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View Full Version : Crash of Comair 5191 - Part 2



Midnight Mike
2006-08-30, 02:09 PM
MODERATOR NOTE: This post was split from other thread to start anew.

Getting us back on topic to the thread title...

Pilots are Pilots responsible to know where they are going and not depend on the controller to watch where they are going.

If they need extra help, they need to ask and inform the controller that they are unfamiliar with the airport

At times, a Controller may need to walk on the Cat Walk, but, from the inside of the Tower, a Controller may not be able to see every part of the airport.

NOW, when the report from the NTSB is released, more than likely, it will say Pilot Error, with reasons, & I am sure that they will have other people share responsibility.

PhilDernerJr
2006-08-30, 02:49 PM
The news isn't explaining this enough to my liking....can anyone tell me exactly what taxiway construction occured and how/if it really affected anything in regards to the crash?

I also heard that the mistaken runway has a big hump in the middle, so you can't see the other end.

Midnight Mike
2006-08-30, 03:21 PM
Phil

Did you see this photo?

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v726/MidnightMike/Airport.gif

PhilDernerJr
2006-08-30, 03:32 PM
I've seen diagrams, but where exactly was the construction? In the colored areas? Did that affect their taxiiing at all?

pgengler
2006-08-30, 03:51 PM
The image used by the Wikipedia article (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:KLEX_USGS_Comair_Paths.jpg) may be more helpful; red is actual path, blue is intended path, black X marks taxiway out of service.

Nonstop2AUH
2006-08-30, 04:21 PM
NY Times today reports that this crew boarded and started to preflight the wrong aircraft before ramp workers pointed out the mistake.

For those of you who have been there, is this an easy error to make, or does it imply a potential level of inattention (at best) or impairment (at worst)?

hiss srq
2006-08-30, 04:30 PM
If there was that much of a question as to the location of the aircraft they could have always requested progressive taxi. It is understandable confusion but that is why you check your heading upon line up before you stand em up. Aloto fthese smaller airports play with staffing how about the collision a few years ago at SRQ I lost agood freind in that one because the controllers decided to make a swap in the cab mid rush with several in the pattern etc etc.. and at that time we had our on approach control as well. Big boo boo there ATC has a part in it but we as pilots are the ones who are the final barrier when it comes to safety. The F/O BTW is not looking like he is going to make it the coma is bad from what someone told me.


On another note the CRJ probably never even made it off the ground and if it did barely because it takes about 5 grand from what i understand with a near full load to get up and off in the 100/200 as one of my good freinds flys them for air wisconsin and was explaining it as well as my observing two of them going off yesterday at SRQ. none made it off before the intersection for 14 and 4/22 which is about halfway or 4500 feet if I recall correctly.

mirrodie
2006-08-30, 05:00 PM
I apologize as I have not heard much about this crash.

One question though. Wouldn't a pilot know, by looking, that the runway was too short? Or at least if it did not seem right?

moose135
2006-08-30, 05:07 PM
I apologize as I have not heard much about this crash.

One question though. Wouldn't a pilot know, by looking, that the runway was too short? Or at least if it did not seem right?

We'll ignore the fact that you came late to the party and just be greatful you showed up at all :D

Given the circumstances, they probably couldn't tell the runway length. It was still dark, and apparently (as per the NOTAM) was unlit, so they really had no way of knowing how far into the darkness the runway extended. Also, I've seen reports that there is a "hump" mid-way down it's length, so even in daylight you can't really see the departure end when lined up for takeoff.

NIKV69
2006-08-30, 10:38 PM
I am sorry but this is pilot error and nothing more. The staffing of the tower means nothing. You are supposed to have a chart of the airport and now what runway is what. Lights and all this other stuff is a smokescreen.

Derf
2006-08-30, 11:24 PM
I am sorry but this is pilot error and nothing more. The staffing of the tower means nothing. You are supposed to have a chart of the airport and now what runway is what. Lights and all this other stuff is a smokescreen.

