777, has fully auto land capability." "Just let if fly itself!"
It has diminised to the point that even many general aviation/airline/military pilots are now willing to forget how to fly and just become..... CHILDREN OF THE MAGENTA LINE.
Rory Kay of the FAA is correct. Where in hell has he and the FAA been for the past 30 years?
Bob