Love finding these older videos of mentour. It's awesome to see that the quality of the content has always been amazing and the amount of knowledge blows me away
@chrissytheconqueror70496 жыл бұрын
When you just found an old half hour video of Mentour and didn't know it existed before..... Best moment of the day! XD
@MentourPilot6 жыл бұрын
Excellent! There are quite a few old nuggets out there now. The quality isnt great but the info holds!
@garybeller54996 жыл бұрын
Perfect for waiting to pick up the Mrs. From work. Lol
@MarcQuiclic5 жыл бұрын
@@MentourPilot it's a gem
@AngelCanseco14 жыл бұрын
Hell yeah lol, goad to see how far you’ve come MP
@morbidious6665 жыл бұрын
Thanks for doing this. I really hate flying, I'm scared as hell, I'm really panicking just thinking of it. Your videos helps a lot understanding what going on. Again thanks, keep up the great work:)
@mitosaviation9 жыл бұрын
I remember subscribing to your channel when you first told your instagram followers you were starting a new project on KZbin, actually I was one of your first 10 subscribers. It's amazing to see how far you've come in just a few months time.. but anyway, it's no surprise at all when one realizes how much effort and commitment you put into your videos! I hope to soon be able to get through your airline's cadet selection process and, who knows, maybe get to know you as my future colleague! Thank you so much Peter!!
@bretthood17576 жыл бұрын
I am absolutely loving all the videos. I have them playing in the background on my headphones while I am working and I am learning so much about the aviation industry. Thank you so much for doing all these videos :)
@EinkOLED7 жыл бұрын
Having flown to high altitude cities up to 13,000ft around peru such as cusco, I quickly understand how altitude can affect your breathing and ability to think. I'm glad boeing decided to change the high altitude buzzer from the one that sounds like the takeoff configuration warning horn, it sadly cost the lives of all those onboard the helios jet. A vocal warning to done the masks would also be a nice feature to help confused asphyxiated pilots, who may not understand the cause of the warning noise.
@gordonlawrence47496 жыл бұрын
You can do altitude training that will make yo capable of getting to 20,000 feet without oxygen without too many problems, and some nutcases have got way higher EG Peter Habeler and Rinhold Messner summiting the 29,000 feet of Everest without oxygen. If you are a ground loafer doing anything physical at 8000 is going to mess you up. I'm surprised that pilots do not seem to get any altitude acclimitisation other than some specialist military ones (EG in the RAF).
@sandrafeliciano91057 жыл бұрын
Tack så mycket Petter! Been through one last Wednesday and this was the best explanation I found - detailed, objective, very informative. Great pedagogic and communication skills. Well done! :)
@marcs9905 жыл бұрын
Great video. I’m currently going through my small jet training. The only thing that I have been taught, it might be different in a Boeing 737. But we conduct an emergency descent almost immediately, after checking the status of the aircraft and we have already donned our oxygen masks. We put in the emergency 7700 n just start going down and at the same time we contact ATC. I’m taught that as soon as you put that emergency 7700 that the ATC will monitor you closely and move everything out of your way. It’s not until we reach a safe altitude that we start looking at alternate airports. But to be honest during the decent the first officer will probably be looking at alternatives anyhow but a lot of his time is spent feeding the captain info such as speed, rate of descent etc. Thanks for another great video.
@enzino2379 жыл бұрын
This is going to be the best channel about flying from a pilot perspective. Keep it up!
@enzino2379 жыл бұрын
If I can't find a way to whitelist your channel on my ad blocker, I will change ad blocker. You deserve all the support you can possibly get! ;)
@Drakonisclangaming8 жыл бұрын
I'm a Jew (not kidding) And your last name scares me
@aperson40757 жыл бұрын
Marco Nasti His channel link
@sillyfoxgirlnya6 жыл бұрын
what about Captain Joe?
@PierreaSweedieCat6 жыл бұрын
Joe and Mentour are AWESOME!
@scottstrang15835 жыл бұрын
This made me think about Payne Stewart and his Lear crash. Do any types of aircraft have the ability to automatically decend if decompression occurs? If so how does it warn ATC and other traffic that would be obviously affected by a sudden descent.? Your channel is a treasure trove of info and I'm not even a pilot. Wish I was.