I concur

hiss srq
2006-08-31, 01:09 AM
I am sorry but this is pilot error and nothing more. The staffing of the tower means nothing. You are supposed to have a chart of the airport and now what runway is what. Lights and all this other stuff is a smokescreen. Though for the majority of the issue the crew is responsable for the final level of safety of operation there is still a level of responsability on the man in the cab. Otherwise why in the heck do we have ATC? They are supposed to assist us guide us and advise us on things like this. The crew never asked for a progressive taxi from ATC as far as I know and it is understandable, they thought they had it figured out but it still falls on the controller to some extent whether it be 10% 15% 20% or 100% ATC in an incident like this one has a level of responsibility. And for lights etc......... They mean something, perhaps they would have made it had those lights been on. It would have given a much better judgement of length even if they were already over the hump they might have had the time to stomp on the brakes.

K9DEP
2006-08-31, 10:16 AM
I am sorry but this is pilot error and nothing more. The staffing of the tower means nothing. You are supposed to have a chart of the airport and now what runway is what. Lights and all this other stuff is a smokescreen. Though for the majority of the issue the crew is responsable for the final level of safety of operation there is still a level of responsability on the man in the cab. Otherwise why in the heck do we have ATC? They are supposed to assist us guide us and advise us on things like this. The crew never asked for a progressive taxi from ATC as far as I know and it is understandable, they thought they had it figured out but it still falls on the controller to some extent whether it be 10% 15% 20% or 100% ATC in an incident like this one has a level of responsibility. And for

Well if you believe that then you shouldn't ever fly out of KFRG the only time the controllers there look outside "from their books and magazines or weekend party pics" is when they give taxi instructions. Nowadays some airport controllers have programs that would show their field on a computer screen and on the screen they could see every aircraft that they want (helped in part by the planes transponder), I know Kennedy has it I'm not sure about La Guardia.

Also whenever you are listening to ATC (for KFRG) and you hear the controller say to an arriving aircraft "report inner shore line"(when arriving from the south) or report "Northport Stacks/ Walt Whitman Mall(arriving from the North)" for a second there the controller looked up at the screen to find the incoming aircraft nut after giving instructions for you to "report" back to them they can go back to conversing with another controller, or reading.

It's even worse for controllers in IFR conditions they don't do anything unless it's been asked for or requested. They give the instructions and the pilot follows (correctly or incorrectly).

By the way the controllers "main purpose" in life is to provide the proper spacing between aircraft, the rest is left up to the pilot. :lol:

hiss srq
2006-08-31, 05:47 PM
I was not intending to insult ATC their duties etc etc.. but I personally beleive that a percentage lies on LEX's ATC as well. On another note that technology is awesome, I think most airports even some of the smaller ones do need that stuff.

Mateo
2006-08-31, 07:11 PM
ATC keeps the planes apart. It's the pilot's responsibility to tell a 2 apart from a 6. I don't know why we're getting all of these canards in the news about one controller vs. two, or how much sleep the ATC had the night before.

Futterman
2006-09-07, 12:23 AM
Alright, guys, I'm back and rarin' to go! :) These lectures I have are really paying off, as you'll hopefully see below...

I’ll admit that I haven’t read all the posts, but here're my two cents (not sure what currency, since this is a LOT) about the whole thing:
____________

It's already been established that this is strictly a human factors issue, since N431CA was perfectly airworthy at the time of the crash (well, right before).

Now, pilots are responsible for taking a temporary leave if they are under an exceptionally high amount of stress. I’ve been told that airlines will excuse pilots from their job for a certain amount of time after a traumatic event – ie: the death of a relative – in the interest of having the crew’s full and focused attention on the flight deck.

However, accidents are never the result of one sole mishap. There is always a very long chain of events leading up to accidents like this, and it involves more than just the captain and his or her first officer. The lack of staffing up in the control tower definitely played a major role – aside from them not realizing where the plane was (which, considering the position of the tower and angle of view he had of the two runways, is not difficult to see where a mistake could have been made), they may have just assumed that the crew was familiar with the rearranged taxiways when in fact they were not.

The pilots in here know as well as I do, probably better, in fact, how busy a pilot can be before takeoff. And that’s just in a Cessna or Piper. Imagine the pre-departure checklists and other distractions that a crew has to deal with on the flight deck of a CRJ – with this “link” and the “link” of the taxiway construction and out-of-the-ordinary taxi instructions in mind, it’s not hard to see where the chain could have broken.

