I am from Pakistan and let me tell you here the seniors are almost always rude and disrespectful towards their junior no matter what field or department you are working in. They will make the junior look bad when they dont know something instead of helping them to learn and progress and grow. The moment you started saying the captain started grilling his FO, I can understand and feel what it was like and how it is gonna end. I can literally feel what the FO would have felt at that time. I feel anger thinking so many people lost their lives just because of an old crappy person who was very overconfident.
@rouguedissidia2 жыл бұрын
"HE WANTS TO BE A PILOT GRAPEE!"
@SweXperts2 жыл бұрын
@@ali2naveedJJ's flight crashed somewhere in the northern area!
@fudzzz2 жыл бұрын
@@ali2naveed JJ was coming back from Skardu, and the plane was one of our old decrepit Fokker aircrafts.
@yousafzaiaa74532 жыл бұрын
I am from Pakistan, and being a manager in an office, I have often been criticized for being "too friendly" and "too frank" with my subordinates. I always reply the critics that I do this so that my assistants and subordinates do not hesitate to correct me when I am wrong. I have a team and I want to improve and utilize its skill. Thanks God... my team never disappointed me and my department is considered the best performing in the company. After watching these kind of videos, I am happy that what I do at my workplace is not a bad thing.
@somename222222 жыл бұрын
Yep , we are still running with the old mindset in professional and corporate circles
@megitoro2 жыл бұрын
I have 15,000 flight hours, 10,000 wide body Boeing and I never fail to learn something from your videos. Excellent graphics and illustrations!
@MentourPilot2 жыл бұрын
Thank you Russel, that means a lot to hear from someone with your experience. 💕
@shubhampawar98232 жыл бұрын
Every one liked your comment 🧑✈️
@vadim75902 жыл бұрын
You just wanted to brag, typical pilot. 🤣
@findingexplained93902 жыл бұрын
I want to become a pilot in the future, whats the hardest thing to learn in the cockpit and what is the hardest part of flying? I need to learn for my future self
@jj-dg9uc2 жыл бұрын
Not gonna lie, but if you've got that much experience but are saying your learning from a KZbin channel is a worrying thing to hear!!!!! What airline do you fly with? so I can avoid it like the plague
@o0Theresa0o2 жыл бұрын
The belittling didn't just kill the guy's confidence, it also over-inflated his own. He had confirmed in his own mind that he was the best, he was invincible, and the rules didn't have to apply to him because he was the expert and knew better. So, he started going rogue. This isn't just about the failures of becoming passive... it's also about the dangers of becoming over-confident.
@o0Theresa0o2 жыл бұрын
@JoosPander BlackAmerica Do you have any peer-reviewed articles to validate that? Because that sounds like some racist bullshit.
@g.tucker86822 жыл бұрын
Very good insight. I think it's very likely that it was exactly as you say. The captain became confused in a challenging situation, and couldn't admit to himself that he needed help. And certainly not the help of the lowly first officer he had just ruthlessly berated.
@SagaciousFrank2 жыл бұрын
Of course, people in positions of leadership and power who behave like this towards their subordinates in a chain of command are always trying to salve their own personal inadequacies.
@afoster1621 Жыл бұрын
Don't think the culpability is 100% on just the pilot though, its corporate.....how surely they are able to measure these things over time? This was mentioned around the 29 min mark also.
@gernhard.reinholdsen Жыл бұрын
Confidence wasn't the only thing it killed.
@starlight85542 жыл бұрын
The dynamics in the cockpit reminds me of what it’s like in the hospital as a junior doctor. The senior doctors can be vicious to the level of making you wonder if it’s worth it to stay in this career.
@ThirtytwoJ2 жыл бұрын
Try being the patient with a thousand hours study and full grasp just to be refused the proper test or treatment based on absoultely no info other than the patient already knowing what to expect having already been through the knee jerk diagnosises and them refuted... while in agony and refused the working meds for mind clouding useless for pain and far more dangerous seiaure meds.
@starlight85542 жыл бұрын
@@ThirtytwoJ yeah because I’ve never been a patient in my entire life. Doctors never get sick, yano 🙄
@fridgeffs5662 Жыл бұрын
@@ThirtytwoJp
@WhiteWolf-lm7gj Жыл бұрын
@@ThirtytwoJ You know, both of those situations can suck at the same time
@therocinante3443 Жыл бұрын
Having worked in a hospital for a few years now.. I've met maybe two people who were actually nice. 99% have horrible attitudes and are nasty to everybody around them.
@reyd86092 жыл бұрын
This is the best narration verbally, technically, and cinematically of a tragic aero incident. I am a retired instructor pilot of an A330 and I can say this can be used as excellent training material. Kudos to you!
@TheJaymon19622 жыл бұрын
What they said
@user-sx1fg7lc3c2 жыл бұрын
I think he is, or was, a pilot trainer of some sort in his career. I love his videos he does a really good job explaining things in a way that a non pilot would understand
@23omorales2 жыл бұрын
@@user-sx1fg7lc3c I believe mentour is a line training captain or along those lines he’s mentioned it before.
@Powerranger-le4up2 жыл бұрын
The show, Air Crash Investigation, would make great training material as well. Air Canada Jazz even requires their ground crew to watch a Season 9 episode as part of de-icing training.
@jimsteinway6952 жыл бұрын
Not only that I like Petters accent!
@swingtheB2 жыл бұрын
As a pilot for a major airline, I wish we watched your videos during recurrent annual training. You really paint a picture of the complete accident. You bring up excellent points, one of the most important being the CRM that is fostered in the cockpit, or lack thereof. I feel this captain had a toxic, anti authority attitude and the only thing that could have saved this flight is if the FO had been trained to be more assertive and take control in critical situations, and essentially saved the captain from himself. Such a tragedy. Thank you for making such great content- you’re making the skies safer.
@HappyGrump2 жыл бұрын
Several videos MenTour has done show that things might have been different if the copilot had spoken up, questioned something. Likewise, there're some amazing videos covering captains who are totally power-hungry loons. Both can prove a disaster.
@abewickham2 жыл бұрын
It is not only valuable for pilots , similar circumstances occur in many places .. like crisis in cloud infrastructure management .. very similar
@amyx2312 жыл бұрын
I’m now in my 30s. A 60-something senior berating me like this…I’d have kept my head down too. Probably would’ve only mentioned something too late, after minutes of anxiety.
@cristianstoica45442 жыл бұрын
I dont think the simulator training includes the kind of situations where questioning the authority is the right way forward.
@wilsjane2 жыл бұрын
@@cristianstoica4544 I think that a difficult situation should be set up in the simulator and 2 pilots who work together left to sort things out, with no external input. It would provide valuable information for the airline of what is REALLY happening on the flight deck of their aircraft. Needless to say, the positive as well as the negative lessons should be learned. One point that you will always see, is that with situations such as when 'Sully' saved all those lives, he ran everything past his first officer, to check that he had not missed anything.
@MothaLuva Жыл бұрын
The only thing I’m asking myself is, how this captain could have survived the previous 25,000 hours.
@SuperWinback Жыл бұрын
Maybe he had a bad day, perfect storm
@syberphish Жыл бұрын
@@SuperWinback Taking a sip of an opened beer and realizing it's piss is a bad day. Killing everyone aboard an airplane because you can't get over your own ego and feel the need to berate the sh*t out of someone in an attempt to make yourself feel better and more superior is a way of life, not a bad day.
@FireOccator Жыл бұрын
The plane flew him.
@nerfer1091 Жыл бұрын
@@FireOccator Jokes aside, it does seem like he was used to relying on as much automation as possible to reduce the effort required from him
@diorocks5858 Жыл бұрын
its cultural with Indians and Pakistani to be snobbish
@KLTrainz2 жыл бұрын
His arrogance got every passenger and crew member killed. What an infuriating accident! I've seen this in so many different industries. You get that one guy with all the experience who thinks they are above everyone and just does as they please. "Screw the company policy, I'll do it my way" all the while belittling a newer employee. Absolutely infuriating!
@evertvriezinga31932 жыл бұрын
Indeed
@johnneal002 жыл бұрын
Actually, the FO should have done something... anything. His cowardice is equally to blame.
@Milesco2 жыл бұрын
@@johnneal00 Ideally, the FO should've taken over, but under the circumstances, with the captain belittling him and undermining his confidence, I can't blame the FO at all for not doing so. This tragedy was the captain's fault.
@ahmedayaat47362 жыл бұрын
Very common in the subcontinent, horrible crew culture. was there in other Asian countries as well, but changed
@KLTrainz2 жыл бұрын
@@johnneal00 It wasn't cowardice, it's just how the culture was. Back then, you just didn't question the captain. His word was law, and you don't dare talk back to him. You get hardened war vets that don't take kindly to some rookie questioning his decades of experience. This accident, plus a few others brought about major changes in the training culture that now gives the lower ranking Pilots the confidence to speak up without fear of repercussions. Had the FO spoken up, yes this could have been avoided, he just did what his instincts and the culture back then said to do.....nothing :(
@koreainsincere2 жыл бұрын
Must be very hard for the families of the victims to come to terms with the fact that they lost their loved ones because of the over-inflated ego of a captain. Utterly heartbreaking.
@rharris13362 жыл бұрын
Agreed. In simplest terms, they lost their loved ones because of one guys fragile ego. In every action the captain made was an attempt at saving face in front of his Junior colleague even though disaster was imminent. If you make a mistake admit it. Don’t make three more mistakes trying to cover your ass. Let that admission be one of your greatest lessons taught to your junior colleague.
@TheGrandGanon2 жыл бұрын
Not to mention this captain was probably too old to safely operate a plane.
@gailwaters8142 жыл бұрын
I'm amazed by the mindset of this captain. A mix of massive arrogance and massive incompetence. Incredible.
@AnimeSunglasses2 жыл бұрын
@@TheGrandGanon That always feels to me like a shaky assumption in principle, but in this case I can't help but wonder if he truly did have some cognitive decline from aging...
@TheGrandGanon2 жыл бұрын
@@AnimeSunglasses Statistically at that age they're likely are in decline. Where in most jobs the amount wouldn't be an issue - when operating a plane it's introducing too much risk.
@adamnottage86422 жыл бұрын
I worked for n individual who exhibited all of the negative aspects of this captain. I am convinced he was actively trying to break me down, so I have enormous sympathy with the FO in this case.
@MentourPilot2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, you will not be a good captain unless you remember how it felt to be a first officer.
@petrairene2 жыл бұрын
@@MentourPilot I think the mentality of these folks is rather, "I had to endure this when I was younger, so now I have earned the right to do it to someone else". Plus, people who grow up in a culture of bullying often develop impulse control problems later in life.
@ZombieSazza2 жыл бұрын
@@petrairene and it’s a dumb attitude, like surely if you have empathy then you’d truly understand what it’s like in that position and would never want to put someone else through that
@petrairene2 жыл бұрын
@@ZombieSazza Unfortunately these types of macho culture breed male narcissism. And a narcissist will never have empathy with someone below them.
@e.b.952 жыл бұрын
@@ZombieSazza empathy is often whittled down by mistreatment and achievement. "I've gone through that, and look where I am. Im doing great and I am great. Therefore, if I do this thing to someone else, I am doing something right."
