• @Evotech
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    213 hours ago

    Black hawk, clearly a DEI acquisition

  • John Richard
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    1 day ago

    Note: It takes a serious fuck up for something like this to happen. Get ready for 100x excuses as to why they can’t provide the details quickly.

    • @Evotech
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      11 hours ago

      Best i can do is shut down aviation safety council

    • @[email protected]
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      1924 hours ago

      Until we know why, the most prudent course of action is to place the blame on the commander in chief of all the military. As they bar the highest level of responsibility.

      • @BradleyUffner
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        419 hours ago

        He is going to find some way to blame DEI.

        • @RememberTheApollo_
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          9 hours ago

          # Trump suggests ‘dwarves, amputees and epileptics’ are ‘DEI hires’ and not qualified for Air Traffic Control positions

          Trump highlighted a series of articles covering the FAA’s “diversity push,” saying they were actively recruiting workers who “suffer severe intellectual disabilities, psychiatric problems, and other mental and physical conditions.”

          Trump included examples of some of the disabilities and conditions that are listed on the FAA’s website, including individuals missing extremities, paralysis, severe intellectual disability, psychiatric disability and dwarfism, among others.

          He said: “'The FAA website states they include hearing, vision, missing extremities, partial paralysis, complete paralysis, epilepsy, severe intellectual disability, psychiatric disability and dwarfism all qualified for the position of a controller of air planes pouring into our country, pouring into a little spot. A little dot on the map. A runway.”

          https://www.irishstar.com/news/us-news/trump-suggests-dwarves-amputees-epileptics-34586326.amp

      • John Richard
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        1024 hours ago

        I’m sure he’ll blame Biden, if he hasn’t already.

        • enkers
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          11 hours ago

          You pretty much called it:

          https://lemmy.world/post/24922558

          He also claimed, seemingly without evidence, that former President Joe Biden had lowered the standard for hiring air traffic controllers, which he said was raised to the “highest standard that you could have” during his first administration in 2016.

        • @[email protected]
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          24 hours ago

          So let’s preemptively blame Trump.

          Why doesn’t he care about the troops?

          How could this be allowed to happen under Trumps presidency?

      • Captain Aggravated
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        1319 hours ago

        Collision happened at 300 feet (not sure if that’s MSL or AGL but in Washington DC it’s not much of a difference), airliner was on final approach presumably cleared to land. Fixed wing aircraft have right of way over rotary wing aircraft. There is absolutely no reason a helicopter should have been there in the first place.

        I’m going to be extremely interested to learn why neither the tower nor the jet knew the position of that helicopter. Prevailing VMC, in the most surveilled airspace on the continent, apparently this Blackhawk was invisible to eyes, radar and TCAS. In the Washington SFRA. How do you fuck this up without actively trying?

        • @[email protected]M
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          318 hours ago

          How do you fuck this up without actively trying?

          Military pilots are not immune to getting disoriented and simply fucking up and being where they’re not supposed to. Shit happens, unfortunately. I have no idea what the explanation will turn out to be, but it could be “the helicopter was in the wrong place, and too low for the radar to read them, and it was nighttime” and nothing more complicated than that

          this Blackhawk was invisible to eyes, radar and TCAS

          One of these things is not like the others. 🙂

          I get what you mean but the way you said it was funny to me.

          Do you have a source for this? All I saw was that the helicopter was underneath the airplane, meaning they couldn’t see it. I had thought that ATC was in contact with the helicopter, although I have no explanation for why they didn’t see the collision coming.

          • Captain Aggravated
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            417 hours ago

            Do you have a source for this?

            I’m a pilot, I’m familiar with these systems and how they work.

            So 1. eyes. VMC prevailed, I’m assuming the helicopter was operating under VFR; in fact I would find it extremely weird if they were under IFR because if so they should have been properly sequenced. According to ABC News, the helicopter was in radio contact with the tower who advised the helicopter of the approaching airliner and asked if they had it in sight. With few clouds at 1100 feet and visibility of better than 10 statute miles, the helicopter should have been able to see an airliner with position lights, strobes and landing lights on, even if the airliner couldn’t see the helicopter. At this point I should mention, there are rules about who gets the right of way in the sky, generally it’s less maneuverable aircraft get right of way over more maneuverable aircraft, helicopters must yield to airplanes, helicopters can stop, airplanes can’t. So it was the job of the helicopter to see and avoid. Which they apparently failed to do.

            Also, at 300 feet up, this collision took place less than a mile from the runway, the tower should have been able to see both aircraft visually.

            1. Radar. Secondary surveillance radar is decades old technology, it has its roots in World War 2. It is possible the helicopter was so low that it wasn’t visible on radar with terrain and whatnot.

            2. TCAS. This is a system installed on the airliner that basically works as its own surveillance radar, capable of interrogating any Mode C Transponder equipped aircraft, which is required equipment to fly in this airspace. The airliner apparently had line of sight to the helicopter, after all they hit the damn thing, so they should have been able to see the helicopter on TCAS, which should have warned them to climb to avoid the collision. This may not work if the airliner had their TCAS equipment in standby mode, or if the helicopter wasn’t squawking. The turbine-powered transport aircraft with more than 30 passenger seats is required to carry TCAS, so they DID have it on board.