Remembering that stress is the key factor in most, if not all aviation disasters, there’s a very prominent series of events to look at that facilitates a disaster like DL5191. There’s the famous “Swiss Cheese Model” that perfectly illustrates this:

http://www.coloradofirecamp.com/swiss-cheese/images/swiss-cheese-failures.jpg

It may look cheesy (hah), but if you ever get the chance to read (or read about) James Reason’s 1990 book “Human Error,” you’ll find that it is widely accepted and has been proven to be true time and time again. Right off the bat, we notice how small the chances of an accident really are; the odds of passing through one hole alone are not very high, and the chances of passing through each and every hole without catching yourself are even more remote. Applying this to the Comair crash, there were obviously several “latent failures” on behalf of many people in the LEX system. This is also one way of analyzing the “links” in the “chain” I mentioned before.

For number 1 – “Organizational Influences” – we can find potential deficiency in the pilot’s training stress associated with meeting strict slot times at ATL, and stress associated with fatigue, among other things.

For number 2 – “Unsafe Supervision” – the obvious lack of ATC supervision is key here, as well as the pilots’ failure to safely carry out necessary procedures and either notice, report, and/or address any discrepancies.

For number 3 – “Preconditions for Unsafe Acts” – there is the (assumed) failure of both crew members to check and crosscheck one another while continually referencing checklists and monitoring aircraft systems. Inadequate CRM and exceptional physical/mental fatigue is also a player here.

For number 4 – “Unsafe Acts” – the decision to take off without obviously and properly verifying the runway led to the death of 47 passengers and 2 crew members.

The breakdown here is clear: starting from the very point the captain and first officer woke up in the morning (or didn’t, to be fair) and through to their arrival at the airport, preflight, pushback, and taxi, they were on a path for destruction. As a result, N431CA went through each hole in the four slices of the “Swiss Cheese Model” and ended up as a burning wreck in some trees a few hundred feet from the end of the runway.

The integrity of this system, or chain, is essential to the safe operation of any airport and aircraft.

See this link for some more reading: http://www.coloradofirecamp.com/swiss-cheese/introduction.htm

This whole notion of stress was actually the driving force behind the Tenerife crash back in the 1970s which, as we all know, is the deadliest aviation disaster in history. In short, the KLM captain – the most highly regarded crew member in the airline, mind you – was more concerned with resuming his flight to the Netherlands and not exceeding crew-time than he was with the safe operation of his aircraft. Stress got the better of him and he jumped to conclusions when he heard the controller say “standby for take off” while the PanAm 747 was backtracking up the same runway – in fact, someone apparently cued the mic during the controller’s transmission, so all the KLM crew heard was “take off.” Impatient and preoccupied, the captain took this for clearance and advanced the throttles to the point where they collided with the PanAm ship and killed 583 people.

Interestingly enough, since then, the phrase “standby for take off” has been completely replaced by “hold short” and “position and hold.” In fact, the only time you will (or should) hear “take off” is when receiving clearance.


With regards to the compass heading/runway number conflict…

http://i110.photobucket.com/albums/n107/pauwilso/Comairphoto.jpg

In this photo, you can see the two taxiways in question: the one going straight along the bottom, A7, was closed, and the CRJ was supposed to taxi across runway 26 to where the business jet is.

1) The crew obviously made the first left, instead of the second left they were supposed to. That’s the only way to mistakenly line up with 26 instead of 22. Their position on either runway is such that in BOTH cases, they would have been in front of the runway numbers. The only way for them to know for sure which runway they were on would be to check their compass heading.

2) Pilots here: How many times have you misread your heading? The directional gyro and compass are visual cues the pilot uses to approximate their heading with a quick glance. Few, if any, sit there and count each 2-degree tick on the arc. Sure, 40-degrees is hard to miss on the navigation display in a glass cockpit, but it’s entirely within the realm of possibility that they either misread or didn’t even check their heading. We’ll never know for sure.

Looking back, there’s one fundamental difference between the crew of 5191 and all other crews today: they didn’t have a fatal crash to remind them of heading-checks before pushing the throttles forward.