@PHICEN2 жыл бұрын
As a nurse for forty years, I can draw parallels to this situation in the healthcare environment. Your channel is truly one of the best on KZbin.
@KilerkRazorclaw2 жыл бұрын
Was SaR and Disaster Response for nearly 12 years, i can agree and honestly i think it applies to any job really. Degrading your subordanants is dangerous and stupid, ALWAYS build them up never tear them down. Destruction of confidence can be a slippery slope leading to people either becoming angry and irrational or withdrawing into themselves and becoming unwilling to learn or speak up when they see a problem.
@mikoto76932 жыл бұрын
@@KilerkRazorclaw Can’t disagree with you there. I once had a boss like that, he was duty manager in our department which meant he was second in command. When I was new, I thought it was personal until I saw him tearing into my ward partner. (We were cleaners in a hospital and there were two of us in the ward.) Afterwards when he’d gone back up to the office I asked about it and she just said he was like that way with everyone and that if I got caught into one of his tellings off was to just say “yes sir” then ignore everything he just told me and carry on doing it the way I was trained. And yes, we do have to be careful. We have a cleaning solution that involves dropping a dispersable tablet into a bottle filled to the appropriate line with cold water. And the cold water part was important because if you drop it into hot water it releases a chlorine gas. Go figure. After awhile I thought about it and decided that it was much less aggravating to simply be a bit more alert and that way I could usually notice if he entered my ward and take evasive manoeuvres to avoid him, usually by ducking into the nearest toilet, office, behind the nurses station or even bail out of the ward entirely and embark on a journey to the storage and supply area to grab a few things our cleaning cupboard was running low on. Admittedly though that approach nearly backfired because he noticed that on the rare times that he went into my ward to specifically find me, he very seldom actually could and was forced to leave a message with the nurse in charge or my hapless partner. That led to accusations of me not actually being on the ward doing my job. The only reason it didn’t backfire is that whenever my supervisors went to find me to do random spot checks during my shifts, I was always there, easy to find and diligently working. Looking back on it now, I think either he, my supervisors, or both figured out what I was doing-particularly when my partner noticed the accusations and asked me directly about it and of course I confessed to her… and then we both started doing it. We even found ways to warn each other-usually by making some unique noise that slightly abusing our equipment makes or by hand gestures. It seems like a lot of effort to avoid one aggravating manager, but honest to god it got to the point where he could irritate me just by walking by. When the day came that word came down the grapevine that he was leaving I was concerned that I was being pranked but nope, and receiving that news led to what was the happiest shift I’ve ever had at work. But yeah I have sympathy for that poor first officer because he didn’t have the evasive options I did. Lol, to be stuck in a tiny flight deck with my old deputy manager for hours on end? 🤯I don’t think both of us would still be breathing by the time the plane landed. 😉
@glamdolly302 жыл бұрын
I worked in television for 20 years, an arena that attracts more than its fair share of narcissists, egomaniacs and sociopaths! The toxic bullying in that cockpit broke my heart, and was sadly familiar to me in my former work in television. So often the last people who should be given power over others, are the very people who get it. And of course they pursued that power in order to abuse it, and those unfortunate enough to find themselves answerable to them and their vile, sadistic conduct. My heart breaks for the first officer, whose last hours alive were gleefully made miserable by that monstrous Captain. No doubt he had a long history of workplace bullying. In his sixties, I believe his fragile ego was threatened by a younger man, so he enjoyed the chance to humiliate him to elevate his own status (in his mind, though in no one else's). It's no better than schoolyard bullying and it's totally unacceptable. If only he had been reported before for such conduct, his career as a pilot could have ended - and all those people he killed with his vile conduct might still be alive.
@paulkeenan26912 жыл бұрын
The poor interpersonal professional communication does have parallel associations to Dr's.
@behindthen0thing2 жыл бұрын
Don't let it happen
@muhammadmazhar44192 жыл бұрын
I had my friend in this flight he along with his whole family perished that day just because someone thought they knew it all. He was about to get married and I didn’t believe when I read his name on the list of deceased passengers and still can’t believe he is not with us anymore.
@SgtMacKerZ Жыл бұрын
:( sorry to hear this.
@aeroaxeyt Жыл бұрын
So sorry for your loss, rest in peace to all on that flight (except the captain)
@haffman56 Жыл бұрын
was the he was getting married to called Romaisa?
@hamzahaseeb921911 ай бұрын
ALLAH maghfirat frmaye, aameen
@hamzahaseeb921911 ай бұрын
dont know bro@@haffman56
@hannalester80102 жыл бұрын
Crying about how the FO would've felt seconds before his death. He knew he and 150 others were going to be killed because of the man sitting next to him and worse, because of his own pacificity. He was pleading for his life yet still not empowered enough to take controls. Probably one of the saddest and easily most preventable accidents I've seen.
@philipjamesparsons2 жыл бұрын
The FO gave the Captain lots of input and opportunities to avoid this accident. The question to me is how could a Captain, this useless be Captain? A pilot this dangerous is many years in the making and usually the product of management turning a blind eye. Blaming the FO for not being assertive is fashionable these days and gets management off the hook.
@Pruz19012 жыл бұрын
Exactly what I thought. There were 150 people aboard that aircraft, of whom only one knew what was about to happen, and he had the flight controls in front of him and did nothing. Human culture must be an incredibly powerful force, that can overcome a person's natural instinct for self-preservation 😔
@argentiusdarkkon39182 жыл бұрын
Yep
@advancedlamb2 жыл бұрын
@@philipjamesparsons real question is why isn't everyone calling the captain a murderer? it's evident that he wanted to die, he even forced the plane down in its final moments for no reason. the fact that people can even watch this and not unanimously conclude murder is absurd.
@leexgx2 жыл бұрын
@@advancedlamb just confused person it seems, Co pilot should have force taken control, declared it to airtraffic control and called for assistance from cabin
@WayneM19612 жыл бұрын
I had been doing well in my flying training, doing several cross country solo flights when unexpectedly my instructor said "I'm coming along for the ride today." Anyway to cut a long story short, I had of course, got quite used to the traffic pattern and the headings/distance before turning. I was on downwind when my instructor told me to turn in a direction that was totally wrong. I immediately said "Sorry Jock but that's wrong" he replied "most excellent! but don't be sorry your reply should have been that's not right or that can't be right. I just wanted to know if you had the confidence to tell me what I said was wrong. You have learnt another important lesson today, and one I don't want you to ever forget" A valuable lesson indeed and one that did stick with me.
@KDill292 жыл бұрын
Should have told him, "well I'm not sorry to tell you you're wrong, I'm sorry that you are!!"" 😂😂
@ErynRenee2 жыл бұрын
Not a pilot, but my in-car driving instructor did this sort of thing towards the end... she'd tell me to turn the wrong way onto a one way street or tell me to make an illegal turn, lane change, etc. She wanted to see if I'd obey her or the traffic laws. (I followed the laws.) This reminds me of the study by Milgram about blind obedience to authority - we are somewhat programed to obey those who have authority in any given situation, and willing to act in a way that contradicts our own training, conscience & values.
@DominikPinkas2 жыл бұрын
My father did the same when he was teaching me how to drive. Excellent lesson, everyone needs one.
@MrTurboparker2 жыл бұрын
@@DominikPinkas My dad did the same while teaching me to fly & while teaching me how to drive back when I was 12-13 yrs old. Best lesson I ever learned, and it stuck with me over the decades. When I taught RF engineering in college, I did the same with my students near the end of the course.
@petermelnyk76642 жыл бұрын
Instructor gives incorrect order....oh ...I was just testing you.....bs.
@JasonLihani2 жыл бұрын
Man I remember my instructors having WAYYY more confidence in me than I had in myself. I always felt like I was being convinced I was better than I was, meaning I pushed SO HARD to prove them right.
@charlesreid93372 жыл бұрын
sounds like fantastic instructors. Still havent managed to start training yet but the sheer amount of stress has to be insane. Im a trucker .. use d to extreme stress but just the thought of communicating with ATC while trying to land sounds insanely stressful
@sharoncassell93582 жыл бұрын
Maybe capt was suicidal.feeling no self worth due to age.
@californianative27602 жыл бұрын
I am an ergonomics engineer and a human factors engineer. Making the student comfortable with communicating with the teacher and building confidence in the skills that the student has and is developing, is the correct way to teach!
@djg59502 жыл бұрын
@@sharoncassell9358 If that was the case why take 151 innocent people with you ? Plenty of ways to take your own life without including others in that plan.
@PetThePeeves2 жыл бұрын
Then they are natural teachers. I’m an educator and that approach right there is EXACTLY how to handle most students that cause problems, especially in middle school and high school. It’s a time when a lot of us struggle with self confidence in general and by that age if they have been labeled a “problem student” they’ve leaned into that as a coping mechanism. It’s amazing how many can become better students with that confidence in them and the expectations being set high (but only reasonably so-still within reach). Then recognizing the successes and using mistakes as a teaching tool. I really don’t believe just one teacher is likely to change en entire life trajectory (I’ve heard the stories and have my own favorite teachers that you better believe I’ve reached out to to thank now that I’m in their shoes) but something that has to be built by instructors as a team. BUT even one is better than none! I’m not nurturing by nature and can be snarky, but I do love my kids and WILL keep trying for that semester I have them to build confidence (I feel like art is an opportunity to work on life skills in a more relaxed environment so that even if they hate art and get stuck in my class they’ve at least learned SOMETHING) because you’re exactly right…once they start to realize the tasks before them are something they really CAN handle they push themselves to prove it.
@Doo_Doo_Patrol Жыл бұрын
I binge watched the Flight Channel for a while, often after night shift, and after a few beers in I'd fall asleep while watching. One day I awoke to a terrain, pull up warning and almost pissed myself.
@stopgotdamndeletingmycomme86429 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂
@cherryrotella37149 ай бұрын
🤣🤣🤣
@zalimkhan0079 ай бұрын
Hahahah
@AnnaPrzebudzona7 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@AvyScottandFlower6 ай бұрын
*PULL! UP!* 🏔 💀😅
@kibble242 жыл бұрын
It's horrifying to think of what the FO was experiencing internally in the final moments. What an absolute tragedy.
@marcel14162 жыл бұрын
From what we can tell, the FO hadn't lost any (or just a little) situational awareness - but was afraid to takeover controls. If he would have taken control and the CAPT didn't like it - the Airbus fly-by-wire system has a design feature, that allows a pilot takeover sidestick priority and to ignore the inputs of the other sidestick, if needed. This system works on both sides, so either pilot can keep the autopilot disconnect button on the sidestick pushed, which will give that sidestick priority over the other one and the aircraft will ingore any sidestick inputs from the other side as long as the button is pressed down. If that CAPT would have become angry at this point and wanted controls back, the only way that would work (in a technical manner) is to SOMEHOW get the FO to stop pressing the button (yank the FO off his sidestick or knock him out...). If that button is not pressed by the pilot in "control" and the other pilot gives sidestick inputs at the same time, both inputs will be added arithmetically (e.g. left side full down + right side full up -> plane doesn't change the attitude). In both situations, the pilots are made aware of that by aural warnings ("PRIORITY LEFT"/"PRIORITY RIGHT" and "DUAL INPUT") and a switch in front of them lighting up for a visual warning.
