I swear on that second accident, that plane was doing everything it could to not crash, but was overridden by some horrible pilots.
@clqudy475011 ай бұрын
At least they'll never do that again, I guess.
@AE.rojet_aviation11 ай бұрын
@@clqudy4750yeah there up there
@W8RIT111 ай бұрын
I don't remember exactly which video here on this channel. It was the one with the Russian pilot who lets his son "fly" the plane. I think the video creator commented that it was as if the pilots wanted to crash because there were 2 points in their disaster that if they simply let go of the controls, the plane would have corrected itself.
@bignades111 ай бұрын
@@W8RIT1 you got it mostly right, the plane likely wouldn’t have corrected itself, but had they just turned on the autopilot at any point prior to the final dive, it would’ve easily recovered
@tbm3fan91311 ай бұрын
Exactly why I will not fly any Third World airlines. Maybe biased but then it is MY life and so I can be as biased as I feel necessary.
@jaimhaas517011 ай бұрын
The sheer incompetence of that second one leaves me baffled. How did these pilots ever get certified?
@vivi612111 ай бұрын
good question
@stephenhazeldene771911 ай бұрын
Cornflakes packet
@kevinmalone321011 ай бұрын
That's a very good question.
@JDH_MUSIC11 ай бұрын
the airline was called yemenia, that's explanation enough
@malcolmwhite658811 ай бұрын
Yes, it’s like a panic error made by a private pilot who has only just gone solo and yet you’ve got a couple of experience people on the flight date with lots of automation to help and lots of warnings, interesting I don’t know if that’s relevant or not, but a friend of mine who flew for our national Carrier in New Zealand did an upgrade to a 737 type rating in America, and while he was there, there was a pilot from a very wealthy country from that part of the world in this video I can’t remember the exact country, but apparently the pilot was absolutely useless, but he tried to literally bribe the American instructor with money to pass him when he wouldn’t. He departed and said no problem he will find a flight training instructor that will give him his 737 rating!
@b.t.35611 ай бұрын
The sheer negligence in both cases is disgusting
@tayyub718211 ай бұрын
Especially the Controller in the second incident doesn't know what he's saying just stuttering and yapping
@ADPeguero11 ай бұрын
Not just disgusting, but also scary. We place our lives in the hands of people that may be full of incompetence.
@luuduonghy65911 ай бұрын
@@tayyub7182 The first incident wasn't much better as pilot let these kids into cockpit, something that was forbidden in aviation.
@glamdolly3011 ай бұрын
@@luuduonghy659 Huh? No kids caused either accident - you are referencing an entirely different crash!
@serverbf100mr11 ай бұрын
@@luuduonghy659What you just said was Aeroflot Flight 593 not that Inex Adria Flight
@georgem740011 ай бұрын
I've never piloted a plane, but the split second it tells me TERRAIN! PULL UP! PULL UP! I'm PULLING UP!
@lunayoshi11 ай бұрын
Until you pull up too much and it stalls, I guess. :( As was the case with the second plane.
@RatPfink6611 ай бұрын
@@lunayoshi First, full throttle!
@muitosabao11 ай бұрын
that's exactly what they did on the second crash, and that ultimately made the plane stall and crash!
@hoopdesign11 ай бұрын
@@muitosabaoyou can pull up without pulling up to the moon. In the first video the pilots went 9 seconds without doing anything after hearing “pull up!” In the second video the pilots decided the plane was a rocket and could head to the moon. Can’t pilots just pull up like normal, like they know how to operate a plane or something?
@secondskins-nl11 ай бұрын
@@hoopdesign I'm not a pilot but on approach you've basically idle thrust since the plane gets more like a glider from your top of decent. All is calculated in a way you land as slow as possible with margin of course. The pilots didn't pull up anything, it's the automatic applied full thrust that made the plane pitch up. As said in the clip, the pilots should actually have pushed the nose down to counteract. You want to keep speed, without enough speed you drop like a brick. And it's all split second work, once you lose sufficient air flow over the wings you're too late. You can add power etc but all has a delay with a big heavy plane and already close to the ground there ain't much margin. Flying a plane ain't hard but doing exactly what's right in some seconds in a unusual situation is. That's why pilots are trained on situations they often never will encounter. Both of these accidents where avoidable but that's with a lot of accidents. Humans are pretty lousy if it's about focussing at a lot at the same time and if there is happening a lot around you it's really easy to miss something. Especially when things are unexpected. If you read the comments you'll notice a lot of super talented pilots who won't make mistakes are actually just commenting KZbin videos the entire day. Total waste of talent and could make aviation so much saver to have them as pilots /sarcastic
@gusmc0111 ай бұрын
The aircraft tried to save them, but they were determined to fly it into the ocean.
@ThomasthetankengineE210 ай бұрын
Yeah. For once, the A/P and the computer systems are on the good side
@TheRuben_music9 ай бұрын
Well they didnt crash into the ocean. But nice try
@TheRuben_music9 ай бұрын
For once? 50 millions flight last year were on the good side@@ThomasthetankengineE2
@jstring8 ай бұрын
@@TheRuben_musicum. Yea they did. They were in a nose up stall and slammed into the ocean killing everyone aboard except a 13 year old girl. Did you not watch the second part???
@TheRuben_music8 ай бұрын
I commented clearly before I realized there were more stories in the video than the first one.@@jstring
@todd508211 ай бұрын
On that 2nd crash I lost track of how many mistakes the pilots made.
@deepthinker99911 ай бұрын
Too many to count?
