Home » Pilot practiced for that Alps crash on the previous flight

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Pilot practiced for that Alps crash on the previous flight — 8 Comments

  1. I read that all but 5-7 min of a flight are usually on auto pilot. If you think about the causes of airplane accidents my bet most are caused by human error and sabotage. A smaller number are due to weather or mechanical problems. If we eliminate pilot error (automate the 5-7 min) would the number of accidents go down?

  2. I don’t know, anyone that works with computers knows how flaky they can be, especially when trying to make them do something they were designed to prevent. If he was even playing around with the settings this way, I’d assume he had already fully steeled himself and was repeatedly trying to find a way to make the plane ditch in the ocean. It didn’t work, but he didn’t get caught either, and was able to repeat the process when flying over land with a much higher elevation, where he was successful.

  3. I’m betting that he wasn’t practicing, but trying to do it, and losing his nerve.

  4. Mrs Whatsit:

    Well, we’ll never know. But that’s not my hunch. He never even lets the plane change course or drop at all (except for following the pre-programmed slow descent). Seems to me that if he kept getting cold feet, at some point he would have at least let the plane drop a little bit extra (the pilot, outside of the cockpit at the time, would never have detected it, either, as long as the drop wasn’t drastic).

    Whereas just a couple of hours later he doesn’t falter at all—the plane just goes down down down and crashes. No attempt to pull up, not a word said in the cockpit so that the flight recorder can record it, nothing. Nada. I think he had no intention of crashing the first plane and every intention of crashing the second.

    But of course, as I said, one can’t know.

  5. You’re right, we can’t know — and I didn’t realize the two flights were only a few hours apart, which does support your interpretation. It’s a mystery.

    Also mystifying is how he managed to keep so calm when he did finally put the plane into its descent — the initial reports, at least, were that his breathing was audible and remained steady throughout, even when the pilot could be heard banging on the cabin door and passengers were screaming, even when the ground was coming right up at him. No matter how disturbed and suicidal he was, I find that impossible to understand. Drugs?

  6. It’s called conditioning and focus. Something he put himself through.

  7. I would be betting that he thought there might be some sort of alarm that might go off if you entered an impossible flight path, and was testing the system. What with things like stall warning stick shakers and aircraft collision alerts, he might have wanted to test the water in a deniable way, before committing fully.

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