@kuldeepgadhvi17884 жыл бұрын
You are simply superb in explaining everything in so much detail yet in simple language. I have seen dozens of your videos and watching more and more. My heartfelt regards to you.
@gordonlawrence47496 жыл бұрын
I have no idea why I find this so interesting. Yes I've worked on passenger and military aircraft including design work, but I have never had the inclination to fly anything other than gliders and light aircraft. Could watch this channel all day (and actually have once). Not only that but most of the conversations seem to be with or by people who use their brain as more than an ornament.
@dogbugler6 жыл бұрын
Say hey, Mr. Mentour pilot. Im so glade to have happened across your most excellent channel. I am not a pilot but did a bit of flying with my friend back in the late 70's to early 80's. We took excursions around various place in Texas and Oklahoma. While I watch your channel I visualize flying with you in the cockpit. Thank you so much sir. Be Well. Regards from N.Tx. dog bugler
@timothyodering62992 жыл бұрын
Hi Mentor This was a very useful video for me. It describes the working of the pressurisation system and its malfunction in a relatable way so that I can directly understand. It shows this drastic maneuver to be a planned process and not a crazy helter skelter thing, the way movies like to depict it. Thank you for your work. Timothy
@wiktoriaheinz92446 жыл бұрын
I really like this channel. I’m not a pilot, and way to old to become professionally, but on and off I fly a lot and I would really like to know more. I suspect that you, Petter, initially thought this out for your students or cadets as you, but you will find yourself with a way broader public than that, everyone from curiosity seekers as myself to people who are absolutely terrified of flying that may come over their fear and actually widen there horizons, a life changer in a way. I also see many similarities between how you handle issues and as we in the medical field handle them (I am an M.D. and a civilingenjör). I see potential bilateral-beneficial benchmarking that could improve for both our professions, and ultimately our clients (you say pax, we say patients). Wish all the best 👍✈️
@cortlandtatt67504 жыл бұрын
This the best channel. There R millions who would want to become a pilot, I'M ONE OF THEM this goes straight to learn how to fly I watch day & night. The way mentour teaches it's just very easy to learn. Awesome, & awesome God bless the mentour pilot. Thank you thank you Mentour
@gamlemann537 жыл бұрын
Kjempeinformative videoer du har! Flyr ofte jeg, men har fremdeles litt "flyskrekk"! Men disse videoene dine hjelper fordi de er veldig opplysende om hvor hvor sikkert det egentlig er å fly! Tusen takk for all den flotte informasjonen du gir!!
@Matt-mv5tt6 жыл бұрын
I actually have a story from a passenger perspective. I remember I was on a flight from Bradley International Airport to an airport in Ocala, I forget which one. Anyways as we were taxing out to the runway we pulled to the side and stopped for a while. The pilot informed us that the master caution light had gone on in the cockpit and they were trying to sort out the problem. We ended up returning to the gate and deplaning and we were going to be put onto an entirely different plane. So after a few hours we boarded the new plane and the pilot on the PA informed us that there had been issue with the cabin pressurization system. The rest of my vacation went without incident. I’m just happy they caught the problem on the ground rather than it failing mid-flight
@VNAV_PTH9 жыл бұрын
Captain, great podcast. I realize an emergency descend must be a very nervwrecking manouver since you rely on visual clues and TCAS to keep aircraft separation until ATC becomes aware of the situation and reacts. The manouver by itself puts other people's lives at risk as well, not just the people onboard the aircraft that is having problems so it must be a terrible but necessary decision to make as a commander under stress. Especially in bad weather with limited visibility. Let's hope that is a decision you only need to make in the sim.
@jasonsledge79004 жыл бұрын
Late to the party but I experienced an emergency decent over the Aegean see. Me and my fiance had idea what what's going on and thought this was the end. I traveled a ton for business and had zero issues with that but the year after I was so extremely afraid to fly but still had to. Finding this video helped me with a bit closure of understanding what happened and realizing the flight crew did the right thing. Just wanted to say thanks for making flying a bit better.