Stepping on (or off, I’m not really sure!) my soapbox for a minute, I was thinking of a way this could have possibly been prevented. After using a sophisticated 737 model for FS designed by PMDG (http://www.precisionmanuals.com), it becomes obvious that an alarm sounds if the throttles are advanced without being in proper takeoff configuration (I imagine this is true on most, if not all other modern aircraft). The information that trips this alarm comes from the FMC…and the departure runway has to be entered into the FMC as part of the flight plan. My thought is this: have the runway heading (+/-1.5 degrees) included in this packet of “critical take off configuration information” and have the alarm sound if the current runway heading doesn’t match the FMC when the throttles are pushed forward.

I spoke with an experienced assistant professor in the aviation department at my school last week, and he told me about how he had once heard of a pilot who, after some 30 years with an airline, never once encountered an accident or incident. He also told me about another pilot who, after 30 years, had hundreds of events (but none fatal). Which one would you rather fly with? Well, this professor said he would rather go with the former…within 30 years, it’s impossible for him to never have had something out-of-the-ordinary occur. The difference, though, between him and the second pilot is that he was able to recognize and deal with a small discrepancy before it snowballed into a big problem. Yes, we learn the hard way, and yes, “the rule books are written in blood”, but it’s impossible for us – or even the NTSB – to blame any one person or thing. We’ll surely see a slew of new regulations and technology as a result of this crash.

A pilot friend recently said:

When things have changed aroud you (construction and upgrades) there is no harm in calling for some confirmation and waiting for acknowledgement. If they both misread or (both) never even checked then the on-going training and procedures are lacking.

I’m sure his suggestion will become a regulation in some way, shape, or form. However, I wouldn’t be so quick to assume that the on-going training and procedures at Delta (or Comair, whoever) are lacking…clearly, “human factors” is the likely umbrella-explanation for all this, and it’s quite an area of study to be reckoned with. If the problem lies in the most basic of training, we’d be seeing crashes like this every week.

Once you introduce the factors I discuss above, flight operations take on a whole new face. Training and logical assessment go out the window, leaving us with a very unpredictable crew. Fatigue as a result of an early-morning flight following a late-night flight is similar to the state-of-mind a pilot, for instance, may be in when a relative is ill. Only difference is that there’s no way for the airline to detect this danger in time and compensate for it. Actually, the airline has no interest in dealing with this on such short notice since it costs money and time to change crews. An unfortunate truth, but a truth nonetheless.

This pilot-friend also said:

We're skilled professionals whose job it is to follow those procedures for the safe conduct of our flight. There are 2 of us (or sometimes more) so things are Checked and Cross-Checked. Two heads are better than one, if they agree. Each of them must be as diligent as the other and those Cross Checks ensure that.

Absolutely…and this is why there are over 6,000 uneventful flights in the sky above the United States at any given moment, any given day. The last fatal crash in commercial aviation was almost 5 years ago, but that was in a league of it’s own. Point is simply that we learn the hard way. The automated, fail-safe alarm systems in every nook and cranny of a modern jet these days are not in lieu of a diligent and level-headed crew – no way, no how – but they are a necessity in situations like this, where the aircraft is controlled by a crew compromised by one thing or another.

If humans can’t plug the holes in the Swiss cheese, then machines will have to do it for them until a better solution is found.

Over ‘n out,

Brian

NIKV69
2006-09-07, 05:13 PM
where the aircraft is controlled by a crew compromised by one thing or another.



However, accidents are never the result of one sole mishap. There is always a very long chain of events leading up to accidents like this, and it involves more than just the captain and his or her first officer.

Many of these "things" are facts of life though Brian. Construction, lack or runway lights etc. All these so called "factors" are things that any pilot can encounter in the everyday world of commercial aviation. This F/O took for granted where he was. Which is not good enough in my opinion. He had plenty of other tools at his disposal to tell him where he was. As for KLM captain Van Zanten he too could have verified his so called clearance to depart. In his haste to leave though he took that for granted and caused the worst aviation disaster in history. This is why I feel the NTSB's lingo is very dangerous when they discuss contributing factors. The fact still remains that one key mistake or problem with the aircraft will bring it down or destroy it. Which is what we saw with Comair and KLM. It seems not too many people in this country want to ever say that a pilot or an airline is to blame for an accident. If we stick to the facts though it's clear the pilot is to blame in LEX. Nothing else.