@mikoto76932 жыл бұрын
@@marcel1416 Oh that’s actually really good to know, thank you very much for the information. I had been wondering about that for awhile now. I was aware that pilots are meant to challenge the other when it becomes dangerous and take control, sometimes saying “my aircraft” but I wondered what would happen if the first one didn’t relinquish it. Not knowing about that system, about the only solution I could think of was a mean right hook if you’re big and strong enough for it, or delivering a sharp kick to the balls if you aren’t. Either way the first one is probably going to let go of the controls. 🤣 I like your solution better.
@StoneCoolds2 жыл бұрын
I would have take control of the plane, and the bewt the captain into a bloody blob of broken bones Such an incompetent pilot shouldn't even have a driver's license 🙄
@the3rdid4852 жыл бұрын
Hopefully he realized he was responsible for killing over 100 people.
@petep.20922 жыл бұрын
The immensely crushing regret as he realized that he could have saved his own life, it only he'd acted sooner…
@PitterPatter202 жыл бұрын
What an infuriating accident. Heartbroken for the FO and, of course, all the passengers. Calling this preventable is a gross understatement as the captain had to go out of his way to manufacture a crisis before completely failing to respond to it properly. So sad that the FO could have done something but the captain belittled and insulted him enough that he felt totally helpless and out of control in the final moments. I hope the passengers never knew what hit them and died at least not feeling the same kind of terror that the FO experienced. What a tragedy
@jeremysmith96942 жыл бұрын
They definitely did not feel a thing. I can guarantee that.
@nora220002 жыл бұрын
Part of pilot training needs to be refusing intimidation tactics. The captain committed murder/suicide.
@Nehmo2 жыл бұрын
@@jeremysmith9694 We all should be so lucky.
@ok-jw8px2 жыл бұрын
And why the captain pitched down in the last seconds??? i’ll never understand that
@dthomas92302 жыл бұрын
@@ok-jw8px The plane and the F/O were shouting "Pull Up!" The a--hole was arguning with everybody, ground controller, C/P warnings, F/O warnings, just confused as hell. Ignoring company protocol with only a year in company showed whoever hired him is too blame, too. He might not have had Airbus time at his old carrier.
@limajuliett34062 жыл бұрын
Shocking... I‘ve been flying for airlines for more than 5 years now. I am convinced your videos will help me identify threats and prevent accidents and incidents. I think you‘re doing a great service to airline pilots with your videos!
@TTFerdinand2 жыл бұрын
Yes... Always be prepared for everything, even your copilot going full Andreas Lubitz on you. As a mere passenger I have a habit of always touching the aircraft while boarding, asking it silently to deliver me to my destination in one piece and preferably alive. I always pay attention to the safety briefing, I know where my exits are and if seated at the emergency exit, I know how to handle the door. But I can't pat the flight crew for good luck, I just have to trust them to do their job. Having watched almost every episode of "Air Crash Investigation" hasn't helped. And no, I'm not afraid of flying, it's the possible 200G impact with a hill or a forest that makes me somewhat nervous.
@jupitereuropa-e3w2 жыл бұрын
I am no pilot, but for what I've seen good CRM seems to be one of the most if not the most important factor in preventing accidents in general.
@ohdear22752 жыл бұрын
@@TTFerdinand Excellent post.
@robertgoodwin5393 Жыл бұрын
Dear Lima, I'm a still living old bold pilot. I think every commercial pilot should have a minimum of flight time every month in a light aircraft! So you can remember how to fly! A Cessna 150 or old Taylor-craft taildragger is fun! A ball and attitude indicator and a compass are most helpful! I hope this advice may someday save you and your passengers! Db Cockpit management is the key! Enjoy your flying career, I did!!! Db
@highflyventures-qg8ef Жыл бұрын
@@robertgoodwin5393 I 100 percent agree with you. Unfortunately I have decided to put my single engine piston hobby on the backburner for now. With a newborn and a Longhaul/Shorthaul job there is just no time and money for now... The good news is, flying visual approaches is highly encouraged in my company...
@theghostofGeorgehalas Жыл бұрын
I was a firefighter/medic in the states and I can attest at how common this type of behavior is even while bumping down the road with a patient on the verge of death. Makes for a terrible learning experience and the loss of confidence in a newby is astounding. Thanks for taking a stand and glad it’s not as commonplace in the flight industry.
@Robert_N2 жыл бұрын
I can just imagine my dad RIP who was an airline captain saying, " This captain is not fit to drive a horse cart, let alone fly an A321". RIP to all the victims of his incompetence.
@seand.g4232 жыл бұрын
Horse cart? Try a hula-hoop!
@David-uo1rb2 жыл бұрын
I wish they made more captains like your dad. Sorry for your loss.
@shamelesshussy Жыл бұрын
I mean, it was cultural/systemic too. Stop with the ‘sir’ deference, take the controls, and shout “my plane!”. You don’t win prizes for politeness, just an early grave.
@arshad81702 жыл бұрын
As someone who used to fly on this flight as a passenger, for work (Karachi-Islamabad), I am very familiar with the area and the hilly terrain where we used to also go for trekking (Margalla Hills). It was a tragic tragic accident with so many lives lost. Thank you for making such a an excellent video for non pilots but aviation enthusiasts.
@Amped4Life2 жыл бұрын
@Arshad Altaf - Are reports around incidents in Pakistan generally this short and incomplete by the Pakistani air safety board institution?
@arshad81702 жыл бұрын
@@Amped4Life Yes agree. Some of the reasons: hide corruption and their incompetence to implement regulations related to air safety; cover up their nepotism; and recruitment of personnel not suitable for key technical positions. In short, myriad of issues.
@ssharpe14sharon42 жыл бұрын
@@arshad8170 try
@j_m_b_19142 жыл бұрын
@Arshad Altaf Thank god you weren't on this particular flight! It must be pretty strange for you when you heard about this accident with the knowledge that you frequently flew this flight.
@arshad81702 жыл бұрын
@Hal Colombo??
@supers27932 жыл бұрын
Being a Pakistani from Karachi (where this flight originated), I lost acquaintances in this tragic accident and even then there were rumors that a lot was brushed under the carpet like the fact that the pilot stayed awake all night before the flight etc. In reality (and as you have mentioned) the main issue is the culture of cutting corners and safety lapses and unless we are willing to learn from such horrific losses nothing stops more accidents from happening.
@thearchibaldtuttle2 жыл бұрын
Sorry for your loss!
@MMD-z6z2 жыл бұрын
Rules are not for Pakistani pilots, and culture FTW !!!
@rainscratch2 жыл бұрын
Very valid points, and if there have been corners cut, and inadequate training in responsible behavior, it is possible that authorities may sweep deficiencies 'under the rug' as you say, to save the focus pointing at the authority charged with the responsibility to monitor and set standards.
@pt83062 жыл бұрын
The fact that the report was extremely half-assed makes me think the problem isn't just with the airline, but it's structural. Pakistan sounds like a very corrupt and unsafe place to live.
@ynemey12432 жыл бұрын
The non-aviation culture of some countries like the US encourages self-destructive behavior like this, largely because there's always someone who profits from it. A million deaths from covid; they don't learn from mistakes -- they embrace them as the standard.
@umairnawaz87592 жыл бұрын
I still remember this day. Rescue operation was an even bigger challenge due to inaccessible terrain. The plane crashed deep into the hills inside deep forest. No road access. None of the hiking trails leading that way. Sky Pouring down like non-stop. Thankfully the new airport is now far south west of these hills with a lot of clear area.
@hamzabu1169 ай бұрын
yeah I saw the place, you can just stand on the road and see burnt hill on the other side of ditch, impossible rescue thing
@REDRAWVISIONS2 жыл бұрын
I feel so sorry for the First Officer who, although having far less flying experience than the Captain, would probably have developed into a great pilot. If there are other bullying Captains, like the one who was "in control" here, they should take note!! A great video Petter.
@brianb94102 жыл бұрын
There are many parallels between the work of an Anesthesiologist and the piloting of an aircraft. I have experience with both. The culture in the cockpit described in this episode is exactly what I witnessed in medical school at Indiana University in the middle 1980’s. A large minority of the professors were not satisfied until the student being questioned was entirely humiliated. Fortunately, my pilot training experience was quite excellent. My CFI seemed only interested in helping me become the best pilot I could be. Thank you for a particularly well executed video.
@MentourPilot2 жыл бұрын
That’s interesting to hear Brian. Thank you.
@johnamy1172 жыл бұрын
The medical sector can gain much by learning from commercial aviation accident avoidance procedures theory
@pranavmishra55412 жыл бұрын
There’s a brilliant book on this, called the Checklist Manifesto by a general surgeon named Atul Gawande. It highlights how well aviation has learned from checklists and how physicians make excuses that medicine is too complicated to formulate checklists. Gawande is one of the creators of the surgical safety checklist which is used around the world now before every surgical procedure. I believe Malcolm Gladwell has also highlighted CRM issues arising from hierarchy.
@JesiWhyte2 жыл бұрын
I'm a med student and yes, there are some consultants that will stomp you into the ground. I remember one instance of being questioned on ward rounds, I was able to answer but then he started asking questions at the resident's level and when I couldn't he chastized me in front of the whole team and patients. Luckily for me, the interns and residents saw what he was doing.
@r2db2 жыл бұрын
@@pranavmishra5541 Checklists do have a place, but that place is not everywhere. When resuscitating a patient do we do a time-out and confirm that we are, in fact intubating the correct patient as evidenced by their hospital ID and a signed consent form? No. It is self-evident that as the patient is having CPR performed this is the correct patient, unless we already have in hand a valid do not resuscitate order and if this is so then the first action is to stop performing CPR. Do we confirm the site for central venous access when in an unstable patient we now have only one IO, multiple failed attempts at peripheral access, and a blood pressure of 50/30? No. The site is a central vein - any central vein. Right or left is irrelevant if the vein is patent and the wire advances freely. Medicine differs from aviation in multiple other critical ways, one of which is that in medicine the only time you have two physicians of the same specialty managing the same patient at the same time is briefly during change of shift. Most frequently in medicine there is only one person licensed to practice medicine and surgery touching the patient at one time. In contrast, within the cockpit of all large transport aircraft both pilots must be legally qualified to operate the aircraft. Single pilot IFR only exists with smaller aircraft and Part 135 operators. The abbreviation "CRM" is still used for single-pilot IFR, but the wording is different and the practice is very different from what is practiced by part 121 crews. A different implementation is needed also for medicine, and even within medicine it would need to be implemented far differently at a rural critical access hospital with only one physician and one nurse versus an urban academic hospital with every subspecialty available in-house.
@oruj-e-munir59082 жыл бұрын
I remember watching the crash news on TV. Our neighbor also passed away in this accident. Unfortunately the findings of the investigation never reached to public. Thank you so much for explaining what might've happened that day.
@AwaisKhalid2 жыл бұрын
The findings and the detailed inquiry report are actually public. It's right there on the civil aviation website.
@DERP_Squad2 жыл бұрын
It was only in the publication of a report in 2020 that the Pakistani CAA was given the opportunity to do a complete investigation of the Pakistani aviation industry. What they found was truly shocking. A third of commercial pilots registered with the Pakistani CAA had no legitimate qualifications, having either gotten a certificate via cronyism and bribery, or having had someone else take the exams under their name. The investigation into this crash was severely limited, likely because a wider investigation would have found that there were many pilots without legitimate qualifications. The Pakistani International Airlines operation which includes Air Blue and Serene Air as a subsidiary operators was found to have 262 pilots of 860 having no legitimate qualifications. As we don't know the qualifications of either pilot in this incident, so we should them the benefit of the doubt.