@featherstone58386 жыл бұрын
I think it would be important to inform passengers what happens during an emergency descend. This could even be done by a pre-recorded message. A friend of mine had experienced one years ago. As she is not big into science, she thought they were going to crash, as the aircraft seemed to be 'falling'.
@samehsobhy20126 жыл бұрын
I would like to congratulate you for this channel, the extensive effort exerted to come up with this is obvious, I would like you to make a video about the 737-800 Autopilot, as a continuation of the FMC setting video, the MPC podcast should answer questions like why there are 2 autopilots? when do they disconnect? how to use Vnav and Lnav? do the Vnav sometimes does not work? and so on...I will really appreciate that very much,
@davecrupel28174 жыл бұрын
Had my car speakers up high before clicking the video by coincidence. Hooooly craaaap that intro was amazing 😍
@pew61262 жыл бұрын
Great video! Calm. NO panic. Great CRM.
@richardjones21514 жыл бұрын
Hi Peter:-) THANK YOU for all of your content...you have been helping me to over come my anxiety of flying for maybe two years now: please continue your great work! (i am an anxious-flying systems-engineer...lol) Topic question: Every now and then, I can hold my breath for periods of between 30 and 90 seconds (depending on whatever-at that time).....do you think that for pilots; taking a deep breath when hearing the alarm, and holding breath while fitting their oxygen masks could be a procedural benefit....or degradation of safety? No hurry for an answer....best wishes to you, and your colleges and family of course, From mid wales UK and we are most grateful YEEEEEE--HAAAAAA!! :-)
@lainearmstrong59309 жыл бұрын
Very glad i found your channel man. Thank you for the awesome videos. Back to my online commercial ground school, cant wait to one day have a career like yours!
@AviaTAH9 жыл бұрын
This series on Aircraft Failure M... ROCKS.
@DanielinLaTuna Жыл бұрын
A flight attendant once told me that they appreciate when passengers complain about headaches. Armed with that information they can request the pilot increase cabin pressure and they too will feel better. Lower cabin pressures mean lower operating costs - the airlines are all for that
@android5845 ай бұрын
Could this be why I usually have a headache and low energy by the time a Jetstar flight is over and need Panadol. I wondered if it was pollutants in the bleed air.
@howardanderson7455 жыл бұрын
I can only hope that should my mask drop during a flight, I will recognize your voice informing all passengers we are experiencing a minor technical problem. The plane should be back under control, before we reach the ground.
@manofknowledge10005 жыл бұрын
Hi this is a great channel so interesting even for someone like myself I don’t fly but have always been interested since my uncle was a raf fighter pilot in Vietnam and the best pilot he could land backwards and do all the tricks 😎 great channel keep it up 🙂🙂🙂
@michaelbomman49034 жыл бұрын
Finally a subject that shows concern.
@pierre371459599 жыл бұрын
What is your take on the use of automation during an emergency? Some instructors say "You need all the help you can get!" and others will tell you that it is safer to take the plane by hand because you don't know what else is wrong with it. Is it a company specific procedure? During a rapid descent, wouldn't it be faster to manually intervene? thanks for all the help!
@PILOTDANY9 жыл бұрын
Nice. I will be going in the SIM in about a month training these things during my OCC :) Thanx..
@johnchetcuti99609 жыл бұрын
Excellent briefing Capt.
@tobiasra12 жыл бұрын
A great explanation video, well organized, but nearly had a heart attack at 13:08. Listening with concentration after all.
@franciskabiawu5 жыл бұрын
Excellent video captain. Keep up the good work
@zipp4everyone2636 жыл бұрын
REALLY happy about the new intro...
@camillejohnson703510 ай бұрын
I have read other comments that this is an older video. Petter was doing a quality job even from the beginning. Breathing is pretty important for the crew and passengers. In seconds so much is changing to arrive at a level where everyone can be safe. This is done rapidly as well as to discover what is causing the depressurisation.
@lockon0129 жыл бұрын
Great video, as usual! When you are done with the emergency series, can you go back to flight school with different study techniques on how to successfully manage to obtain all theory needed. Starting my ab-initio next year when I'm done with my bachelor grade in aviation :)
@lockon0129 жыл бұрын
It should be "first bachelor year" since the bachelor grade includes the ab-initio in the last two years and some other courses in the first year...
