It is a lack of understanding of Automation and how it is supposed to behave in abnormal situations that has caused those recent accidents.fixedpitch wrote:Interesting point. Is there a "culture of automation" in today's airline cockpits? I know that the Air France incident generated a lot of discussion over this - here's a Vanity Fair article that sums it up. http://www.vanityfair.com/news/business ... -447-crashI worry that a "culture" of automation dependence creeps in, and some pilots become very accustomed to watching automation do the job for them, and one day it doesn't. On that day, surprise! Pilot, you gotta fly it right now! (and it's not lined up, on the glidepath).
Not the lack of flying skill.
let me put it another way.
A thorough knowledge of Automation would have prevented those accidents, no matter the flying skill.
I am very sad to say that but that's what is happening.










