KL-666 wrote:Monitoring is not done by subjective listening to engines or so. It is an instrument scan of the most important items on the pfd: speed, horizon, altitude and vertical speed. If any of these change in an unexpected way then something is wrong, and it should alert the pilot to take action. Other items are looked at too, but they are not so important as these 4 parameters.
Let's assume a pilot does scan his instruments - say at about 10+- miles* from the runway and about 2500ft* and something happened to the engines, without any visual or noise indicating something was wrong, the pilot was looking at - say - his or her checklist. Before looking at that check list the speed was about 150knots*. Then he or she looked at the checklists. Then looks back at the speed. By which time, it's showing about 110knots* and the plane had started dropping at an increasing rate, wasn't felt at first, but feels it now. "Uh oh" time. Quickly reacted, full thorttle, but too late, stalled or loss of altitude at that point and the curve of the descent was beginning to go the point of no return.. would this scenario be possible?
*just an estimate-Insert the appropriate numbers corresponding to section as needed