@lockon0129 жыл бұрын
+Mentour Pilot sounds great! would love to participate, but unfortunately my flight training doesn't start until the summer...
@panoshountis15168 жыл бұрын
Outstanding video! I guess one thing you do not do is keep climbing, like the Helios crew did.
@mohammedfadol63569 жыл бұрын
nice & useful i enjoyed thanks captain
@Riccochette10 ай бұрын
Fantastic content from day 1 💪
@hughgilroy80216 жыл бұрын
brilliant talk petter hope i never have to go through it for real but it's great to have an idea what is going on if i do.
@pepper6696 жыл бұрын
Always nice and informative to listen to you.
@ahmadtheaviationlover19375 жыл бұрын
Awesome channel mentour pilot! Love ur videos. Not gonna lie your channel is better than captain joe because i understand ur explanation more easier than captain joe
@1globe2 жыл бұрын
Great episode! 👏
@bulletbling8 жыл бұрын
Very good video. Well done.
@tobylots7 жыл бұрын
Your a brilliant teacher
@SkywalkerWroc9 жыл бұрын
Great video, sir, enjoyed watching it. If I may suggest something - when you show tables with data in feet - could you also include meters, just for reference for those unfamiliar with imperial system? I know feets are used in aviation for altitude, but it still would be helpful for random people watching the video :)
@paavanchohan29239 жыл бұрын
thank you so much for this podcast :) I'm about to watch it
@robertwright3646 жыл бұрын
I remember when I took my SCUBA course we had to factor in our flight time in our Doppler dive charts because of the pressurization.
@PidgeyTheFluff6 жыл бұрын
Love your content. Been listening to your podcasts all week. Should consider adding a pop filter to your microphone though :)
@atharvapokharkar84609 жыл бұрын
Very Informative :) Thanks a Lot ! Love Your Channel
@franksommer81516 жыл бұрын
Great video, as every time. But one question (as a PMDG pilot): do I really switch on ALL lights on descend, including the retractable? AFAIK they are allowed to use only below 10k ft...
@sevana.berwari71187 жыл бұрын
Thanks a lot cpt,by the way the O2 emergency masks in the 737-800 will drops at cabin altitude of 14,000ftThank you sir.
@avamendez12728 жыл бұрын
explosive decompression is something you have to see to believe, everything fogs up. if you're at cruise altitude, until that pressure equalizes, whatever isn't bolted down or strapped in within a 20 foot radius of that hole is going away.
@lazybonesdogwalkingservice45325 жыл бұрын
I would like to see a video on what to do if your plane is being hijacked from a pilots point and a passengers point. Like what happened on board United 93
@android5845 ай бұрын
Good luck getting solid information on that false flag operation.
@ManchesterAviation9 жыл бұрын
Very informative video!!! Liked!
@christofferwaltersdorff43037 жыл бұрын
Or there is a door that blows out, or something like that~ mentour pilot 2016 That is the most casually explained, of hand comment, I have ever seen
@PlaneCrazy19997 жыл бұрын
Christoffer Waltersdorff True but it has happened before.
@sethaddison20396 жыл бұрын
Or a roof blows off... happened(aloha airlines)
@leschase59367 жыл бұрын
Dear Mentour, I know how rare it is to have the rubber jungle deployed, as they say in the industry. I once had it flying in early 1970's, where the pressurization did not happen quick enough after takeoff, and after a short while, we were able to continue to our final destination. Has this ever happened for real to you?
@guardrailbiter2 жыл бұрын
First Officer testing if they air is breathable: "Snifffff. Ah, smells like excellent crew resource management."
@rusrus295 жыл бұрын
arh my daily addiction to " Mentour" My NO 1 Channel on youtube !..Now, is there an actual video simulation off this emergency procedure to watch?
@erikchapman97326 жыл бұрын
What would happen if the pressure control valve were to jam in the closed position? Is it possible for the engine bleed air to overpressurize the cabin to the point that it would essentially pop? I assume the bleed air comes from the early stages of the compressor so maybe the potential pressure can't ever be that high.