@NicolaW722 жыл бұрын
@@DERP_Squad In this case the formal qualification of this Captain was obviously not the problem. He had all necessary licenses. With more then 25000 flight hours he was a very, very experienced pilot. The disturbing point are his shocking attitudes, not only towards his First Officer but also towards the Air Traffic Controller ("Let him say what he want") and also towards the Standard Operational Procedures of his company, neglecting all safety issues during a difficult approach in bad weather conditions in a difficult terrain - and the THEREFORE raising and unanswered questions: Was this only the personal behaviour of a guy who slipped through the Safety Management System? If yes: How did he slip through? Was it a problem of the Company Culture? If yes: A problem of the Company Culture of Air Blue, of his previous employer from which he switched over only a short time earlier or from both of them? Or are we facing here a broader problem? With this superficial report all answers to this severe questions must stay speculations. And THIS is the real risk in this case.
@gailwaters8142 жыл бұрын
I'm amazed by the mindset of this captain. A mix of massive arrogance and massive incompetence. Incredible.
@raydenfm2362 жыл бұрын
I can relate a lot to this, not as pilot but as a truck driver, I didn't die but we ended up clipping the barrier because his ego was to big to give me the controls when he was clearly tired. This attitude should not be allowed in any industry, specially aviation with so many lives at stake.
@WhiteWolf-lm7gj Жыл бұрын
I'm glad to hear you didn't die, I was really worried for a second there! But seriously, it's stunning to imagine how people can put ego above common sense in these situations
@empresskae1980 Жыл бұрын
I work in Safety/Compliance at a trucking company and was a driver before this job. It amazes me every time when I have to call a driver about their foolishness and I'm met with "I've been doing this for X amount of years, blah blah". That's when mistakes happen, when you're so arrogant to think you know everything and there's nothing left to learn. Just a couple days ago, a guy turned over going too fast around a curve...he had over 20 years of experience...you'd think he would know not to take a 40mph ramp going 68mph with a 40k lb load but here we are 🤷🏽♀️
@bobby1970 Жыл бұрын
They're also known as assholes.
@blutey2 жыл бұрын
I think the captain being 60 and already mandatorily retired from a another airline on age grounds had something to do with it. He felt 'threatened' by the younger pilot and was trying to reassert himself, with tragic results.
@PCLHH2 жыл бұрын
Yes this accident was very unnecessary.
@johnlamb27772 жыл бұрын
61
@richnfamous592 жыл бұрын
a good teacher is like a satnav: if you take a wrong turn, it simply tells you how to get where you want to go. this captain? he thought he knew it all and wanted to be 'da big man'. and so many people died as a result. there was no other reason behind this tragedy
@jacobgill48082 жыл бұрын
May have been a well covered up suicide too
@georgeconway43602 жыл бұрын
I was a F/O for 16 years and a Captain for 27 years. My experience was Captains like the one in this accident are weak and probably dangerous.
@737andtriumphspitfire92 жыл бұрын
Hi, I lost my Job as a 737 Captain in New Zealand due to Covid. I used some of your systems videos to help study for an upcoming Command interview which was successful. Keep up the good work.
@sk8erbyern2 жыл бұрын
@Blue Penguin we make ATC software and our team managed to get a hold of an ex-ATC to help out with the project as a domain-expert. It would never be possible without the Covid downsizing I think. Last I heard he is training to become a pilot now that the situation is normalizing.
@brittanyshaw31562 жыл бұрын
sorry to hear that! was it with Air NZ?
@neonic6912 жыл бұрын
@@brittanyshaw3156 since when did air NZ fly 737s?
@brittanyshaw31562 жыл бұрын
@@neonic691 I believe they used to a while ago. I guess it can't be air NZ then since commenter said it was due to covid
@neonic6912 жыл бұрын
@@brittanyshaw3156 yea
@j_vasey2 жыл бұрын
When you said the recording stopped, I could see your pain, I can see your passion and your genuine empathy for the first officer in particular. A very well presented video made all that much better with your genuine connection and understanding of the cockpit.
@Labgorilla2 жыл бұрын
Absolutely chaos. Absolute chaos. Thank you for highlighting this. I hope it is used to train pilots because , as passengers it is wholly unacceptable to see this level of arrogance and incompetence and bullying. But it doesn’t end there. The accident report is shocking and unacceptable.
@Zahidkhan-ts9uq2 жыл бұрын
I am from islamabad Pakistan. And this was the first and most saddening disaster in this city's history. The hill which is the crash site is almost 15 miles away from where I live. Thank you for the video and more information that you shared on this devastating incident.
@DERP_Squad2 жыл бұрын
One of the reasons the report was so limited in it's scope was that the airline industry in Pakistan at the time was a mess of fake and completely missing qualifications allowed through the system by bribery, cronyism, and intimidation. I have no knowledge of the qualifications of the aircrew in this situation, but a 2020 investigation found 1/3 of professional pilots registered in Pakistan had fake or fraudulently obtained licences, with Pakistan International Airlines, the parent company and controlling operator of Air Blue being highlighted as having problems. Out of the 860 pilots in the PIA/Serene Air/Air Blue operation 262 were found to never have taken a piloting exam and held fake credentials. As a result of this, PIA is banned from flying in both EU, US, and many other authorities airspace with most PIA flights now operated by foreign charter firms. Taking the state of the Pakistani airline industry into account, it is likely that pressure was put on the investigating agency by officials to limit the investigation merely to Air Blue Flight 202 and not look into wider issues due to the damage to the reputation of Pakistani aviation that would result. There were 5 further major crashes before the report on the corruption within Pakistani aviation were published in 2020.
@roymaddocks31842 жыл бұрын
Pakistan truly is a failed state; how disappointing
@Julia-nl3gq2 жыл бұрын
Ah, now that makes sense. I'm not surprised at all. Thank you for the information.
@paulortiz20352 жыл бұрын
As I was flying from Casablanca to Cairo I was a bit concerned about a few things I saw! The person next to me said, what I found rather chilling, "If Allah wants us to get to Cairo, We will get to Cairo!! Ok then! Enough said! We did make it to Cairo without incident! (And I'm still happy about that!!!)
@igorsmihailovs522 жыл бұрын
I have just remembered that Pakistan also has nuclear weapons. But I am sure the situation is completely different there.... right?
@KDill292 жыл бұрын
Was?......
@andrewbaerm.d.39842 жыл бұрын
Interesting. This was 2010. In January, 1982, I was a 4th year medical student at GW in Washington, DC. I was doing an elective in Forensic Pathology at the DC Medical Examiner's Office. I was there on the day of the Air Florida accident. Even then, long before I got into GA I had an interest in aviation. I don't think I will ever forget that and the subsequent days when the bodies of the pilots and passengers were brought in.... Ice cold and smelling of Jet A... I eventually read the NTSB report. The First Officer commented during the roll out, "It doesn't feel right." He could have aborted the take off but chose not to. It was this accident that brought the psychological factors impacting CRM to bear. Yet over two decades later in this incident, it is as though nothing had been learned from Air Florida. It is absolutely astonishing that the FO had been so shaken by the prior grilling that he passively let the Captain doom not only himself but all the passangers. The only move here was to say, "I have the controls" and clear the terrain and execute the missed approach per the procedure outlined on the approach plate. Tragic.
@MarvinHartmann452 Жыл бұрын
The senior pilot having that attitude shouldn't be tolerated no matter how many years of practice he might have. That kind of passive aggressive attitude isn't useful to anyone as nobody will learn anything from this. It's not a way to instruct anyone.
@saadahmed2862 Жыл бұрын
It has been 13 years since this air crash. I had lost a dear cousin brother on the flight, I was fortunate enough to spend the last night with him at his house. I am so thankful to mentor pilot to bring out the details of the incident to the grieving families. May Almighty Bless you. Keep up the good work.
@hamzahaseeb921911 ай бұрын
saad , kahan se ho ap?
@nadirkhan225010 ай бұрын
@@hamzahaseeb9219 Pakistan
@xenomorphisisdilage4729 ай бұрын
It's not allowed to pray for blessings for a non-Muslim. Pray for his guidance, instead.
@hamzahaseeb92199 ай бұрын
@@xenomorphisisdilage472 His cousin brother is non Muslim?
@robertcarter98008 ай бұрын
@@hamzahaseeb9219 He means Mentour. Allah may bless whom he pleases at any time, what's wrong with hoping for mercy from the All merciful?
@pixelsandmagic2 жыл бұрын
I never realized how important good leadership skills are when it comes to flying aeroplanes until I started watching your videos sir. Please keep them coming!!!
@wilsjane2 жыл бұрын
I judge the success of my leadership by what happens when I am on holiday or taking a few days off. Also by how people who have worked for me keep in touch 30 years on.
@shenzo20002 жыл бұрын
bring back the flight engineer, the power of three people in the cockpit would defuse so many of these type of issues
@steve06806572 жыл бұрын
A video explaining if/when a first officer can override or overrule a dangerous pilot would be great. There are too many instances of dogmatic stubborn pilots making decisions outside of standard procedure and first officers being too timid/respectful to break rank.
@davidbataille52082 жыл бұрын
Would be a very interesting topic
@citizensnips23482 жыл бұрын
Crew resource management is pretty much universal in respectable airlines now. For example, If a first officer calls for a go around, the captain has to do it. Airlines aren't allowed to punish pilots for doing it unnecessarily either.
@CKLee-rs4kl2 жыл бұрын
That was especially true with the Japanese crew of a 777 a few years ago during landing at SFO. If the FO had been more assertive, the accident and loss of life could have been avoided.
@Hellsong892 жыл бұрын
@@CKLee-rs4kl I think that was tied to Japanese culture of respecting your seniors no matter what, where in West that respect has to be earned. It partially earned from experience and rank, but there isint cultural incentive to follow orders rather blindly, or rather oppose those orders sturdy enough manner like taking over the controls.
@nikkoval84902 жыл бұрын
There should be a test in aviation where it determines a pilots ego. And if they exhibit high egotistical patterns, should be fired from the spot.