@margeebechyne864211 ай бұрын
The air traffic controller in the first case should NOT have been cleared. He made assumptions, didn't truly listen to what the pilots were saying, and these two pilots trusted his judgement. RIP 180 souls. The second was 100% pilots' errors - many errors. Wow. I'm amazed young Bahia Bakari survived, may God bless her. RIP 152 souls. Thank you for another great presentation.
@emiliaxx166811 ай бұрын
Yes! I'm so surprised to hear he was cleared of all charges when he initially made an assumption how the pilots were flying. Should have asked instead.
@W8RIT111 ай бұрын
Agreed, I'm no expert, but you would have thought that the ATC controller would have had a much closer eye (radar, ADS-B) of the flight path. Hell...he had ONE job to do. Again, I'm not an expert, but from what I've watched on flight tracking sites, my Monday morning QB'ing doesn't seem like it is all that hard. In fact, more mundane and repeated over and over. I can get the gist by listening to radio communications at a major airport vicinity and flight tracking sites, or just receive my own ADS-B...ACARS or HFDL can be a tool as well.
@user-rj4vr2sc2d11 ай бұрын
That's not how it works though. The pilots are the ones in the sky, and they hold the ultimate responsibility in keeping the plane safe. It is their job to override the controller if they are instructed to do something unsafe. If you're driving a car and the GPS tells you to drive off a cliff, and you do it, is the GPS at fault?
@W8RIT111 ай бұрын
@@user-rj4vr2sc2d If they were instructed to do something that they knew was unsafe, they wouldn't "override" the ATC controller, they would raise a dispute over the instruction. No, ATC, I am unable to descend to that altitude due to _______. That's not how it works tho....
@TillyOrifice11 ай бұрын
@@user-rj4vr2sc2d Erm, I think I'd sack my GPS if it did that..
@yerunski11 ай бұрын
In the real audio of the last flight in the video, there is a noticeable silence from both pilots.. they were barely communicating. Shocking.
@AlexandreG7 ай бұрын
They just wanted to go in style, and take a bunch of innocents with them. Cowards
@winterhaydn6 ай бұрын
@@AlexandreG - Augh. There's no evidence of that.
@AlexandreG6 ай бұрын
@winterhaydn my bad for claiming stuff that 10 people will read on the internet without enough evidence, I really should think next time before claiming such things about some suspicious pieces of shit who just crashed a perfectly calm land approach out of the blue with hundreds of people in the plane, thank you
@dudemanismadcool2 ай бұрын
@@AlexandreG Yeah. So many of these air disaster stories are blatant cover-ups I reckon. Lot's of bombs and pilot murder/suicides passed off as malfunctions or pilot error I reckon
@darylhope64110 ай бұрын
The incompetence of the pilots on the second one is literally astounding.
@cattinkerbell494611 ай бұрын
2nd case: You can't convince me that these dudes ever passed any flying test without bribes.
@wokewokerman528011 ай бұрын
...some airlines and in some countries are absolutely scary....
@wilsjane10 ай бұрын
@@wokewokerman5280 ATC in the second video were unbelievable. ww win. watca call it. You n n know, that blowy stuff. Meanwhile on the first video, when the pilots could well have had a missed approach, ATC would send them on a sightseeing tour over the mountains. In both cases, both ATC and the pilots were a bunch of clowns. In the second video, After nearly landing in the water. Airbus automation along with both pilots, could not get them back to 1,000 feet without stalling. What right minded pilot sets the autopilot to descend to zero. Meanwhile, to save interrupting the sterile flight deck, the pilot monitoring had gone off to make some coffee. Sorry. I should not be so light-hearted about situations where people died.
@meadahagain7 ай бұрын
@@wilsjaneand that’s the problem I see in the comment section of a lot of these type of videos. A pilot is required to go under arduous testing and training for a reason. Unless the fault is that of a mechanic or air control personnel, I feel as though you can criticize a bad decision made by the pilot to your heart’s content. I don’t care how much stress they were under before the crash, you are literally trained for this.
@wilsjane7 ай бұрын
@@meadahagainThe problem I often see, is the pilots working like parrots and having little understanding of what the controls are actually doing. The more automation that is added, the worse this is becoming. We have pilots today who would struggle to fly without automation. A friend of ours is the retired chief pilot of a major international airline. Both she and her successors insisted on regular manual flying. In this situation, the automation becomes the backup and if they need to use it, the realise that their skills are lacking. They are the only major airline who have managed 55 years without a crash or incident resulting in injury. Can you name the airline, it's the one that you never see in any of these videos, LOL
@brandmotivo7 ай бұрын
@@wilsjane Qantas?
@ronaryel644511 ай бұрын
First incident in 1981: The pilots were flying a route that was new to them. They obviously did not study terrain charts before departing, and had no clue they were flying toward a mountain. This is inexcusable. They entered a holding pattern at the wrong speed, which means their execution of that holding pattern was incorrect and led them toward the mountain. Again, inexcusable. It was their responsibility to understand the correct speed required of that pattern. If the air traffic controller had access to radar that could tell him where the airliner was, he could have told the pilots in plenty of time that they were in the wrong place. Instead, both he and the pilots made all kinds of assumptions. Had the pilots told him "We have never been here before," maybe he could have been more helpful. The investigation cleared the controllers, but I think their asking the pilots for the airliner's position would have prevented the crash. Second incident (Yemen): Did this flight crew learn how to fly an airplane? Suppose they had shut off all the automatic functions. Could the Captain have manually flown the plane to a safe landing? One girl won the lottery - she lived to tell about it. It's sad that every other passenger and the flight attendants had to die for this crew's gross stupidity.