@mx5mke6 жыл бұрын
The chart shows show surprisingly LONG duration of "useful consciousness" until reaching extremely high altitudes, yet only a few seconds delay in pilots donning killed both Payne Stewart and Helios 522. WHEN THE MASK DROPS, GRAB IT!
@krugerblue6 жыл бұрын
I do realize that my question is sidetracked to the subject of this video, but I was wondering if you could be so kind to share some information about the cockpit access procedures. Now, in the tragic wake of the germanwings accident, we all learned that the captain was locked out of the cockpit, and this was possible because there is some kind of access override accessible only from inside the cockpit. Now, of course this makes sense, because if an entry code becomes compromised, the pilots must be able to isolate themselves completely, even from the rest of the crew. But - I wonder why there is no kind of biometric access too. This might not be usable or practical in normal procedures, but in some kind of emergency, it could be. We've all seen spy movies where you cut the finger of somebody just to stick it to a fingerprint reader, maybe a retina scan would not work when a plane is shaking violently, a face recognition is not 100% secure - and so on. So my question (unless this violates any kind of sensitive information disclosure) is more related to...has anything changed as a result of this, has the industry taken notice of this potentially flawed procedure that initially (and understandably) was conceived starting from the idea that no crew member would even intentionally want to harm anybody else (even though there are some other tragic examples in the history of aviation) ? Personally I have always considered the fact that pilots need to use the cabin bathroom, a bit weird, because it creates the premise for a security breach. Are there any planes that have a direct bathroom accessible from the cockpit ? Regardless of everything, I am old enough to have experienced flying way before all the paranoia. Back in 1992 I was flying back to Europe from US, and I spent a couple of hours in the cockpit - the pilots were smoking, having coffee, joking (I was 15 years old back then) - in the cabin everybody was laughing, drinking, joking (again smoking - debatable, as even being a smoker I would not agree to smoking even again on planes). A big plane (747), with such a relaxed atmosphere, casual - tended to feel like a cruise ship - friendships would be created, telephone numbers exchanged (no FB, mobile or email addressed existed). I also remember way before that, back in 1984 I also was flying frequently long haul with my mother, and as soon as I fell asleep she would go in the back and hang around with other passengers and flight attendants. I also remember in some occasions that the cockpit door stayed open - how awesome was that, and I would sneak to the door just the get a glimpse inside. I truly believe that that period was the end of the golden age of aviation (which started in the 40' with the boeing long range seaplanes). I miss that period, but as with everything that surrounds us in any industry and domain, it will never come back. is that good, is that bad ? It's everyone's personal decision.
@828enigma63 жыл бұрын
Bad, in that we have loonatics and religious zealots willing to kill themselves and others to make a point. And they're loose in society.
@bernardkozlowski97572 жыл бұрын
That explains why I kept falling asleep while riding my bicycle in winter with my face completely covered except for vision.
@computerbob065 жыл бұрын
I heard the pilots who flew soldiers to Kandahar, in Afghanistan had to do a combat landing each time. That meant flight altitude to ground in 90 seconds, "one way journey to hell, baby.......... going down" (Hudson).
@Captainxwind9 жыл бұрын
Cool video
@mekihadji70348 жыл бұрын
Great work
@halityilmaz29429 жыл бұрын
It felt like watching an action movie :-) Thank you
@longlab1x4 жыл бұрын
Why couldn't there be cameras so you as the pilots could SEE what is going on in the cabin or other areas of the aircraft? Just because it's an older aircraft version? I realize this isn't good for all scenarios but just a thought/question. Keep up your awesome videos man!
@longlab1x4 жыл бұрын
I realize this is an old one. I was just catching up!
@dfdemt8 ай бұрын
18:57 - Why bring the thrust levers back and close them during the decent along with putting the speed brakes out? Wouldn’t this slow your decent and increase the amount of time before reaching a breathable altitude? Wouldn’t thrust power you down faster?