@sadiqjohnny772 жыл бұрын
Just in case anyone is interested in the real probablity of what happend on this flight: When I was Chief Pilot Safety for PIA, I received a confidential report from a F/O who told me how, an otherwise genial captain behaved in an arrrogant manner on a DC-10 flight from Paris to Frankfurt. The next part of the flight was from Frankfurt to Cairo. The capt was fasting during the month of Ramadan, and he broke his fast at sunset, when they were descending for Cairo. Cairo was renovating the main runway so no aids, except for a locator NDB beacon on approach was available. The capt was instructed by ATC to come over the airfield and join a downwind circuit for the runway in use. During the final turn for approach the captain saw two parallel lights that he thought was the runway. He rolled out of the turn and lined up in the post sunset desert haze. The copilot ( who had been trained by me) was always told to use ANY available aid for reference, even if it was not usually used for an instument approach. He had tuned the Approach beacon and it showed that the runway HAD to be at right angles on the left. The captain ignored him. Fortunately there was a dead heading DC-10 captain on the jump seat. When thy reached 500ft AGL the copilot yelled "Cars!" --they were approaching a road!The captain did not respond,The Jump Seat captain shouted at the copilot to take over and he seized the controls and opened power to pull up. The captain seemed to be in a trance. With the guidance of the other captain the copilot carried out a makeshift let down over the beacon and landed safely . This happened in the late 1980s . ANother report came in about BOTH pilots on an F 27 falling asleep while fasting. I banned fasting and flying and the CAA followed our example. It is my belief that the Air Blue captain suffered from hyoglycemia (low blood sugar) caused by fasting. His fellow captains told me that he was very religious and had asked for a day off after praying all night and planned to fast the next day. He was picked up for that flight due to a pilot shortage, and probably continued with his fasting program , as it was a short flight.After the first turn to join a bad weather circuit, he most likely developed tunnel vision as he did not respond to any warnings carrying on towards the hills--and when he finally did, he panicked and turned left , not right--straight into the Margalla Hills. The Karachi A 320 crash occurred on the last day of Ramadan. My guess is that both pilots were fasting and were in that same euphoria induced tunnel vision. No pilot could have made those stupid mistakes in their right minds. I sent a message to the Inquiry Accident Investigation Board and also briefed the top brass of PIA. Strict measures were brought in (like I had done 25 years ago) and there have been no such incidents since the Karachi crash. The saddest part was that it was not necessary to fast and fly from a religious point of view. In the lectures that I gave to point out the dangers of fasting and flying, I pointed out that 1) Fasting is excused while on a journey and 2) A fasting day missed can be made up on another day off when not flying. This had nothing to do with age or Alzheimers, Dementia etc. Air Force pilots on a very early morning training flight were know to have accidents because they did not feel like eating at that time--the equivalent of fasting. For every Air force flight, the commander of the mission sits with his pilots and EATS before flying.
@anadubar48192 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing. This makes a lot of sense. Hypoglycemia can paralyze the thought process. If the captain was fasting at the time of accident, then this is the most probable explanation.
@sosamosa902 жыл бұрын
keep the religion out of it your envy is so clear beside it's not your business to tell people when to eat or not read the law that you said that you are aware of, beside i checked with my collegues about this info and guess what you are a liar so next time dont lie its bad for you
@damienjeremyweir45432 жыл бұрын
A very real common sense
@SayVeritatis2 жыл бұрын
You are spot on sir. This is what I thought regarding the Karachi A-320 crash as the pilots were reported to have been fasting.
@MultiSciGeek2 жыл бұрын
While this is _kinda_ believable... you will NOT develop tunnel vision from not eating for two days lmao... furthermore he was actively arguing with his copilot, which doesn't seem like a trance to me. More than likely, since you mention he was very religious (hence conservative), is that he was just an arrogant old uncle that could not stand being told they're wrong by a younger person, even if it means them making stuff up just to be right (when they know they aren't)... but which resulted in loss of life in this case. Tragic... Knowing Desi culture, I instantly knew what this was about when he started scolding the young guy and him calling him "SIR" every three seconds.... Read my other comment for the full explanation. But basically if you've seen the show "Chernobyl" it's exactly that 3.6 roentgen scene - a veteran in his field, but because of that too arrogant, and perhaps due to age, incapable of making the RIGHT decisions. It's a deadly combo. Always stay humble, and if you can't function properly, don't work.
@kavinduwickramasinghe-y2i11 ай бұрын
First officer Syed Muntajib Ahmed was a f-16 fighter pilot for 12 years in pakistan air force. then took an early retirement due to medical reasons. He retired as a Squadron Leader.
@lagflag2 жыл бұрын
I work in an office, manage other people, but those videos helped my managerial skills in a big way. The courses my employer provided were garbage comparing to those real life learning events and videos! Thank you!!
@606Jelly2 жыл бұрын
Same for me. I think about "resource management" in a different way, especially when the team is working to a tight deadline or things are a little stressed. But of course the consequences if I get it wrong are nothing more than a late project, maybe lost revenue and an unhappy boss.
@anand-menon2 жыл бұрын
In traditional and hierarchical societies such as India and Pakistan have, this problem of seniors putting down their juniors in not so subtle ways is particularly acute. Deference to authority and especially age is a given and this becomes problematic especially when the older senior person also happens to be wrong and refuses to see/admit his/her mistake. Even a polite and firm pushback from a junior could spell the end of a career. That's why it's always " Yes Sir !, Yes Sir !!... Three Bags Full Sir !!! "
@MentourPilot2 жыл бұрын
I know. I create these videos to show just how dangerous that attitude can be.
@renierpretorius34252 жыл бұрын
Is there not training to stop that its 100's of lives at risk. One ego vs one person? I know what my answer is and I'm not even a pilot. Senior captains should know that the co pilot is trained and also knows how to fly the plane. Listen and evaluate what was said can help in any situation
@arnoldhau12 жыл бұрын
@@renierpretorius3425 no training can overcome culturally embedded behaviour.
@petrairene2 жыл бұрын
@@arnoldhau1 The company could encourage the reporting of this type of bullying and then step on the toes of these seniors. I mean, there are voice recordings in the cockpit, any junior officer has proof if it has happened. The companies have to make sure that this is kept in check. And to sack repeat offenders.
@robertjaent60872 жыл бұрын
Was wondering about that, thanks for your input Anand!
@OldskoolNL2 жыл бұрын
I felt 27:44 to my core. Goosebumps. Can't imagine how the FO must have felt during those final seconds knowing what was happening, but unable to do anything about it.
@SagaciousFrank2 жыл бұрын
Can't help but pity him, the fact that he remained deferential addressing him as "Sir" right up to the bitter end in disbelief at what this condescending know it all Captain was doing.
@nicholi27892 жыл бұрын
This series is so cool. I’m not even a pilot. Just somebody mildly interested in aviation and I have been bingeing this series. Excellent work!
@wanderer77552 жыл бұрын
Same here, it's awesome content
@bikezonly9 ай бұрын
I’ve always wanted to be a pilot but never qualified. This channel fills that hole.
@ZeusEKR2 жыл бұрын
There is no way that was a one time occurrence with the captain. He had to have been like that with previous flights and crew mates. They should have spoken up and maybe he wouldn't have been been flying that flight.
@maryeckel96822 жыл бұрын
I'm sure you're right about that.
@melodiefrances38982 жыл бұрын
I totally agree. The problem with people reporting this is that the person often feels too humiliated to even tell anyone ... I imagine many people knew what a jerk he was ...
@tomriley57902 жыл бұрын
@Tom Foster true the first officer was a new guy - potentially nobody else would fly with him.... again points to issues within the airline.
@StephenKarl_Integral2 жыл бұрын
Actually, there is more than just ego. It's a culture. Living in a country where people ARE NOT EQUAL, in every sense of the word, I know how to identify a situation where someone is convinced he's always right, not because he doesn't know he is actually wrong, but because the culture is to never admit you're wrong when you are on a *higher hierarchical position.* Countries where you can imprison someone if you personnaly know some General or Colonel, countries where you can use public funds as you wish when your band of buddies are in charge of the head of staff in presidence and ministry, where you can pay justice to get away. Airlines in such countries are no different, a senior pilot cannot be wrong, you just get fired the moment you land to have the nerve to challenge the boss........... *til the day you have dead people like here.* Then, the band of dictators there will feint a low profile and designate the low ranked representative to fire, as responsible for the lack of professionalism in the industry, they will make some relative efforts (like comply with approach plates from now on and ban all custom made by the captains) and some efforts to behave (but that disgust them the most) ... This will last for a time, but, actually, nothing has really changed, the next junior that dare to question _authority_ will still get publicly fired, well before any major incident. It is unlikely the other captains/pilots were not willing to fly with this captain. When both _high ranked_ are teamed, there is no scolding, no humiliation routine, actually, they have very good teamwork and very friendly with each over. The reason why they are that mean to juniors is, juniors are unaware that, to be "part of the band," one must cover up for the other, in case someone messed badly. It's no wonder why they need to show their authority in public, the culture must prevail and those who don't know yet must witness as much practial example as possible. In any job in those countries, not only in aviation, if you hear one day _"this guy is seeking for problems"_ from your boss talking to anyone but you, while hinting everyone to look at you, you know you're screwed. Countries are not the same guys. There are deep disparities in terms of "equality" or "professionnalism over ego" interpretations. That's why Mentour said it's deeper than just a series of unfortunate events led by an overconfident captain. How come that captain, known for his behavior for years, like many others, not get grounded, and the investigation having nothing to say about ? => Cultural. On an obscure side, one can say it's a good thing he is dead, it's easier to blame the dead... The good thing when it comes to those airlines in those countries, Covid (and the Ukraine war) has brought those airlines in the verge of collapse, that it becomes imperative to make efforts in professionnalism to remain in the competition. Also, many of those "old school" captains are retired or dead, so, less people to humiliate you (although it's not yet a nice work environment either, but, way better than before for sure).
@NicolaW722 жыл бұрын
@@melodiefrances3898 Yes, indeed. And if you´re a young pilot, only a few years in the business, probably in your first engagement as a "real pilot", and putted down as a "Know-nothing" by an elderly Captain with huge experience and decades of flying aircrafts, you easily take it yourself for real and believe it. And these guys are knowing this and a part of their huge experience is: "I can do whatever I want, nobody will complain." But if you´re an Airline Captain with this attitude there can be finally a mountain in your way.
@Kretiq2 жыл бұрын
Hi Mentour. Today is the 35th anniversary of the tragic catastrophe of flight LO5055 where all of the 183 souls onboard died. It was the biggest aviation catastrophe that ever happened in Poland. It happened when IŁ-62M "Tadeusz Kościuszko'' was doing an emergency landing with fire onboard, two out of four engines turned off, and without elevator and rudder. Plane crashed 6 km from runway 33 at Warszawa-Okęcie. Last words of this flight were “Goodnight. Goodbye. Bye. We die now…”. Me and probably many people would love you to create a video about this tragic flight.
@sakumar2 жыл бұрын
There is definitely a cultural issue leading to abysmal CRM practices. Pakistan International Airlines 8303 crashed in Karachi in May 2020 and there again it all started with the pilot being abusive towards the F/O, sneering at his lack of experience, then disregarding ATC -- ended up touching down gear-up, then crashing on the go around because the engines were damaged during the aborted landing.
@alinaqirizvi14412 жыл бұрын
yes definitely a desi thing
@sk8erbyern2 жыл бұрын
talking shit to someone because of lack of experience is probably the dumbest thing ever. Did they start with 20k hours clocked or something lmao that's not how time fucking works. It is like shitting on a child for being young.