@thebeasters11 ай бұрын
The controllers should of recognized by the questions, the altitude and speed and what *they were actually supposed to do" that something didn't make sense. Both made mistakes but the altitude alone was a huge sign
@cs77smith6710 ай бұрын
@user-tz1zo6nu3nwhere did you hear about her full story? Link 🖇️
@micheleh526910 ай бұрын
How was speed the problem in the first crash? It was altitude. They hit the mountain. They didn't stall
@ronaryel644510 ай бұрын
@@micheleh5269 The incorrect speed was the cause of an incorrect turn radius, which directly led to hitting the mountain. Lower speed (still above stall) = ability to turn tighter. Higher speed means a wider turn. Simply put, the aircraft ended up in the wrong place because of that.
@fayelitzinger98245 ай бұрын
@user-tz1zo6nu3n when I was a kid I used to think that if I jumped on an airplane it would crash. like I was 100% convinced if anyone jumped we would immediately go down.
@radudeATL11 ай бұрын
I don’t even understand how that last flight went so wrong. Baffling incompetence.
@Keys87910 ай бұрын
I am so thankful, as a pilot, for modern avionics and navigation equipment. Things like this are almost entirely a 'thing of the past' with the access to so much information.
@CBU-j2v11 ай бұрын
That level of incompetence is astounding.
@aaaaaaaa-rn5kl10 ай бұрын
I was so sure that the second one wouldn't have any survivors. The fact that she survived is a miracle.
@matthewdavis440610 ай бұрын
Unbelievable, absolutely unbelievable
@Memoriesinseconds10 ай бұрын
And she says there was a bomb in the plane
@tomoakhill882511 ай бұрын
What I like most about this channel, and why a support it, is the textual commentary. The experiments with voice narration fail with me. But the wonderful, detailed, well written, text is an example of the best in film making.
@krashd11 ай бұрын
That last sentence makes me think you are a bot, but then a bot would not know about his voice experiments. That last sentence could only have been written by a bot though, or someone who has never seen written English before in their lives...
@user-bv6gs4qw9k11 ай бұрын
Great production quality, especially since you seem to be a one man crew? I don't know how it works but since you don't voice-over and seem to do the editing yourself, learning of the technicalities of each incident, recreating it in the sim and digesting the info and presenting it to a laymen audience, the effort seems immense.
@ashleypg170811 ай бұрын
I've been watching TFC for years-- it really is an amazing channel.
@vampiresforesl10 ай бұрын
The text is sometimes taken from Wikipedia on this channel.
@Highland_Moo8 ай бұрын
All the info on these incidents is available on Wikipedia - most of what he has displayed on screen has been copied and pasted directly from Wiki. Even the very start of each upload has the exact opening of Mayday/Air Crash Investigation tv show…..the part about recreation made from testimonies of those involved and the crash reports etc. This channel recreates the events using flight simulation software and he does that well, but the info that goes up on screen is copied. Still, it’s a good channel and involves a lot of work. Makes it easy to imagine what happened rather than just reading a hard copy of the investigation report.
@Llanovanya8511 ай бұрын
Having watched about 300 accident case studies like these until now, I can positively conclude that 95% of all disasters could've been avoided if the pilot would be forced to look at his friggin artificial horizon at least once in a while... All these elaborate explanations, explaining somatographic illusions blah blah blah are just describing the symptoms, not the cause. The cause is that pilots over the last 50 years somehow fail to check the single most crucial instrument right in front of their faces.
@ClearedAsFiled11 ай бұрын
You are soooooo right...!!
@szwolinski458711 ай бұрын
The aviation industry as a whole, instructor pilots, and instrument qualified pilots all know and acknowledge what you are saying. However, until you have experienced 'vertigo' while in the 'goo' at low altitude doing 150 knots, you have no idea how difficult it is to overcome millions of years of evolution developed 'balance.' Needless to say there are hundreds or thousands of cases where the pilots did overcome this difficulty by using their instruments. We only read or hear about the ones that didn't.
@aeomaster3211 ай бұрын
The essence of instrument flying is to learn NOT to rely on your feelings but on the instruments. Always remember the basics; knowing the attitude (artificial horizon attitude indicator) and power at all times. A level attitude and cruise thrust are where you reset to when confusion reigns.
@esecallum11 ай бұрын
It is hidden out of sight. just like airspeed and height. cockpit designs are terrible nowadays with so much crap obscuring vital indicators
@pikestance421911 ай бұрын
I har what you are saying, but they are examples of instrument failures, and the pilot used his instruments to their deaths.
@johnwinkler53619 ай бұрын
What is not said in the video is that the circling approach on runway 20 in Moroni is particularly challenging. There is actually a hill (not shown here) near the 20 final. You can’t just extend even a bit the downwind leg, you have to be fairly close and the final is necessarily short. You are stabilized on final only at around 300 ft. There are lights which must be operating at night to provide some guidance. This is way over the level of competency of those pilots, who couldn’t even control even a basic flight path at night, like making a turn without descending, according to this video.
@lizardfirefighter1104 ай бұрын
Always, when you make a turn always keep an eye on the altimeter. Basic shit😳
@christina5kids16grands10 ай бұрын
I've looked everywhere to find Bahai Bakari's book "Moi Bahia, la Miraculée" in english, but I don't see any translated editions. If anyone knows how I can get my hands on that book in english, please lmk. What an incredible story - 12 years old, stayed in the water with a broken collarbone and pelvis for 13 hours overnight until she was finally rescued! Incredible story of a young lady with a strong will to survive...even knowing her mother was no longer alive. This is one hell of a story.
