Why I don't fly Air Canada: SFO near miss might have triggered ‘greatest aviation disaster in history’
Read the article, then listen to the audio on there that was from the actual plane. They were SECONDS from this plane crashing into multiple others on the taxiway (very little time between "go around" and "he flew right over us" on that audio). As you can guess, a plane going 160mph (I googled it... landing speed for an Airbus A320) doesn't stop when it hits the FIRST plane in its way.
If anything, this incident shows how f'n important it is that everybody at an airport is paying attention all the time. Too many checklists and other distractions might have meant that the pilots on the ground weren't paying attention. Luckily for hundreds (possibly thousands) of people, they were paying attention and spoke up.
Read the article, then listen to the audio on there that was from the actual plane. They were SECONDS from this plane crashing into multiple others on the taxiway (very little time between "go around" and "he flew right over us" on that audio). As you can guess, a plane going 160mph (I googled it... landing speed for an Airbus A320) doesn't stop when it hits the FIRST plane in its way.
I bolded what will probably become the focus of the investigation, but lest you think that this all could have been solved by automation, I give you: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asiana_Airlines_Flight_214“If you could imagine an Airbus colliding with four passenger aircraft wide bodies, full of fuel and passengers, then you can imagine how horrific this could have been,” he said.
...
The aircraft had been cleared to land on Runway 28R, which runs parallel with that taxiway, according to the FAA. The pilot was flying the plane manually on a clear night when he lined up wrong, the federal agency said.
The interesting part about THAT crash (and why I picked it) was that it occurred on runway 28L of the SAME airport. If you look at it, it's actually one runway over, parallel. Hence 28R in this case (right), and 28L in that one (left). Either way, same airport, nearly the same runway, near-miss in this case, not-as-bad-as-it-could-have-been in that previous case.The NTSB further determined that the pilot's faulty mental model of the airplane's automation logic led to his inadvertent deactivation of automatic airspeed control. In addition, Asiana's automation policy emphasized the full use of all automation and did not encourage manual flight during line operations.
If anything, this incident shows how f'n important it is that everybody at an airport is paying attention all the time. Too many checklists and other distractions might have meant that the pilots on the ground weren't paying attention. Luckily for hundreds (possibly thousands) of people, they were paying attention and spoke up.