@kkumar26182 жыл бұрын
Don’t understand why these people hate F/O ? Aisi kya personal dushmani hai ? Karz leke whoopis nahi diya kya ? Matlab apne ego ki keemat masoom logon ki jaan se zyada hai 🤬
@CW130J2 жыл бұрын
@@kkumar2618 the mentality of Indo-Pak subcontinent. Main boss hun, tu kuch bhi nahin. Translation (I am the boss, you are nothing)
@canadianacademyoflearning56342 жыл бұрын
@@CW130J Sorry to say but I had been facing the same culture here in Canada for the last 10 + years, so wherever the hierarchy exists the culture is the same regardless, maybe the word smithing is done more in this culture. but the core issue is the same
@muneebhussain6729 Жыл бұрын
I was 8 years old and about 15-20 miles away from where the crash happened, we got the news of this tragedy over a phone call from my aunt and even whilst watching this I got chills through my spine thinking of how everyone felt in their last moments. The kind of stubbornness, arrogance and corner-cutting behaviour this captain displayed here (and I hate to say this) is an example that goes to show why we haven't progressed as a nation and to this day this kind of behaviour costs our people their livelihoods. May the Passengers and the FO rest in peace, Ameen.
@CC-xn5xi11 ай бұрын
I agree. It s a huge problem.
@mish1302 жыл бұрын
Great video. When I transitioned from the C-130E (not very automated) to the C-130J Super Hercules, the best advice I got from my instructor was "When the automation starts doing something you didn't expect, disengage all the automation and hand fly the aircraft. Work out why "the box" isn't doing what you expected once the aircraft is safe."
@sharoncassell93582 жыл бұрын
Viewers its important to read comments because you may have missed something or the person writing has a point you had no clue about. Don't just watch video and think you got this. It makes a world of difference . Sometimes you can answer questions other less informed persons want to know the answer to and hear your side. Its intriguing.
@Ali2day2 жыл бұрын
lost some dear friends in this accident. This is the first time I understand what actually happened on this flight. Thank you for another great video.
@josephconnor23102 жыл бұрын
I'm sorry to hear this.
@Ali2day2 жыл бұрын
@@josephconnor2310 Thank you for your kindness. It was a long time ago yet it still feels like it was yesterday.
@cstratford7339 Жыл бұрын
I'm so sorry for your loss
@later_daze_40802 жыл бұрын
Ego is a dangerous thing.
@MentourPilot2 жыл бұрын
It definitely can be.
@Dr.farazalam2 жыл бұрын
Sadly, it's quite common here in the Indian Subcontinent.. its a part of the culture. Noone dare even ask anything to the senior, and a culture of imposing this superiority by asking them to do unnecessary things to juniors.
@rafabeton6092 жыл бұрын
Mentour, this is an incredible way of going through every single detail of an accident. Very insightful.
@crockett6162 жыл бұрын
As someone who at some point devoured the Mayday air crash investigation TV series, watched them multiple times actually, and who's read a pile of NTSB reports out of sheer curiosity, I'm so glad I found your channel! Keep these coming, please! This case is kind of similar to Korean Air Cargo flight 8509 where the captain overbanked the aircraft and the first officer did not take the controls and so they crashed.
@JamesDavy20099 ай бұрын
One factor was the captain's attitude indicator showing level flight while the standby and FO's attitude indicators showed ~90° left bank.
@texasray52372 жыл бұрын
The captain had plenty of opportunities to correct the situation but continued to make things worse and worse. It reminds me of my dad's descent into Alzheimer's disease. For the first couple of years he would seem normal and coherent most of the time but slip into dementia suddenly and without any outward sign. Even then he could converse and seem normal but he would totally lose track of what he was doing. This eventually resulted in him driving hundreds of miles totally lost but not even realizing he was lost. Someone heard about the situation on the radio and managed to get ahead of him and block the road so he would have to stop, and they talked until the police arrived, and even then my dad didn't know he was lost. He said he was on his way home, and that home was just down the road. But really he was in another county and was just about to get on the interstate going even further away. But he thought, honestly, that everything was under control. And the captain in this story seems to be a bit like that, totally lost, but not even realizing it and certainly not about to admit it to anyone else.
@LeSarthois2 жыл бұрын
I feel you, this happened to my grand-father; tho for him it was just dementia caused by old age (he was 90 when it became more than just "being distracted for a few seconds"). But yeah, it really struck a chord when the narration makes it appears that the captain behave like he knows what he's doing when he clearly was behaving wrong.
@Pandidolod2 жыл бұрын
Could very well be the beginnings of some type of dementia for the pilot. That's also what I thought of. But it could very well also be the fact that he was retirement age and overconfident in his own abilities.
@leanbean83762 жыл бұрын
@@Pandidolod Once retired, "stay retired"., & be thankful, graceful, & ecstatic U accomplished that!!
@anadubar48192 жыл бұрын
I had the same feeling. This guy made catastrophically wrong decisions, when he got the terrain warning, he did not really react, and in the end he was descending instead of pulling up. That can't be explained with a domineering or aggressive personality, that is reduced mental capacity.
Excellent presentation. This is the most infuriating incident I think I've seen. It should be the first incident taught by CRM instructors by how important it is for commanders to recognise how critical their behaviour is in maintaining a safe operation. Just pitiful how this completely avoidable situation turned into a tragedy.
@PetThePeeves2 жыл бұрын
We have our own version of CRM in education and sometimes there are people that ether cannot or will not change. Either delusional, inflated ego, or compensating for something. We could use more training in how to respectfully but assertively work with others as well, because surviving that first year teaching is brutal and sometimes breeds a culture where “just keep swimming” is all they can do and it becomes a habit. Easier to now make waves, but can result in disaster.
@adee7546 Жыл бұрын
Awesome video as always. Just one point: the main issue was not that the FO was not there at the time of need. The main issue, in this case, is that the FO continued to warn the pilot, over and over (up to the second they crashed) that the plane needed to be lifted up. And, up to the very last second, the pilot ignored him.
@ricbarker48292 жыл бұрын
What blows my mind is that the "pull up" alarm only has one response, there is nothing to decide or debate.....TOGA pwr, and pull up, clean up the A/C if req'd, and if the pilot flying doesn't do it quick enough, then the co pilot should. It amazes me the hold that "class distinction" still has in some countries, to the point it will override your will to survive rather than question your "better".
@beeble20032 жыл бұрын
The other thing that blows my mind is that a terrain alert doesn't disengage the autopilot. But maybe they felt that dumping the pilots straight into manual flying at a time of huge stress wouldn't be helpful. Perhaps it's better to let the pilots turn off the autopilot on their own terms, what should be only a few seconds later.
@leexgx2 жыл бұрын
That was so bad, co-piolt should have taken control the plane and called for assistance from cabin to remove the captain or hold him Back and called radio for police/ambulance once we land as my captain is confused on how to operate the plane (not the first time it has happened where a crash has happened because Co pilot hasn't taken action) the moment the captain did not respond correctly to the second critical ground alarm he should have said I have control of the plane and I am doing escape climb procedure do not stop me or this plane will crash
@leexgx2 жыл бұрын
@@beeble2003 it has a button on the stick to disable autopilot and take "joystick" priority it's just a matter of setting engine power to maximum and pull back (no turning) The Co pilot should have forced taken control in that manner (with verbal I am in control your currently having a medical problem let go of controls don't touch anything)
@mikoto76932 жыл бұрын
@@leexgx One of the worst things about this story is that there is a procedure for exactly that situation, I think. When the pilot flying is doing something dangerous for any reason, the other one says “my aircraft” and take the controls while the one causing the danger has to let go. But yeah I don’t know why they didn’t heed the terrain warning.
@dana1020832 жыл бұрын
@@mikoto7693 yeah it still requires them to oblige..or pass out and let go :/
@vert1xfps2 жыл бұрын
As a young person who desperately wants to be a pilot, this makes me very sad about the situation in my country regarding aviation
@wanderer77552 жыл бұрын
If you graduate as a FO, be the change you want to see. You are the next generation and can make the pilot culture for the better. Good luck
@spamdump44592 жыл бұрын
Since I learn so much from the background details you provide (how this airport is approached, autopilot modes, etc.) I would enjoy a series not about crashes, but the trickiest and most challenging airports and how they must be handled.
@ilmazeric92392 жыл бұрын
I also think a series on challenging airports would be very interesting. For example, my hometown Sarajevo is completely surrounded by mountains (one to the east is very close to the airport), the runway is rather short (2600 m) and the weather can be pretty awful in the colder months with lots of fog and low-lying clouds. Big airplanes can only land approaching from the west and have to take off towards the west too.
@Ten80pete2 жыл бұрын
If I ever decide that I'm okay with being responsible for hundreds (possibly thousands) of human lives and get my pilot license, I just hope im fortunate enough to have a teacher like you. I Love the takeaways that you impart. There is no sensationalism, no blame or beating a dead horse. Just education and stressing the importance of CRM and teamwork and learning from the past.
@gailpeterson37472 жыл бұрын
What a heart wrenching and completely avoidable occurrence. Your message of always striving to build up your team members if in a leadership position is so very important and this example brings it to the fullest light. Thank you for another excellent video.
@christosvoskresye2 жыл бұрын
This kind of story is more infuriating than heart-wrenching to me.
@gailpeterson37472 жыл бұрын
@@christosvoskresye But anger is not going to change the situation. Education and retraining in a positive environment will. Everyone has bad days, but when one allows that to influence their behavior in such a negative manner, it is very easy to get behind situations, close needed staff down, and create scenarios where everyone ends up reacting to events instead of responding to them intelligently and an accident is much more likely to happen.
@amandawatson59312 жыл бұрын
@GailPeterson This.
@blutey2 жыл бұрын
Unfortunately in an office environment the kind of strategy employed is the exact opposite: to ensure you alone remain indispensable to the job and ensure your own job security.
@tiffanyray53602 жыл бұрын
I used to be a pro-skydiver and students and inexperienced jumpers would do some really stupid things..., but we always tried to build them up to our level of safety as opposed to shaming them and shutting down lines of communication. And sometimes their fresh perspective was just what was needed in certain situations so the communication was valuable in the other direction as well.
@XanthusBarnabas2 жыл бұрын
I was HALO/HAHO and combat diver guy in the Army, and have jumped, and dived, with some real oddballs; there's an interesting "threshold of experience" where they go from excited/nervous, then feeling immortal and pushing the envelope, then eventually realise they need to mature and become more safe. The same with training shooters. I really enjoy novices, because their perspective is different; often their questions/inquires make me stop and think about how I'm communicating, or failing to communicate.
@thetowndrunk9882 жыл бұрын
We all know one thing- we’d never have this issue with Petter in the left seat. I’d absolutely love to be trained by you, and be FO any chance I got.
@mdruk20032 жыл бұрын
One of the most remarkable things is that the published/company procedure of short timed headings to fly the circuit was so simple. It's as if the captain was so focused on automation that he'd sooner load himself up with programming RNAV points and fly an automated route than take semi-manual control for the few minutes it would have taken to complete the visual circuit. But you tell us that the accident report didn't look into company culture, which might perhaps have been the most significant aspect of the crash. Really appreciated the clear presentation of the circumstances leading to this accident. Mentour sets the standard.
@4FOGIDNI2 жыл бұрын
I remember reading up on this accident, your video brought the severity of the atmosphere on that flight deck to life. The FO was anxiously paralyzed the entire flight an absolutely chilling situation.
@jcorbett96202 жыл бұрын
This reminded me of a crash, B.E.A. Flight 548, that took place in the UK, just outside Heathrow (I believe it's called the Staines disaster). This was back in the days before CRM when the "captain was god" and involved a highly irrascible Captain and a timid and passive FO. The FO had witnessed a highly charged argument between the Capt and other pilots over an industrial dispute and when the Captain made mistakes during take-off, was cowed into not speaking up. The plane (a Hawker Sidley Trident, being operated by British European Airways) stalled into the ground and disintegrated, killing all 118 on board. This was the greatest loss of life in an air accident in the UK until Lockerbie. The resulting report of this accident and it's causes, was one of the impetuses to start training CRM.