@DeepestQuotesAnd9 ай бұрын
Get it in digital version in French then copy paste each paragraph in a translator online. ✌️
@machone167211 ай бұрын
The second crew totally lacked situation awareness and seemed to have little understanding of proper aircraft control/flight dynamics. Never should have been in a cockpit.
@kevinmalone321011 ай бұрын
Yep, and because they were allowed to become pilot's, they killed all those passengers and the flight crew.
@ronjones-697711 ай бұрын
Just like the TNFlygirl that crashed recently. If you don't understand the basic mechanics of HOW an airplane is able to fly, you're gonna do something stupid eventually.
@High-Alpha11 ай бұрын
One glaring thing I noticed about the second case was that there was no communication between the pilots. I never heard a single word spoken on the CVR. Only aural warnings. What were they doing up there?
@deepthinker99911 ай бұрын
We are all asking the same question.
@aeomaster3211 ай бұрын
Yes, the co pilot would have quietly watched them fly into the sea as the altimeter reduced to zero.
@eshelly420511 ай бұрын
In the 80s we had a horrific approach into Preswick Scotland aboard a British midland aircraft. Looking out the side window you couldn’t see the wingtip. The turbulence was so severe that the over head bins opened up. I was a young Marine and I was with a Corporal from our unit. At first we were laughing but then our wing tip dipped and kept dipping. I looked over at the flight attendant and she was petrified. The plane leveled out and everyone was screaming. I honestly thought I was going to die. The turbulence was even worse and the engines were screaming. I looked out of the window and saw green but no runway. We slammed into the runway and the grass. We shuddered went airborne and slammed back down. Slid sideways and then straightened out. As we taxied to the gate the pilot said in his Scottish accent. “Thank you for flying British Midland airlines. We hope you enjoy your time in Preswick or other Scottish adventures” As I was leaving the plane I asked the flight attendant for her number, what is the worst that could happen after that. We dated for a year after that…
@Jimbo-qd5zz10 ай бұрын
good work
@eshelly420510 ай бұрын
@@Jimbo-qd5zz ?
@jameshardy627710 ай бұрын
Hoofing dit Royal.
@eshelly420510 ай бұрын
@@jameshardy6277 WTF are you saying?
@jameshardy627710 ай бұрын
If you don't know what 'hoofing dit Royal' means then no way were you in the Corps. @@eshelly4205
@GARYBRUNDAGEMUSIC10 ай бұрын
There was a young 12 year old girl who survived the second crash- the sole survivor. Her name is Bahia Bakari and she released a memoir in 2010 including her experience. She was approached by Steven Spielberg to make a movie out of what happened, but she reportedly declined him.
@George-xb5ey10 ай бұрын
Spielberg is on the Epstein list ofcourse he approached a 12 year old girl
@thebeasters11 ай бұрын
Cleared of all charges is ridiculous
@aeomaster3211 ай бұрын
Well presented video concentrating on the essentials needed to see what occurred. Because visual circling approaches require manual memory muscle flying skills, automation can't be used to help these poorly trained pilots. I have done many 600 foot circling night approaches in the mountains, and made sure that one set of eyes remained in the cockpit to monitor speed and altitude. A sad and unnecessary a tragedy.
@danesen11 ай бұрын
Very good animations and visual effects. Thank you for highlighting this disaster for all to understand.
@jaguar324811 ай бұрын
The second one is sadly not the first time an airliner has crashed because of the crews inability to fly a visual circuit in the dark. Gulf Air lost an A320 in 2000 after a go around ended up with a botched circuit and a crash on finals. Worse still Gulf Air did there level best to blame the aircraft and not the crew even after the CVR was released and proved the crew ignored multiple "pull up" calls, along with being all over the place when it came to height, speed, and headings.
@duanebidoux608711 ай бұрын
As always, awesome production values. The second clip, however, left me wanting a LOT MORE from the video. No history on pilots, and a clearer (if any) understanding of the investigation and the parties involved was very much missed. If that was "real audio" I'm thinking to myself that I have not heard a single word spoken between the pilots the entire time under a barage of circumstances that should have demanded constant verbal communications between the two. I found myself thinking after a bit "are these guys high, or what?" I'm going to have to go find other stuff on this accident. Your videos are great generally--more info on the second accident would have been great.
@flybywire586611 ай бұрын
In the second clip, ATC sounded drunk, or at least had serious difficulties articulating. I´m not sure the pilots were ok, either. Very strange. As you wrote, more information would be nice. Rather one event per video than two abbreviated ones.
@duanebidoux608711 ай бұрын
Well, I remember the ATC guy was really slow but he seemed clear. But, it was just one thing after another with those guys. I gotta find out more@@flybywire5866
@dieheiligenhallen518411 ай бұрын
I can recommend Mentour Pilot for great detailed insight in such kind of accidents.....Flight Channel is awesome too...
@mo1test11 ай бұрын
@@flybywire5866 maybe some low oxygen level? they were low so should not be an issue but they seem intoxicated
@Jump-2-the-moon11 ай бұрын
Completely agreed!
@british.scorpion11 ай бұрын
Amazing the youngster, Bahia, survived after clinging to wreckage for thirteen hours. God blessed her.
@RoamingHeathen10 ай бұрын
So God chose to bless her and let everyone else die?
@british.scorpion10 ай бұрын
@@RoamingHeathen Yes, obviously.
@jamespenny948210 ай бұрын
@@RoamingHeathen Proud to be a heathen, right? Bruh, you need to humble yourself, creation didn't create itself! Read the Bible for yourself, I guarantee it will surprise you.
