The Green Needle vs. Brain Storm: Understanding How Your Brain Decodes Sounds Welcome to Safety Matters, where we explore fascinating aspects of...
Aviation
Optimizing Nighttime Navigation: Red vs White Cockpit Lighting
A Tragic Incident in the Houston Ship Channel: Lessons for Aviation Safety A dredge worker tragically drowned in the Houston Ship Channel when...
Work Environment and Fatigue Survey
Fatigue risk management for pilots has received increasing attention. The existing fatigue management systems have detailed descriptions of the...
Debunking Pilot Flight Time Limitations myths
The fatigue risk analysis falters at the 1st step when there is a generic comparison between a 0900-1700hrs office work schedule and a shift job...
Aircraft Safety Threat: Wasps Nesting in Pitot Probes
https://anchor.fm/safetymatters/episodes/When-Wasps-take-fancy-to-the-aircraft-Pitot-Probe-to-build-mud-nests--safety-is-compromised-e1dre7j/a-a7bcaj
Southwest Airlines’ Boeing 737 Dutch Roll
On May 25, 2024, a Southwest Airlines Boeing 737 experienced a Dutch Roll but managed to recover. The incident resulted in damage to the Rudder Power Control Unit, according to the Federal Aviation Authority of the USA. Reflecting on my time as Head of Flight Operations at Air Asia India in 2013, I recall advocating for mandatory Upset Recovery Training (UPRT) for all pilots within the Air Asia group. Despite its potential for enhancing safety, the proposal was seen as an additional cost and was not implemented. The release of the final accident report for Air Asia flight QZ-8501, which tragically crashed in December 2014 en route from Indonesia to Singapore, killing all 162 on board, resonates with my earlier safety concerns. The report details high altitude upset as a probable cause—echoing my previously dismissed warnings. Through mindFly, I aim to provide insights not fully explored in the official report. I’ll draw parallels between this accident and similar historical events, such as the 1959 Boeing 707 crash during a Dutch Roll demonstration that resulted in a fatal loss of control. The final accident report of the Air Asia flight QZ-8501 which crashed on its flight from Indonesia to Singapore in Dec 2014, killing all 162 occupants, has been released. It is an exhaustive report and a lot of effort may have been put in to explain the circumstances in detail.
...AERO-PAD :NEXT GENERATION AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL
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