@JamesDavy20099 ай бұрын
I remember watching that incident on _Air Crash Investigation._
@sadiqjohnny772 ай бұрын
@@JamesDavy2009 If I remember rightly, the Captain was incapacitated and the F/O (taking over) retracted the slats early, when the correct speed had not been reached. As a former Trident 1E captain , I can tell you that stalling a Trident (or any large jetliner) at low altitude is fatal.
@JamesDavy20092 ай бұрын
@@sadiqjohnny77 Captain Key's incapacitation was the result of the fight he had earlier triggering an arterial event (most would call it a heart attack) caused by undiagnosed arterial lesions (atherosclerosis). It may have been Captain Key that retracted the droop flaps early thinking the lever he pulled was the flaps lever.
@sadiqjohnny772 ай бұрын
@@JamesDavy2009 Usually after take off, the captain calls for the F/O to retract the slats and flaps. In the Trident the slat and flaps lever were totally different, although adjacent to each other. If the slats are retracted when the proper speed had not been reached, amber flashing warning lights would illuminate in front of the pilots. Whether the captain or the f/o had moved the slat lever to "Retract" the flashing lights were perhaps ignored due to the consternation about the captain's incapacitation. This would not trigger a stall warning or activate the stick pusher. The flashing lights could e extinguished y pressing them--and then looking at a screen that told you what the problem was. In this case "LE Flaps" would show.
@nathanmcgowan68372 жыл бұрын
It's almost incomprehensible that a pilot could behave this way.
@bogdiworksV22 жыл бұрын
I wonder if he was stressed out to begin with and feeling insecure, considering the weather conditions and the tight manoeuvre he knew he would have to perform in order to land and the fact he had a practically inexperienced copilot he didn't think he could rely on, so he took his stress out on the poor guy and set out a self fulfilling prophecy.
@-Datura-2 жыл бұрын
I can't fly a kite but am totally fascinated by your content. I have learnt so much because of your videos about aviation. Every video sends me down a rabbit hole of aviation research. Thanks for the awesome content!
@AS-vq3wt2 жыл бұрын
I simply can't follow all the technical jargon in his videos. Most people who watch these only pretend to understand when he's taking about technical features and computer lingo. I'm not one of those people. I just fast forward to the end.
@jmdr482 жыл бұрын
Thanks you for covering this accident. I still remember this morning and no-one could believe that this could happen. There were so many conspiracy theories at that time ranging from flying over no-fly airzone to attack from Americans. In the end in turned out to be an ego of a one man.
@FolixOrision2 жыл бұрын
The background music and the intonation that your using to recount this situation really pulled me in. Thank you for having a high quality of atmosphere in your videos.
@enoughofyourkoicarp2 жыл бұрын
Procedures aren't there just to make your life difficult, they're just there to make your life longer. If a procedure is complicated there are probably a lot of very good reasons for that.
@johannageisel53902 жыл бұрын
"Safety regulations are written in blood." - heard that on the Well There's Your Problem Podcast
@Nivola19532 жыл бұрын
Dear Mentour, this story of the CRM training is one that really infuriates me. There have been so many, I’m talking dozens of accidents, where the culture of social classes, causes the Captain to berate or demean the first officer to the point that the latter, CHOOSES TO DIE rather than go against this culture! I’ve lived in SE Asia for the last 33 years and I’ve seen and heard of this attitude, with different grade in all the countries here, but I know this is not restricted to this part of the world. Every time the investigation produces suggestions to improve CRM training, for the last 20 years, to no avail, the same problem repeats! Because, in my humble opinion, the same culture, prevents the CRM trainers to give the message in the proper way and prevents the airlines from really enforcing it! I wold like to hear the trainers and company policies to spell it out close to “stop being an a**hole to your crew” and “nobody deserves to die for you to keep your pride”. I’ll be (tragically) waiting for the next “suggestion” to improve CRM training and get p***ed off again at the loss of lives, in the name of cultural idiocy.
@robertoramos43022 жыл бұрын
Totally agree!!
@warriorprincessharmony Жыл бұрын
This will have to be implemented on a societal level. We are not born with these prejudices and behaviors. We just grow into them depending on what the society around us allows and practices. So, you can't just do away with it at the office or in the cockpit and expect it to be the end. It has to be ingrained into us as a society that juniors are just as good as seniors. Our ideas can be just as good, just as intelligent, just as passionate and just as right as seniors. Maybe inexperience might be a barrier, but inexperience and stupidity are two very different things, and seniors should understand that. Unfortunately in all cultures on this planet the older generations think they know everything. They might know a lot, but they certainly don't know everything. Something their egos can't handle.
@GinaKayLandis Жыл бұрын
@warriorprince eh, please don't paint all elders with the same brush. Many of us relay to people that we don't know everything about any subject. Your statement is as if an elder would say all juniors haven't enough experience etc.
@salmanwali89312 жыл бұрын
Thank you for covering this! I was always curious about what exactly happened there. I was about 12 years old when this accident happened in 2010. I remember being at Faisal Mosque at the time of the incident which is about 5-8 kilometers near the crash site (Margalla Hills/Damn-e-Koh), I vividly remember watching the fumes of the crash, Armed forces helicopters approaching the crash site, hearing the sirens of the ambulances and list of names of the people identified to be dead in the crash on the car radio.
@esecallum2 жыл бұрын
could be YOU next time. do you abuse people beneath you...?
@VoidStarchan2 жыл бұрын
I am never going to be a pilot, but your talks about CRM actually help me a lot in my management position. so thanks for talking about it, you are the one that introduced me to the concept.
@charlesreid93372 жыл бұрын
Ive never had respect for manager.. especially business majors. I deliver to a company now where ive seen some excellent (and some bad) management. The good managers listen to the employees and rely on them. They do occasionally have to remind people who push too hard but it's fairly rare. This is at a job that is dangerous, can be rough and with constant hardware failures. They work together.. the manager tries to get them what they need while of course having to keep his managers goals up front. Understand these folks have ZERO authority over me or my drivers. We view our job as giving them what they need (whether they know what that is or not). When shit has gone sideways and i see a good crew and one of the better foremen/managers is on duty i destress because i know theyll focus on solving the problem not kissing corporate ass. We've had employees.. and managers.. tell their bosses when we come in theyre taking care of us period.. because we take care of them regardless of what our boss says
@sharoncassell93582 жыл бұрын
Undercover boss displays this concept. You must trust eachother and form that temporary camaraderie to be able to get along well in the cockpit.
@w4r10ckc922 жыл бұрын
Being brought up in the subcontinent culture and as an Senior First Officer working in a regional airline, I can say that there ARE times when the cockpit CRM gets unusually steep. But it is situations like this which requires a FO to become most vigilant, diplomatic, and assertive when required. Thank you Capt Petter for explaining the tragic incident so precisely, and also noticing the cultural issues in this part of the world.
@NZAbbasi2 жыл бұрын
There was Khatmandu PIA disaster in 90s because the FO couldn't challenge his Captain. This is cultural issue to core where not speaking up to elders, seniors is considered as respect and challenging seniors is considered disrespectful, plus it makes you bad guy in the system you work. Where seniors, not used to being challenged, rip you to shreds due to their connection with the management. It's shameful had any learning done From the PIA disaster, this wouldn't have happened. Plus the accident report is shameful half hearted exercise to protect political screw ups on the ground as this Airline was owned by the ex PM of that time. Also, building of the new airport brought great corruption money. Shameful, innocent loss of lives.
@richardkeilig40622 жыл бұрын
I am the safety officer for our fire department. I am learning a lot about safety from watching these videos. Thanks, Mentor Pilot
@jodieamber84292 жыл бұрын
This captain puts me in mind of the Royal Air Maroc Express 439, that ‘I am superior in age and rank and therefore know better than company policy and procedure’ only this had such a tragic outcome which could’ve and should’ve been avoided
@moe36912 жыл бұрын
as a moroccan, that was the first thing I thought of
@flugjung2 жыл бұрын
Now that I’m about to upgrade to captain, I find your videos to be pure gold. I have been following you for almost a year and I really have improved my skills!!! Thanks a lot!
@JScot922 жыл бұрын
The passengers closest to the cockpit would probably have heard the EGPWS audible warnings. That would have been truly terrifying if those passengers understood the significance of them.
@RAXITH_playz2 жыл бұрын
Only those who know what it is upto.. hearing your death clock ticking but can't do a thing is worst thing ever..🥺
@chrisb91432 жыл бұрын
landing with Ryanair : "Terrain ahead! Pull up!"
@paulfogarty77242 жыл бұрын
@@chrisb9143 only this was'nt Ryanair and Ryanair have never had a crash..
@MrNikolidas2 жыл бұрын
@@paulfogarty7724 It just FEELS like a crash when they land xD
@jessemounoury60652 жыл бұрын
Wow really, you can hear that through the cockpit door??
@AbubakarFarooqui4 ай бұрын
I cannot forget this crash just a few kms away from my home. This absolutely shook me to thr core. Thank you for making sense of that tragedy.
@GraveUypo2 жыл бұрын
i'm glad i learned the lesson from this video waaaaaaaaaaaay back when i played online rpgs. i already instinctively knew that instead of criticizing weaker members, i'd just give them an easier assignment with more autonomy, so they would feel they played an important role (and it of course, it wasn't not a major role, but it was still important) and feel like part of the team, while i actually micromanaged the main parties to do the heavy lifting. as a result, in my first week in command, i took a understaffed guild that had never won a single front in its 5 months of existence to take over 75% of the world in a single weekend. in terms of manpower, each of our members during that war had to defeat 15 enemies worth of opposition (that's not how it works but yeah we were 30 and we had over 400 enemies fighting over 4 castles, and we ended up with 3 of them). i was so fullfilled after that war that i quit the game the next day. i had nothing more to be done. that game taught me lessons i took home with me long after the game died. they've already come into play many times in my professional life. if only this guy had learned that lesson too these people would still be alive
@fernandodoldan28642 жыл бұрын
This is fantastic work as always from Mentour Pilot. I especially appreciate the team building lesson, applicable in a cockpit, an office, or even around a dinner table. Building people up and treating them with respect is not only the right thing to do; it can literally mean the difference between life and death. Thank you for that!
@ThirtytwoJ2 жыл бұрын
Cowards never save anyone, especially in less than friendly team buildjng type situations where you might actually have to use force on a uncooperative or incoheirant fool.
@Darryl_Frost2 жыл бұрын
I remember back in my Navy days, we had a similar thing, if you were not sure about something ASK, and you will never get in trouble if you ask, They tell you there is no stupid question, but if you do not ask and you do it wrong, then there is trouble. If there is any doubt ask and forget about embarrassment or pride, because that does not matter.
@marilynmelkor41112 жыл бұрын
I just discovered your channel earlier today. Subscribed. This video hit me hard, especially as one who experienced workplace bullying early in my career too. I think this video should be mandatory viewing for every single manager of every single company in the U.S.