@flyguyry110 ай бұрын
@@jamespenny9482 😂😂😂 telling other ppl to humble themselves while ar same time belittling them. Classic christianity. If "creation" needs a creator, that means the creator needs a creator too. Also by letting all those ppl die for no reason, and keeping her alive to live with trauma, is no present. Suffering is many times worse than death.
@LifebyDesign9 ай бұрын
@@jamespenny9482clearly you haven't read the Bible or the insurmountable number of contradictions and errors would surprise you.
@pachhhanel11 ай бұрын
If you could do the 1988 YAK-40 crash in Bulgaria, because of being pressured by the communist leader Todor Zhivkov back then, who was in a rush, the plane (YAK-40) took off earlier and crashed, then his Tu-154 plane was taxiying over its debris and had its uneventful flight.Sofia-Varna flight 2nd of August 1988. All Bulgarian plane crashes fall into mystery, we do not have a single one uncovered. So would really appreciate a video about if not this one, any other Bulgarian related.
@rnsteve226511 ай бұрын
Absolutely terrifying.
@mortenrahm11 ай бұрын
poor girl
@jaimhaas517011 ай бұрын
Even worse if you were on board.
@rnsteve226511 ай бұрын
@SteviPantyhose-mt5lm Do you like pantyhose?
@sbj979 ай бұрын
@@jaimhaas5170No shit
@naknaksdadn57211 ай бұрын
WTH, the captain had no clue as to the elevation of the terrain around him and the controller had no idea where the aircraft was and sent it straight into the mountains!!! My gosh, nobody knew what the hell was going on!
@danielkokal881911 ай бұрын
they waited 9 sec while the plane was screaming Terrain !.... I'd be on that yoke and throttle in a heartbeat regardless of anything else. you can get your bearings later.
@pomerau11 ай бұрын
@@danielkokal8819 His brain was trying to process what he was not expecting to see. Pilot instinct left him and he could only react after he could work out why. My guess, is all; but shouldn't training throw these instant curve ball at pilots?
@justinschexnayder84859 ай бұрын
3-5% of people in every occupation are going to be terrible at their job
@MegaSunspark11 ай бұрын
Complacency and blind routine-following on the part of the controller here killed those people in the first crash.
@thestimp111 ай бұрын
how hard is it to monitor your 2 basic instruments, speed and altitude. "all this equipment to monitor" speed and altitude tells you 80% of what you are doing.
@krashd11 ай бұрын
You mean the speed and altitude instruments that were registering -1000ft and -1000kph at times?
@dx145011 ай бұрын
Setting the autopilot altitude to 0 is never a good idea unless you want to crash...
@Mach7RadioIntercepts11 ай бұрын
Who TF taught that second crew how to fly an airplaane?? Damn! Or how to fly a circling approach?? Damn!
@majbach196811 ай бұрын
I enjoy your videos. I had to 'rewind' the second incident a few times b/c what I was seeing and what I was reading were two different things. If the overhead view of the approach been aligned with magnetic north or at least a "N" symbol on the map, it would have been easier to follow.
@georgemalley641411 ай бұрын
Why do pilots ignore warnings? The system is yelling Pull Up Pull Up Terrain Terrain yet the pilot continues flying as if it's the turn signal of a car in North Carolina that never turns off.
@knrdvmmlbkkn10 ай бұрын
05:57 06:09 Thanks for the big white arrow. I couldn't possibly have noticed the plane without it.
@terrybrennan497811 ай бұрын
Nice job as usual. 👍👍 Crazy how inept these pilots were in both cases.
@thegunnylingus47518 ай бұрын
Reports like this have cause me to stop flying no joke
@hachimaru29511 ай бұрын
second one feels like ,High work load and flying on instruments to a third world airport by a crew quickly out if their depth
@flyguyry110 ай бұрын
3rd world airport?? Just bc they have an accent? Pilots were the idiots
@hachimaru29510 ай бұрын
@@flyguyry1 only you mentioned their accents
@davidmccann981111 ай бұрын
I've watched this three times I still have no idea what this Yemenia crew were doing. Even when the aircraft was climbing vertically like a rocket and was about to stall, the PF still didn't think he should lower the nose incase he hit the sea. What the hell?
@Jamenator111 ай бұрын
In real life, the plane was at most 30 degrees up, nowhere near vertical and much of the time it was only a little steeper than a typical climb attitude. This youtuber is notorious for getting the animations completely wrong in their videos. When the stall warning first sounded the plane was less than 20 degrees nose up, a completely normal attitude for that plane in a low level climb. The crew were focused on the lack of roll control, that's why they didn't recognise the nose was higher than it should have been
@jackwebb375711 ай бұрын
My favourite channel on KZbin
@nenblom9 ай бұрын
These accidents show how incredibly important good, clear communication between the two pilots and the pilots and ATC is. No radar? RIP ❤❤
@adotintheshark484811 ай бұрын
In the first crash, why have that holding pattern over land at all? They could've done the same thing over water and then line up their approach.
@kevinmalone321011 ай бұрын
It's because if there are other aircraft about to land ahead of them, so they have to fly into a holding pattern. If there's no aircraft in the pattern, then ATC could've told them to fly the shortest route. ATC in this case were incompetent, as were the pilots.
@adotintheshark484811 ай бұрын
but it wasn't a busy airport, and all that area they have over water... @@kevinmalone3210
@krashd11 ай бұрын
Pause at 3:54 To get from the VOR to an over water holding pattern a plane would have to fly directly through the approach path for the airport, much safer to keep aircraft on the "same side of the road" as the VOR rather than sending them through what is likely a busy corridor in the summer holiday season.
