Postby jwocky » Tue Aug 09, 2016 4:26 pm
Okay, lets look at this the other way around:
- why, if everything was normal, did the crew decide to go around? You decide to go around, if either the wind is too too strong in a gust, you got windshear or you messed up, for example too high speed or altitude in end approach, right? What else comes to mind? Windshear would mean, it happened seconds earlier to make it the reason to go around in the first place.
- If you decide to go around, you give throttle and pull your gear in and climb. Now, what the passenger describes is the main gear touched down, the nose wheel not. And the gear was retracted then and the plane glided along the runway without additional thrust till it finally crashed at the end of the runway. So it had a lot of lift, which indicates the speed had to be relative high and allegedly the speed even increased to 180 knots before the crash. Given that a 777 has roughly 135-145 knots touch down speed and 160-170 V1 depending on the load, this is a lot. Does that mean, the speed at touch down was high and got even higher when, by retracting the gear, the drag was reduced? That would mean, the auto throttle was not active because in that case, the system would reduce throttle to get to the set speed instead of accelerating.
- There is something, I miss in all reports, the sound or visual of active reversers. Nobody tells, the reversers were used at any point. Normally, I would expect the pilot to get thrust to zero, then engage the reversers and push thrust forward to reduce speed. Honestly, as nice as autobreaks are, they don't cut it with a heavy bird, especially not, if they are set to the recommended 2.
Soooo, if I see it from that angle, autothrottle and AP as two separate systems, it appears, autothrottle was off or even disarmed, which makes sense, if the pilot is about to use the reversers in the next few seconds, the AP is on and in autoland mode. But the thrust is too high, the AP can set down the main gear, but the pilot doesn't reduce thrust and engages the reversers. Instead, he presses the GA button. But while the AP goes in GA mode and also someone retracts the gear, the thrust remains constant and thus the speed increases when the drag of the gear is gone.
Does that sound like a communication problem? Like pilot and copilot try two different things at the same time? I think, this will come down to the black box data telling the investigators who pressed which button at which time.
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