@69ChevyGarage6 жыл бұрын
Never had an Auto Fail light until yesterday. No sound just the light. Packs on auto bleeds on. We did have an unusually rapid decent at one point reached 3100fpm. But other than that, can't figure why the light came on. No loss of DC power. 737-31S
@lukashorky27126 жыл бұрын
Hi Mentour, first, I'd like to thank you for great videos you are putting out. They are awesome. Just curious what is vertical speed on 737-800 during emergency descent? I've tried it in FSX + PMDG 737-800 (FL380 -> FL100) and with GW around 60 t achieved V/S 4500-5000 ft/min. Is this V/S achievable with real 737?
@danielbengtsson16657 жыл бұрын
Interesting video! I just wonder how common a rapid decompression in connection with an emergency descent is? I have a college who experienced an emergency descent as a passenger on a flight. Then I checked incidents on the Internet for this specific airline, and I noticed it had happened a few times quite recently.
@MentourPilot7 жыл бұрын
+Daniel Bengtsson Hi! It is fortunately quite rare but it does still happen from time to time.
@danielbengtsson16657 жыл бұрын
Hi Mentour Pilot! Thanks for the answer! It is really interesting to follow these informative podcasts.
@kevin84lee7 жыл бұрын
Daniel Bengtsson what airline was it that had the multiple rapid descents?
@Alexander-qz6px2 жыл бұрын
Could the outflow valve be blocked and cabin be overpressured by bleed air that keeps flowing due to another failure?
@oscarlindehey75129 жыл бұрын
Thanks i live in denmark when i get 16 i can start flight training in a 2 man aircraft :D great vid really aprecciated
@oscarlindehey75129 жыл бұрын
No problem i Will on insta my name is oscarlindehey
@ryjelsum3 жыл бұрын
@@oscarlindehey7512 What are you up to 5 years later? :-)
@tarekragab57809 жыл бұрын
Very informative me tour keep it up and do u have a rough idea when the nExt video will be out because I check ur channel everyday
@wizbang687 жыл бұрын
Its more scary than anything, but they couldn’t fix the pressurization, and masks dropped quickly, the emergency descent made more than one person motion sick. Then we flew around for it seemed like 45 minutes before we landed in phx or abq. I was 17 at the time and mom was not in the mood once we got on the gound.
@amahlaka6 жыл бұрын
wizbang68 that last sentence sounds really bad without context
@andrewlavey69926 жыл бұрын
You mentioned setting QNH for the height above the airfield with a banner amending this to heigh above sea level. Would QFE be better, assuming the civil air agencies use this?
@the_TEMPEST3 жыл бұрын
For most of this video I thought you were talking about someone named "Hiroshi" like a hypothetical Japanese co-pilot. Finally realized it was "He or She"
@tt45709 жыл бұрын
Great informative video! You mention several times about the possibility of the door missing. How would that happen? On some longer flights from the Americas to Asia I have gotten paranoid when passengers hang out by the door thinking that if they are terrorists they could open the door and we'd be screwed. Probably not possible, but it has run through my mind. Is that even possible when you factor in pressurization?
@seraphina9857 жыл бұрын
The cargo doors on most aircraft open outwards since it gives them more cargo space, incidents have happened in the past where the locking mechanisms on those have failed in flight. Some aircraft also don't have plug doors on the overwing exits and instead use a locking mechanism that is connected to the weight on wheels switch. Of course neither of these should ever disengage in flight but electrical problems can happen I can't think of any historical incidents on planes in the last few decades where it wasn't the cargo door though since they usually have an electric mechanism and electric locking latches the overwing doors only have electric locking latches it would still need someone to manually turn the handle to open those.
@TonyP92797 жыл бұрын
Pretty much all doors on passenger jets have to open inwards (then swing outwards) so the cabin pressure will make it impossible for any human to open them in flight.
@ramind100016 жыл бұрын
T T at normal Cruise alttitudes it is not possible to Open any cabin doors or cockpit windows, due to the pressure on the door, but sometimes it has happened that cargo doors have unlocked during flight. A United 747 for example
@seanwhite75326 жыл бұрын
DC-10s had a rash of cargo door openings back in the 70s
@marshallhyasi62139 жыл бұрын
Great video as always.. Thx captain ;)
@timw24986 жыл бұрын
Fascinating.