@creolespanish344 ай бұрын
They actually changed it after this accident, now it's drawn over the sea. They also installed a radar, which the airport didn't have at that point, and banned alternative words to 'landing' in communications when the intention is initiating landing procedures
@jenniferayers53549 ай бұрын
60% of the air crashes I see on ALL of these channels are caused by the planes' onboard computers. The computers are programmed with instruction sets and algorithms based on past experiences so in NEW situations they are not informed and the pilots are left to battle with not only conflicting data but the AIs themselves. How many times do you see a pilot trying to descend but the computer either tells them to ascend or in many cases, fly-by-wire, fights with the pilot's inputs to the craft and what needs to be done in the given circumstance? As a for-instance in this video look at 16:25. Auto-pilot had already been disengaged by the pilots so that the pilots could maneuver the craft in a way they felt could resolve the situation but the AFP took control and drove them all to their deaths. In my humble opinion the pilots actually made the right choices based on their own flying capabilities and immediate plan to resolve the issue but an onboard computer algorithm took over and disrupted their plan throwing them into the catastrophic event chain that followed. At 17:01 the stick shaker then activates. What is the force of the stick shaker to responsiveness of a forward push response for downward action? Does this intense jarring not further rattle the already stressed individuals attempting to bring a craft under control? 17:22: proof that the computer put the aircraft into roll based on its algorithmic approach and ability to control the aircraft when it shouldn't have. 17:41: "Real Audio" is used from the cockpit and NO ONE is saying a word. This is because the pilots have put their full trust in the systems they were told were designed to NOT let something like this happen so they are in utter disbelief that it is actually happening. No one screams, no one shouts out to the other to make a move on their end to help (co-pilot, flight engineer). In a split second they all realize they have been overtaken by the fact that they are not actually in charge of the aircraft itself and are actually powerless to stop it. The verbiage used by investigatory agencies and parroted in these presentations typically lays blame on the pilots but they did not in fact have full control over the aircraft and the sequence of events that followed or ultimately led up to the demise. This is now becoming common with the computer-aided cars and trucks on the road. Folks, we are not at a place in time where a true AI exists so that you can just kick your feet back and let the computer do the work while you collect a paycheck or get from point A to B. Plus, doesn't it take the fun out of life anyway to let some coded pile of junk do your job and joy for you? What's next, the computer eats, sleeps, talks and has sex for you too? Wait... Another point pre-comments. I know everyone likes to blame human error in these instances but like I already stated, who programs the AIs? A system is only as intelligent as its programmers so in ALL circumstances human error IS the culprit. It is human error to go cheap on air traffic controllers working a given area at a given time. It is human error for an air traffic controller to be overworked and not push back. It is human error that goes into programming AIs while not allowing for pilot redress at crucial moments. It is human error to go cheap on sensors on the aircraft so that they become compromised often so that the onboard AI cannot calculate properly, it is human error to trust the airline industry AT ALL anymore based on their obvious lack of concern over the safety of people over more profits than anyone should make in a lifetime and you can't take it with you. One final note. My husband and I have developed a new type of compute architecture that resolves many if not all of these problems and it also applies across the board to any and all other compute-related industries right down to the consumer level but nobody wants to be involved or see it come to fruition. This tells us that they don't want the solution, only the problems. That says to us unequivocally that these incidences are not so much accidents as they are by design. That means they are human sacrifices used to continue a control structure by chaos. Ordo ab chao. Cheers!
@kevinmalone321011 ай бұрын
Where did the crew of the 2nd airliner get their pilot's liscense?
@sarahalbers555511 ай бұрын
They probably bought them.
@sbj979 ай бұрын
@@sarahalbers5555😂
@darkfox207611 ай бұрын
Great video as always. Really enjoyed this one
@JSFGuy11 ай бұрын
It just started, you haven't even watched it yet how is it great? Maybe you should watch it first.
@sbj979 ай бұрын
@@JSFGuyLegend has it that he still hasn't watched the video yet
@JohnnywhamoКүн бұрын
That poor little girl, oh man! She not only had to deal with the shock of the crash itself, but considering her age I would think she was probably travelling with family that is not only not there with her but will never be with her again …..THEN….she then spent the next 13 hours alone in the ocean holding on to a mear scrap of something. That is heartbreaking 😢
@TheJoe9716 ай бұрын
I swear even if it's only animation, watching the plane plummets to the sea still creeps tf out of me. The girl who survived... I can only imagine how it felt to be a 100 tons tube free falling.
@SRPM-yk9xw11 ай бұрын
It seems rather daft that 0ft is a legitimate option on Altitude Select.
@jeSuperfly11 ай бұрын
Kinda like the burn it to heck setting on toasters
@skullsaintdead11 ай бұрын
At least give them an aural warning/red light illumination or something, it's a dial too so I could imagine you setting a low alt then moving your hand away and accidentally lowering it further. Odd, possibly dangerous...
@jsmirnoff7710 ай бұрын
It should have been set to go-around altitude for that runway.
@jsmirnoff7710 ай бұрын
But to answer your question directly, there are airports which are situated below sea level, so even a negative value is a valid altitude.
@AnahiRumak11 ай бұрын
What happened to the single story, unique, aircrash videos?
@teddyjackson190211 ай бұрын
Imagine seeing that jet flying a hundred feet above the surface of the sea with its landing gear out.
@sbj979 ай бұрын
I would've been like wtf
@wisdaniel6 ай бұрын
I I were in a boat I'd a had a heart attack.
@martinkirugi25411 ай бұрын
The second plane wasn't ready to crash but the pilots forced it to. Going down with innocent lives
@chacmool258111 ай бұрын
I don't understand the pilots on that second flight. It is obvious in several instances that things are amiss. Why not abort the landing, climb and reassess?