            3. ADS-B. Each aircraft carries a GPS receiver and a transmitter that automatically transmits their location in 3D space; it’s more accurate than surveillance radar and works everywhere the aircraft is. ADS-B Out is also required equipment to operate in this airspace; the tower should have been able to see the helicopter’s position very accurately through ADS-B. The airliner should have been, but I don’t think is yet required to, carry ADS-B in, which also should have been able to see the helicopter.

            So. Why did all these things simultaneously fail? Why was the helicopter even close to the approach path in the first place, they were apparently in radio contact with the tower, why were they allowed anywhere near there? Why did they fail to maintain visual separation from other traffic given warnings from ATC? Why did surveillance radar, TCAS and ADS-B, all of which should have been working, fail to prevent the collision?

            Why did the iceberg penetrate all 6,000 hulls? If only the ship had 6,001 hulls!

            • @[email protected]M
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              16 hours ago

              I’m assuming the helicopter was operating under VFR

              They were, that’s been confirmed.

              With few clouds at 1100 feet and visibility of better than 10 statute miles, the helicopter should have been able to see an airliner with position lights, strobes and landing lights on, even if the airliner couldn’t see the helicopter.

              Yeah. Looking down, presumably through the floor of the aircraft, and seeing the lights of the helicopter against the dark backdrop and all of the different stationary and flashing lights that is Washington DC, would have been totally impossible.

              Why the helicopter didn’t see the airplane after being specifically advised of that specific aircraft, I don’t know, but like I say, shit happens sometimes. Maybe he heard the radio message but just didn’t know up from down at that exact moment and was working on it. Maybe they saw a different airplane and thought it was that one. Maybe they saw it, but had trouble maneuvering away from it and a few seconds’ delay was all it took. The news did mention that it was a training flight, so the helicopter pilot fucking up is extra possible even above the possible that it already was.

              the tower should have been able to see both aircraft visually

              Wouldn’t it be pretty unusual for the controller that was talking to them to be looking anywhere other than their radar? Maybe if someone was staring out the window right at that specific situation right at that specific time, they might have seen it coming, but I don’t think that’s the usual behavior at all times for the person who’s talking with the pilots. It being at night and super-low so the lights of the helo can blend in confusingly with the backdrop lights just adds more unlikeliness.

              Why they didn’t see the collision about to happen on radar is a separate question, but like you said, they were low to terrain.

              TCAS

              Does TCAS get disabled below certain altitudes or close to the runway? I know EGPWS does, which has caused some accidents in the past. Presumably, the TCAS isn’t squawking at you while you’re taxiing that you’re about to hit the next aircraft in front of you, so when does it get cut off? I have no idea, I’m just speculating.

              So. Why did all these things simultaneously fail? Why was the helicopter even close to the approach path in the first place, they were apparently in radio contact with the tower, why were they allowed anywhere near there? Why did they fail to maintain visual separation from other traffic given warnings from ATC? Why did surveillance radar, TCAS and ADS-B, all of which should have been working, fail to prevent the collision?

              This question I have no idea. My guess is that there’s no unified explanation, it was just a confluence of failures of a bunch of different things that each could have prevented it, and people just got really unlucky which happens sometimes. But that’s purely just uninformed speculation as to the answer to a pretty good question.

              Edit: Oh, I completely missed this:

              Do you have a source for this?
              

              I’m a pilot, I’m familiar with these systems and how they work.

              That wasn’t quite my question. You said the helo was invisible to TCAS / radar / etc, and I interpreted that as meaning it was some kind of special helicopter that was, well, invisible to radar. Now that I’m reading it in context, I get the point that you were making, but I took it seriously initially, as meaning it was some kind of military technology involved making it harder to see on radar or something.

              • Captain Aggravated
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                116 hours ago

                TCAS systems will stop issuing RAs (verbal instructions to the pilots, such as ASCEND ASCEND) below 1,000 feet AGL so that it doesn’t steer anyone into terrain. I’ve never flown an aircraft equipped with TCAS, but it is my understanding that it would be switched to standby mode after taxiing off the runway, as you do with a Mode C transponder.

                • @[email protected]M
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                  116 hours ago

                  Got it, that makes sense.

                  So yeah, in that case my official prediction for the way it will have turned out to have happened is:

                  1. Airplane sees helicopter - No way.
                  2. Helicopter sees airplane - Pilot fucked up.
                  3. Radar - Too low to terrain.
                  4. TCAS - Too low.
                  5. ADS-B - Could be one of the aircraft’s equipment wasn’t operating / present, or could be ATC fucked up. They could have just been looking at something else, doing their job in the busy airspace, and not seen two little dots out of dozens of others on their screen that were getting too close to each other. They’d also done everything they needed to do to very formally pass responsibility off to the helo pilot, so they’re allowed to preserve their mental bandwidth for other situations at that point, and it’s the pilot’s job to avoid the crash.
  • @[email protected]
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    113 hours ago

    Both flight paths have been provided now.

    I had assumed the heli took off from/was flying around the east bank by the base marker on that map. Didn’t realize it came from the north with the two aircraft more or less facing each other.

    What the hell… How did neither aircraft see each other? Visually and on instruments.

    • @Evotech
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      013 hours ago

      Guess military was flying dark. Not watching their own instruments.