@TwoPlusTwoEqualsFive322 жыл бұрын
I have found this in other less critical fields, usually the ones that know the least and are the most incompetent act as if they know more and are snobbish towards other staff, worse when they do make a mistake they never accept the issue and don't try to improve. For me if someone acts like that in my business they won't stay for long, people like that are a cancer on your business and should be excised as soon as possible as it's rare that they will improve.
@peterjf77232 жыл бұрын
It's known as the Dunning-Kruger effect. In psychology this is a cognitive bias whereby people with limited knowledge or competence in a given intellectual or practical skill greatly overestimate their own knowledge or competence relative to objective criteria or to the performance of their peers or of people in general. Because they are unaware of their deficiencies, such people generally assume that they are not deficient. It is worse if the person is arrogant or entitled as they are unlikely to attempt to improve their skills.
@bilalriaz98672 жыл бұрын
You are right but problems here in Pakistan is that Most Airlines hire the pilot who get retired from Air Force due to completion of their tenor or get grounded due to some medical issues (pulling G Force, cant handle Air pressure due sudden maneuvers etc ) or being released from Air Force due to indiscipline behavior. Bcoz they are trained pilot and Air Force trained them , those pilot given priority over the fresh student pilot with less flying hours. And this is why for fresh aviation cadets , margin is very less to become hired for Airline. So when those (Airforce veterans) pilots get hired by Airline , they have Macho behavior in their attitude bcoz of being former fighter pilot. And these people have tendency to overrule and ignore the ATC instructions or First Officer (lack of CRM) , and due to this , Pakistan faced another crash Flight 8303 PIA , in Karachi when pilot ignore ATC instructions when he was not established vertically.
@kenbrown28082 жыл бұрын
@@peterjf7723 I have worked in environments with this sort of person, and while it is bad if they are a colleague, it is worse if they are in a position of authority.
@han5vk2 жыл бұрын
Complacency kills.
@fecardona2 жыл бұрын
This effect also happens in the office day to day, corporate world too. But doesn’t cause deaths like this, rather: talent loss, bad products, incompetent decisions, disenfranchisement, distrust in teams, useless divas. Fun fact, it’s mostly done by men.
@W0lf8802 жыл бұрын
Since im early, just want to say, the videos are produced very very well. Clear explanations with all the visuals are really good. Always a pleasure to watch. Cheers,
@Itsa-sh2 жыл бұрын
I don't work in the aviation industry, however your videos (and in particular this one) have always shown good leadership examples. I am a team leader and building up colleagues to pull in the same direction is number 1 for me. and Second to that no matter how much or little experience someone has I've encouraged them to speak up and ask questions which in turn has built up their confidence. People with the attitude of the captain works in all kinds of industry and we need to weed it out, because once the rot starts it really manifests itself and can ruin good culture.
@stellviahohenheim2 жыл бұрын
Yeah right
@vandrovka142 жыл бұрын
Same, I’ve learnt a lot about team work in these videos!!
@tzadiko2 жыл бұрын
'"Let them say what they want", making it clear that the Captain has his own plans'
@damienjeremyweir45432 жыл бұрын
Ironic. The high and mighty pilot thought of the traffic controllers as saying just what they wanted as he himself did and said exactly as he wanted, illegally. As if THAT is not infuriating enough he killed his co-pilot and all the passengers + destroyed an airplane in perfect working order and damaged the land and killed a goat. No dates for that pilot at sundown.
@ninedaysjane24662 жыл бұрын
This scenario has happened way too many times, even in Europe and the U.S. Korean Air had multiple incidents caused by domineering captains and submissive first officers. Fortunately, CRM training has gone a long way towards reducing such incidents.
@edmondzeldin70362 жыл бұрын
The horrific crash in Tenerife was an example of this dynamic. The KLM first officer was too deferential to the captain and didn't insist that they not take off because they had not received notification that the PanAm aircraft had yet exited the runway.
@rishabagarwal36282 жыл бұрын
@@edmondzeldin7036 In Tenerife accident, I agree that the captain should have waited for the final call from first officer before proceeding for takeoff. But in this specific case I believe the majority of the fault is of the captain. Also, the lack of radar infrastructure at the airport was bad too.
@plektosgaming Жыл бұрын
The issue is really Boomers and their general inability to see younger generations as anything other than children. They hold onto power and refuse to see the younger generations as capable of anything, or if they are, it's not as good as they can do it. So the younger pilot reverts into the mode of their parents scolding them and just shuts down. I mean I never and I mean never won an argument with my boomer dad. He simply ramped it up until I caved in because he was sure as the sun will rise tomorrow in his authority and agenda and it simply wasn't worth it trying to convince him that he was wrong. Not that he would ever admit it or take one word of advice from me in the first place. We hardly talk as you can imagine. He's still toxic even though I'm now in my 50s. In his brain, I'm forever 14 and nothing can change it. And.. here we are again. Stubborn old fool and the younger co-pilot simply unable to tell them no.
@normie27162 жыл бұрын
It seems in these videos, so often a First-Officer who, while perhaps assertive enough to speak his or her mind, rarely will take the leap to actually taking control of the aircraft from the Captain. Are there any incidents wherein a subordinate officer took control of a commercial aircraft and saved it? I'd love to hear.
@KutWrite2 жыл бұрын
A life lesson even for non-pilots. Stand up for yourself, dammit! The earlier you do it (e.g. at the beginning of this flight) the easier it is. It can sometimes be done with a simple question, such as "Sir, is this a training flight?" or "Sir, is that the company approved circling procedure?"
@Mantek4302 жыл бұрын
This is always easier said than done. You can find yourself in situation when the more you fight, the harder wall you hit ,and you only put yourself in worse position each time. There's risk of being left with literally nothing but more mental scars, that no-one will even care later on either. School reality can be an example.
@ilm_seeker2 жыл бұрын
@@Mantek430 Yes, it can be easier said than done, but KutWrite is correct. Just DO IT! SAY IT! Feelings may be hurt and he might have gotten more pushback from the captain, but this is not a mere sport of cricket, this is flying an airplane with lives at stake. In this situation, one has no choice but to speak up regardless of whether it is easy or not.
@ilm_seeker2 жыл бұрын
I thought the same, I thought at some point the FO would have respectfully said, "Sir, is this a training flight? I'd rather concentrate on the flight since the weather is bad."
@KutWrite2 жыл бұрын
@@Mantek430: In my experience, the earlier you address it, the less you have to do. Further, once you've done so, you develop an attitude of self-confidence that predators shy away from. They always go for the (perceived) easy target. The last time I had to use physical cues was a huge supervisor with the railroad I worked for. He wasn't my boss, but high enough to sling his weight around. He wrongly interfered with my job on the radio and I politely asked that he change frequencies. I didn't add, but he should have known the radio rules cover that. He came striding into my office and opened the swing door past which only we operators were allowed. I instantly stood up, smile on my face, making eye contact and walked just as fast right toward him. I'm low-average height and build but the guy was a tower and in good shape so I glanced at his knees, just in case. At about 3' distance, he froze, a surprised look on his face. I said "Sir, with all respect, please check the comm rules before you say anything." He stared at me, nodded and left. There were no repercussions and he never bothered me again. He actually wasn't a bad guy, just maybe had a bad start to his day and felt embarrassed about being called on a violation on live radio. I'm seeing some further lessons on episodes of "Mr Inbetween" on FX. Check it out!
@theacechip2 жыл бұрын
The cultural considerations go beyond just the company culture. Its also a certain social cultural aspect where deference is given to seniority regardless of who is actually right. Very few people are able to stand up to their own right cause because they may not get support from the powers-that-be if it comes to a dispute.
@Ace96x102 жыл бұрын
How did that person end up as a Capt? Wow...
@MultiSciGeek2 жыл бұрын
The more you work, the more arrogant you get. You have experience but also at 60+ your mental capacity actually plummets. Deadly combo. Have seen it so many times.
@GamingtopupZone9 ай бұрын
It’s Pakistan even a bus driver with some reference can be a pilot.
@gblim3982 жыл бұрын
I could listen to this man all day. Such a mellifluous voice and perfect diction are incredibly rare and, in the case of the latter, indicative of high intelligence. Keep up the excellent work.
@Tiisiphone2 жыл бұрын
This one had me at the edge of my seat. So sad. I don't know why such a seasoned pilot neglected to follow the SOPs, but he had zero emotional intelligence for sure, and this surely was part of the problem as you said.
@NicolaW722 жыл бұрын
Exactly.
@matsnilson77272 жыл бұрын
Not sure why I've been watching numerous airplane disaster videos these last couple of days, as they're almost always incredibly chilling and sad, but you really know your stuff. Great work! The same can sadly not be said for the pilot of the flight in this video.
@sharoncassell9358 Жыл бұрын
The capt cut everyone's life short. I think he knew he was losing ground and rather than land properly & let people see he was losing it rather die a capt than get let go due to diminishing brain function. Instead of letting the young FO bloom. It's an older one not accepting aging. Jealous of the FO youth and road ahead of him.
@marmactwins2 жыл бұрын
I’ve always loved watching planes and even building models in my twenties, but I never thought I could actually learn a whole lot about piloting, or mechanical functions of an airliner until now. The mentor pilot is very easy to understand, and being a pilot himself is very generous to others who may need information to make better decisions in emergency situations. Great job in everyway with these videos!
@chnapo12 жыл бұрын
Poor FO. I feel so much for him. I feel like I have been in his situation many times, fortunately not in an airplane, just at the regular office work. But I can totally understand the difficulty to speak up to someone senior, authoritative, the fear of consequences, the attempt to lie to one self that the senior has matters in his hands etc.
@Delibro2 жыл бұрын
Thats right, he was poor the most time. BUT: When faced with mountains ahead and a lethargic captain I would take controls and bring the plane to safety and don't think of legal consequences.
@sharoncassell93582 жыл бұрын
@Hal Colombo This video was technical so layman and pilots can grasp the meaning.excellent achievement. Keep it coming. I subscribe.
@mikebronicki82642 жыл бұрын
Aircraft Warning Systrm: "Terrain ahead, PULL UP, PULL UP." Captain: "In a minute, hang on... I'm busy." Terrain: "Am I a joke to you?"
@texasray52372 жыл бұрын
Who won?
@Snugggg2 жыл бұрын
It's unbelievable though sadly I am witness similar arrogance (although not so catastrophic) from healthcare professionals daily. age and seniority do not overrule facts and logic.
@DynamicSeq2 жыл бұрын
Terrain: You are going to regret that....
@lairdcummings90922 жыл бұрын
Pilot thought his own ego could intimidate the terrain into complying.
@jrmckim2 жыл бұрын
Terrain always has the right away.
@vivianisz7612 жыл бұрын
It could be the captain’s arrogance stopped him from acknowledging his wrong doing. He may think the situation can be salvaged by years of experience, and only started to panic when realized danger. I doubt he ever asked for help or guidance from his colleagues before, so when disastrous mistakes were made, he wouldn’t know how to react, to utilize all resources. It’s a shame that personality flaws brought down so many innocent people.
@johnsrabe2 жыл бұрын
I’d love to see his personnel file from his previous airline. They were probably delighted he reached 60.
@BigFordTruck Жыл бұрын
You and Green Dot are the best aviation KZbinrs imo. I always look forwards to videos from the goats of modern flying.