@2puffs77011 ай бұрын
I swear to pieces, if I am a pilot and I hear the words "PULL UP", I would probably OVER REACT to the command! Yesssirree, that command given for a reason!!!!🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔
@deepthinker99911 ай бұрын
@@R_love45 If you are already too low there is not much chance of exiting a stall.
@jsmirnoff7710 ай бұрын
And that’s one thing you should NOT do - overreact. That’s what gets you into a stall.
@sbj979 ай бұрын
Well thank fuck you're not a pilot 😅
@peterdevreter9 ай бұрын
That poor airbus in the second crash did everything it could to compensate for the terrible actions of the pilots. My god.
@helenphillips42049 ай бұрын
I remember seeing pictures of the wreckage of this inex Adria plane on the side of a mountain. Apparently,the bits were left there for years,and there was a clean up in 2008,with a memorial plaque being placed where the wing impacted the ground,(I think). The pictures were very sad to look at xx
@someone3.200711 ай бұрын
Bad situational awareness. It seemed like the pilots weren't even scared or paying attention when stalling
@maxtornogood11 ай бұрын
I'm surprised anyone survived an airplane nosediving into water!
@krashd11 ай бұрын
At such a low altitude and speed it likely didn't hit the water as hard as an aircraft nosediving from many thousands of feet.
@Jamenator111 ай бұрын
In the actual crash, it never nosedived, it impacted the water in a nose up attitude with low speed. The animation is grossly incorrect.
@WWPlaysHoldem11 ай бұрын
Visual approaches are only used if the pilot flying can visually see the runway. If he loses sight of it the approach should be abandoned and a missed approach initiated!
@elijahsackville-glucksburg11 ай бұрын
I'm not an aviation expert and I watch these videos for leisure in addition to educating myself on the complexity of the aviation industry (I also get help from a lot of the people in the comments section who works and used to work in the aviation industry) but in the first video, I don't think the blame should be placed on the pilots ENTIRELY because firtsly, the ATC officer started the chain of events leading to the disaster, did he not? Well, the crew did commit grave mistakes on their part but the ATC officer did worse I think and they committed the FIRST mistake here and the fact that they were cleared of all charges is beyond me. If I'm mistaken or missing something here, somebody explain it to me, thank you.
@bignades111 ай бұрын
If you’ve looked at a lot of accidents, you’ve probably noticed in almost all cases, “blame” is not a good word to use, as accidents are usually a chain of mistakes(though for the second crash in the video is a rare case of pure pilot fuckup). In every day flying, people make mistakes all the time, and nothing happens. Rarely do several mistakes line up so perfectly to cause a crash. You could argue if any of those mistakes didn’t happen, crash wouldn’t have happened. You can’t necessarily blame the first mistake, especially if it wasn’t a severe one. The real question is, how can procedures/systems/training be changed to make this chain of events close impossible. In some rare cases, it’s also ok to declare something an unpreventable freak accident. World is chaotic and crazy shit happens for no reason all the time
@jamespenny948210 ай бұрын
Thank you for not using ALL CAPS in the text. It's much easier to read lowercase!
@nicoledrury933711 ай бұрын
The first one seems very similar to TWA 514 in 1974. Instructed to descend too low, bad weather and poor visibility. They also couldn't see the mountain
@RickShortt5 ай бұрын
It's like they weren't paying attention to the flight instruments. They became confused and stopped following their basic training.
@Jim-nt7xy11 ай бұрын
Always be wary of what airline you select to fly.
@amirahal-wehbi10 ай бұрын
I wish it were so simple...even the best airlines have accident records unfortunately...
@sbj979 ай бұрын
@@amirahal-wehbiFacts. You can never truly pick your poison
@danieldenis67611 ай бұрын
The approach described at 02:00 is for runway 03 and not for runway 21....
@philippeattackman76311 ай бұрын
" circle to Land " is a killer 😢😢
@jsmirnoff7710 ай бұрын
Only if you fail to aviate.
@jrzygurl8 ай бұрын
That's a long time with that plane going nose up and then down.. could you imagine the passengers.. oh my God😮
@travelwithtony576711 ай бұрын
So they didn’t have radar installed to follow the flight path and altitude of the inbound aircraft? How is it possible they didn’t detect it?
@ElephantRage5 ай бұрын
Some people should stick to handling camels and leave airplanes to those who can actually fly them.
@DarkAngel-dc3te11 ай бұрын
Great examples of human factors. There was nothing wrong with their aircraft or equipment
@brianlutz781310 ай бұрын
I simply cannot wrap my head around how the young girl survived with just bruises and a broken collarbone. It's like she magically teleported from the jet moments before impact and then reappeared a few minutes later clinging to wreckage in the open ocean. Only thing I can think of is that the plane wasn't going very fast when it hit the ocean.
@SRussell-se8if11 ай бұрын
In the first accident, does air traffic control not have access to radar and actually see planes? I always thought that was the case instead of strictly relying on verbal communication for determining location and headings.
@13rdp11 ай бұрын
There was no radar in AJo in those years.
@gama112311 ай бұрын
In memory of no one...
@deepthinker99911 ай бұрын
That was a very unfortunate omission, not even the (2) seconds that we normally get.
@kimmccabe142211 ай бұрын
I think the plane worked harder to save lives than the pilots AND air controller! Always sad. Poor passengers 🙏
@jackodinsen60411 ай бұрын
And this is why so many operators prohibit circling to land approaches. Of course, their actions show a failure in training and competence.
@barbied.593211 ай бұрын
That was intense ! Thanx for sharing !