@IamJimhunder9 жыл бұрын
Thank you Mentour! Very informative! :) What happens if there was an engine blow out and caused an engine fire and a piece of the blade somehow penetrated the engine cowling and caused a rupture in the aircraft skin, causing a hole big enough to instantly depressurize the aircraft, would you spread the work around? (eg. Pass the responsibility to the First Officer to fix the pressurization and the Captain have the responsibility to put the engine out. ) Or have the Captain and First Officer fix each problem together? Thanks!
@annnonymous97916 жыл бұрын
xMinimalistic wow..was that a prophetic scenerio: Southwest Air!
@kimbalcalkins6903 Жыл бұрын
The outside temperature at 30,000 feet is -48F because of low pressure. Does a rapid decompression cause fogging or even frost forming in the passenger cabin ?
@beejaye6 жыл бұрын
Greetings. Have you ever had to deal with this outside of the simulator and have you ever felt incapacitated during flight?
@luckyirvin6 жыл бұрын
great educator, Sir. at 19:00 you "close the throttles..." moving your throttle arm back so you set the engines to idle? did the auto-pilot throttle them back up at 10,000 feet?
@flav63507 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this interesting video! What would happen if the pressurization fails due to both engines failure at high altitude ? I guess that in that case you don't want to descend too fast in order to gain some precious time. Can APU or RAT pressurize the cabin ?
@PlaneCrazy19997 жыл бұрын
flav APU provides electrical power and bleed air (yes it can pressurize) and the RAT will only deploy if every other source of electrical power (both engines and the APU) fail, and the RAT provides only electrical power and no air, and on top of that only powers vital instruments. It’s like losing power at your house and using a gas generator.
@PlaneCrazy19997 жыл бұрын
You’d still descend in any case if it’s going to take more than age minutes to fix the pressure, as the oxygen generators over passengers only last up to 10 minutes.
@PlaneCrazy19997 жыл бұрын
a few minutes** autocorrect sucks
@azizc647 жыл бұрын
Exelent v8d as always Captain...i have a question regarding the transponder mode once the emergency descent is initiated shoul remain TA/RA or TA only..?? Thnxx a Lot..
@spookyDHD9 жыл бұрын
Verry nice videos! I learned a lot from you. And btw. Where are you from??
@spookyDHD9 жыл бұрын
+Mentour Pilot Ok, thanks for being interactive! I think you don't want to answer this quiestion but which airline are you flying for at the moment?? I'm guessing ryanair. If so I hope to see you in the future :)
@aerocap6 жыл бұрын
SO interesting !
@VulcanOnWheels5 жыл бұрын
14:13 I remember hearing the memory aid for that: 77, we're falling from heaven.
@kennethperian43703 жыл бұрын
Good job showing telling,I get the fast going down yes . Well see ya next time see ya bye bye.
@Bhavrageaverage9 жыл бұрын
That new intro is the best
@ShezzaBeatz5 жыл бұрын
This event is the fear of my flying, even though i know in emergency descent it would be relatively safe doing it, it’s like rides, i physically would hate it
@jeswingj6 жыл бұрын
Nice video. Questions: What if you are flying over the ocean out of range of the nearest ATC or have lost your radio? In such case, how would you know it’s safe to decent and there are no other aircrafts around you?
@plum_bit6 жыл бұрын
They have radar on board, that shows other nearby aircraft
@tm84736 жыл бұрын
Wow, very deep and exaustive explanation, as usual. I still miss something. Why, while descending to 10000, you need the local QNH? As far i understood, in order to breath, the important part is the absolute pressure, not the actual height ASL. Do you mean those cases when close to MSA or below transition altitude?
@plum_bit6 жыл бұрын
As local air pressure changes, so does the QNH. So flying at 10,000ft, the air pressure will always be the same, as long as you have the correct QNH
@ramlasalad79889 жыл бұрын
Hi mentor iv found your vids really usefull i have a question: what sponserships are out there ? I want to know some around euroupe thanks a lot mentor.
@mdmattingly16 жыл бұрын
Is it standard procedure to use a plane that won't pressurize if you know ahead of time? I had a short but miserable flight like that. There was a problem with the pressurization system and they decided to fly anyway instead of getting a different plane or fixing it. The poor cabin crew spent more time dealing with barf bags than anything else. Very turbulent flight.