hiss srq
2006-09-08, 04:26 AM
I should be a lawyer I actually just for fun was able to argue the fault of the first officer down to that of not making a compass check being the only issue that would be pinned on him. I was sort of bored but I was amazed at the fifity ways that you actually could split it to look at it and take peice by peice the fault off of the first officer if you got into the lawyer mindset. Seriously. On another note is it me or lately is there more things going on with CRJ's today. Before I had to head to the FBO for my flights of the day I was at my office at SRQ for my other job doing some things and the CRJ-900 that departs in the morning from SRQ to CLT hot started and went tech for the day stuck at SRQ. A few days before that another CR9 departed SRQ and made it just North of the Sunshine Skyway before being forced to shut number two down and divert to TPA and than later today a ASA CR2 departed SRQ and had an inflight enging fire or compressor stall or somthing to that effect and declare an emergency and return to SRQ. He did not even make it back to gate they evacuated as soon as they exited the taxiway and onto the apron. Odd days for the CRJ.

K9DEP
2006-09-08, 06:17 AM
On most new planes (the 737, and higher models 57,67, 47,77 ) when you put your runway into the FMC and put in the flightplan a runway will appear on the MFD so you know what rwy you're supposed to be on.

BTW basically only Boeings and the MD11 use the FMC, as most other manufacturers use the FMS they are different, I feel that the FMS is simply more easy to program b/c it requires less information., Besides it has all those pretty colors and the FMC depending on what plane you're in is just one color! You all saw how cool they look in B6's E190s.

LGA777
2006-09-10, 03:44 PM
I read that in addition to everything else on that Sunday morning when the crew called Clearance Delivery in LEX they used the wrong flight number and said there destination was TOL. I believe that flight was to have been their second leg of the morning after LEX-ATL. Pretty scary stuff.

Cheers

LGA777

Ari707
2006-09-12, 11:09 AM
LEXINGTON, Kentucky (AP) -- Comair was using an outdated chart of Lexington's Blue Grass Airport when one of its planes took off on the wrong runway and crashed in flames, and the airline is now urging pilots to use "extreme caution," according to an e-mail obtained by The Associated Press.

Airline spokeswoman Kate Marx said Monday that the alert was prompted because the airline had an old diagram of Blue Grass Airport.

Comair received a new chart on Friday -- two weeks after the August 27 crash killed 49 of the 50 people on board. The previous chart hadn't been updated since January, despite recent changes to the taxiway route, Marx said.

Late last week, the company updated its dispatch information for Blue Grass Airport cockpit crews with a warning that some runway diagrams don't accurately reflect all the current signs and markings. Comair chief pilot Steve Briner sent an e-mail to pilots Monday pointing out the change.

"Exercise extreme caution during all ground operations," the e-mail stated. "Utilize high threat taxi procedures. If unsure of position or taxi clearance, clarify with (air traffic control)."

A week before the crash, an airport repaving project changed the taxi route leading to the 7,000-foot main runway that Comair Flight 5191 should have used. Instead, the plane turned onto the airport's 3,500-foot runway, a length too short for the regional jet to take off. It crashed in a field less than a mile away and quickly burned.

The National Aeronautical Charting Office, a branch of the Federal Aviation Administration, publishes the maps through vendors hired by the airline. It wasn't immediately clear why Comair would not have had an updated map. FAA spokeswoman Laura Brown didn't immediately return a call late Monday seeking comment.

Comair, a subsidiary of Delta Air Lines Inc., operates 850 flights to 108 cities daily. Both airlines filed for bankruptcy protection last year.

Nonstop2AUH
2006-09-12, 07:16 PM
The people involved in this situation, not just the pilots but Comair management and the FAA/tower, are looking more inept with each bit of information that comes out about this disaster. I'm sure they will all claim that cost-cutting and the airline's bankruptcy has nothing to do with it, but as a layman I find it hard to believe that a "safety first" mentality can coexisit with strategies designed primarily to reduce expenses.

USAF Pilot 07
2006-09-12, 09:18 PM
And how much different were the new maps compared to the old ones. Maps are updated a lot, and many times there are one, maybe two, changes on the map, which may not even have to do anything with the schmatics on the map...

The more stuff that comes out, the more it becomes apparent the crew shouldn't have been in the cockpit that morning. Walking out to the wrong plane? Requesting clearance to TOL when your destination is ATL? Not realizing that runway lights should be on at 6AM? Those are all lapses in the crew's operations...