@GeorgeAusters11 ай бұрын
I don't understand why the pilots in the 2nd one were flying 300ft above the sea with gear down
@Kimian11111 ай бұрын
So, if it weren't the first time using AJO VOR, the flight crew would not follow procedures with as much precision as possible????
@tomislavmiletic_11 ай бұрын
I remember that Ajaccio crash, it was a kinda two day trip if I remember correctly. And tickets where cheap, so the trip was sold out, the interest was that high, so much so, that officials did not know who actually boarded the plane, so for a next couple of days they played the list of all people who showed the interest in the trip on the television...
@richardknapp57011 ай бұрын
Wow! Amazing how poor situation awareness was in both. Thank you for sharing.
@blitzcraig2611 ай бұрын
Great reproduction as always. I wonder though how the flight lost altitude every time it turned, first -2000 and then -1000 Ft.PM. Could it be due to the tail wind?
@majbach196811 ай бұрын
Because the pilots were flying manually and not paying attention to the altimeter. I cannot comprehend how anyone can fly an a/c and not look at the altimeter and ASI constantly.
@hockeyguy82011 ай бұрын
Wind direction does NOT affect an airplane aerodynamically while it is flying thousands of feet high. Wind direction is relative to the ground so it affects groundspeed, never airspeed (except for random turbulence and wind shear which were not in play here).
@kevinmalone321011 ай бұрын
They weren't monitoring their airspeed. They simply failed to fly the aircraft properly.
@majbach196811 ай бұрын
@@kevinmalone3210 Actually, they were monitoring their airspeed (likely) when they sank. Looking at the simulation and CVR, their airspeed remained constant and there never were any alarms. Planes descend when they are not achieving enough thrust, not when their airspeed gets too low.
@carolinehoward18011 ай бұрын
Totally harrowing 😩
@johnfalkenstine83773 ай бұрын
insufficient time in the simulator. I worked for an airline that kept pilots in the simulator for extended periods of time, like torture. But they were all good pilots, pulled a 747 out of an inverted roll after an autopilot defect.
@tokyworld7 ай бұрын
the 2nd one was a pain to watch. such an avoidable crash, even amateur pilots on Flight Simulator could've avoided that.
@AlbanianMan8 ай бұрын
The Yemeni one was like me trying land that damn airplane playing Pilotwings for Super Nintendo.
@benc110311 ай бұрын
Another nice video. That's why I don't fly on Third World airlines. I have first hand experience training their Air Force pilots in my younger days in the USAF. Their airline pilots are worse. "Camels to jets" doesn't work. Yes, many never drove cars or dealt with anything mechanical. They got their position because daddy was a high ranking politician. That's how it works "over there". Yes, they do have some very good pilots. But they also have lots of bad ones that don't get cut from the program. BC 26,000 hrs in 14 jets from 707's to 777's
@flyguyry110 ай бұрын
Nice bigotry on the camel comment
@jakubjasiek30611 ай бұрын
Man its shoking to see that
@apexeverything10111 ай бұрын
This is like my first time flying a 737 in MSFS and I have no idea what I'm doing.
@chrisnewson156010 ай бұрын
Why does the alpha floor protection not put the plane in a stable climb configuration? If it occurs it is likely the pilots are already overloaded and behind the plane. Expecting a nose down input soon after a GPWS or pull up alarm is counterintuitive at the best of times - let alone when you cannot work out what is happening.
@OrangPasien9 ай бұрын
Their problem was poor training and lack of experience. Plenty of pilots fly these same airplanes everyday in worse situations than this and do so with skill and competence. Had the the airplane been built to assume a stable climb in all circumstances (i.e. fly itself) these two might have been able to handle it. But then they really wouldn’t be needed, would they?
@joonsmelodie992711 ай бұрын
Re 2nd 🤡 Landing: I have zero experience/knowledge of piloting anything but an automobile so am I missing something when I ask how in the world does a crew member 'accidentally' input "0" for an altitude??? I believe there was an attempt at explanation but I didn't understand. ....otherwise I might be too frightened to ever fly again after seeing this lol.
@RatPfink6611 ай бұрын
"mishandling"...meaning somehow he twisted the dial all the way to zero without realizing it
@deepthinker99911 ай бұрын
You should be safe on domestic main line carriers. Otherwise you are taking a risk. The more obscure the air carrier and route, the greater the risk. Private carriers are worse yet.
@joonsmelodie992711 ай бұрын
@@deepthinker999 does that include the discount airline like Spirit and Frontier?
@joonsmelodie992711 ай бұрын
@@RatPfink66 exactly, that's what I'm asking, how does that happen? They're supposed to be professionals.
@deepthinker99911 ай бұрын
@@joonsmelodie9927 No - Spirit was caught applying duct tape (or something similar) to a wing. Discount means that corners are being cut to remain profitable. That is pretty much an axiom in business. The money that you save is not worth the risk in my opinion.
@amyjohnston725011 ай бұрын
Does anyone know the name of the musical piece that starts at 7:12 minutes? It’s in a lot of TFC’s videos, but I can never find the name of it. Thanks to anyone who can help, and thanks to TFC for another great video!
@littlehalestorm11 ай бұрын
I wish I did. I like it too. :)
@davidneraas75011 ай бұрын
In Corsica accident the pilots coud have made a right turn away from the mountains.
@jean-jacquesdelmar698711 ай бұрын
Nice job as usual !
@BtcSimmer11 ай бұрын
Love your videos thank you soo much!
@ReviewsChannel-e4r9 ай бұрын
Automated warnings to check correct holding pattern speeds and other approach warnings should be in ALL aircraft!