Finally a non propaganda video.. so refreshing.. UA-cam channels need to stop this, talking about politics, which they have no capacity of understanding.. That would be like me, a graduate with a degree in politics, giving my opinion to you on piloting 🤦♂️
7:43 why don't those logbook have red papers on corners so captain or first officer get direct attention on the paper which actually having fault reported.... As you said they are not going to check whole log book, but if someone see that this particular aircraft having many more red flags in log book they might get interest to check those errors happened 6 or 8 months ago
I was on board the plane. When we landed in Lyon, most passengers wanted to get out of the plane as they were too scared to continue to Paris. The screw were not willing to let them leave the plane but the passengers eventually got out and took the train. Only 35 minutes later we took off and made it safely to our destination. Of course no one told us that the situation was so serious and I happened to come across this video completely by chance and realise that I was a passenger on that flight 😅
I can empathize with the pilot. When you feel like the plane is falling apart around you and you have a window to put the thing on the ground safely, I'd probably do the same thing and just take the slap on the wrist for not following procedures. The fact he reverted to his native French is plenty of evidence how stressed this entire situation made him.
I can imagine the pilots were getting towards the point of "how long till we lose even more instruments? Do we risk trying to do a better/more standard stabilised approach not knowing if we will have displays/systems etc" This are the situations where you will ALWAYS need a human pilot. Unfortuantely this is something that is only going to get worse as systems get more automated/advanced relying on more and more systems and engineers will always be battling with the beancounters in acceptable risk/cost analysis (think 737 MAX and single point of failure being acceptable)
@@PantherSerpahin I argue until I'm blue in the face with the "get rid of human pilots" crowd. First, I can't make them understand that we aren't arguing opposites. They are arguing to remove the humans and fly with only automated systems. I am not arguing we eliminate automation. I'm arguing we need both. They have a disturbing faith in man-made systems, as if, somehow, the humans making the system are less fallible than the humans flying the aircraft.
@@excavatoree As anyone who works with computers on the regular will tell you. Computers are as stupid as the person using/programming them. I am 100% behind relying on automation more and more as it does remove the human variable from equations. However, the Human variable should ALWAYS be there in an oversight role as a very minimum to go "This doesnt look/feel/seem right," and is able to stop, review and possibly correct/abort what the computer is programmed to do.
@@excavatoree critical systems are not really redundant, because of cost and complexity reasons. So the first thing would be to make everything _actually_ redundant for full autonomy. That is an enormous task in itself. The second would be in case of full autonomy, to employ pilot-engineers. Basically the two pilots should be trained to work with the normally autonomous system, and understand it well in case of a malfunction. This is a _very_ high bar. This way autonomy in aviation can lower the chance of accidents an order of magnitude or even more, but it would not lower the costs at all. The opposite: pilots would need even more training. Airlines using autonomy to replace humans, to make things cheaper would produce just as many accidents as humans nowadays. Even highly intelligent autonomy is vulnerable to massive coincidences, there always should be two human pilots on board (at least until AGI becomes truly superhuman in every conceivable way)
Just looking at the top 25 countries with the most fatal air crashes since 1945 he'd have to do 3,370 videos. And that's without doing videos on all the non-fatal crashes, near misses, incidents etc. At 1 video per week it would take 200 years, if all air accidents and incidents ceased from today.
As an engineer too, problems that fix themselves scares the shit out of me since it means something critical is acting randomly; so I expect more problems that on the surface dont relate to each other. You feel like someone on paroll one mistake and you're back to jail lol
@@MrTsatia as a programmer, I share this fear. Granted, a malfunction on my part means that my shitty game will crash, not a fucking plane, but if something "sorts itself out" you know shit is giga fucked
I cannot believe that poor Captain and First Officer had to fly the *same* plane back to Marrakech without any of the faults addressed! How their hearts must have sunk when the autopilot disconnected on their final approach. “Here we go again.” The report into the accident in my opinion, fails to recognise that hindsight is wonderful. It’s very easy to criticise the actions of the crew from the safety of the ground, with all the time in the world to think about the best course of action. At the end of the day, the Captain made decisions which got everyone safely on the ground, on the runway and with no (physical) damage to the aircraft. The plane’s mental state was in turmoil and I can just imagine the crew’s relief evaporating in an instant when they learned that they had to fly it again!
it's because of Boeing who try at every problem to blame the crew to preserve it reputation, the new 737 (what Morocco was one of the buyers) had a serious software problem in that time till it was stopped flighting by the majority of companies who own it (including Morocco), what escalade to a huge problem even with the US GOV VS Boeing!!
Hello ! May Allah protect and guide you to his light and happiness in this life and the hereafter, God bless, Ameen. Excuse me for giving a little presentation of Islam, because it is very misunderstood nowadays, especially on those « Antichrist's » times, where media and politics are mixed to distort history and truth. And terrorists (puppets of the Antichrist) who misinterpret verses, out of ignorance and political motivations, and take them out of historical context (just like radical atheists do by the way) don't help either. Thank you very much for your time. First of all, if you have any questions regarding Islam and yourself, just open the Quran randomly, and you will find the answer in front of you, like a miracle and a sign from God.
Islam is an arabic word that means the Surrender to the One and Only God, our Creator, Protector, Provider, who gives us life and all that we have, we are safe and sound by his will and grace, we are His and to Him we return, and we have to thank him in this trial life by submitting to him by our free will, or later in the Day of judgment when it's too late to save our own skin. Islam was the original Religion descended to earth from heaven with Adam and Eve (peace and blessing be upon them) in the beginning of humanity. and was passed to people with the succession of the 124 000 prophets and 315 messengers of God to all nations and civilizations since, passing by Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Ismaël, Joseph, Moses, Aaron, Joshua, David, Solomon and Jesus (Peace and blessing be upon them) during the history of mankind, the last replaces and completes the previous, until the succession of the last messenger of God fourteen centuries ago, Muhammad (Peace and blessing be upon him) to complete the noble morals of all mankind, to bring humans and jinns out of darkness into light, and to purify people's religion and belief from corruption and polytheism, and return it to purity and true monotheism, like it was in the times of the prophets (Peace and blessing be upon them). Many Religions that we know nowadays, at their beginning were true and under Islam, initiated by one of the prophets of God, but their original teachings, history and scriptures have been corrupted over time with falsification and polytheism, or lost and replaced with false ones. That's why Islam is the only Religion accepted by God nowadays, which consists in bearing witness that there is no god besides Allah (God in Aramaic, the original language of Jesus and the Gospel), and that Muhammad is His servant and messenger, just like Jesus and Moses and others are His servants and messengers. Never a messenger of God said he was God or literally son of God, it was the people after him who changed the words of God and corrupted the Religion. God is unique and absolute, He does not need to have a family and sons or to associate anyone else with His kingdom, He can simply create whatever He wants, everything belongs to Him, and to Him everything will return. Allah said in Surah Al-Mu’minun : “God has never begotten a son, nor is there any god besides Him. Otherwise, each god would have taken away what it has created, and some of them would have gained supremacy over others. Glory be to God, far beyond what they describe. The Knower of the hidden and the manifest. He is exalted, far above what they associate. (91-92 / Translated by ITANI). Allah means the one and only God, the God of all prophets and creatures, the creator of the universe and mankind, and the Master of the Day of judgment, where our destiny, Hell or Paradise, is decided based on our faith and deeds in this trial life, and above all, Allah's mercy. Allah said in Surah Al-Ikhlas : In the name of God, the Gracious, the Merciful. Say, “He is God, the One. God, the Absolute. He begets not, nor was He begotten. And there is none comparable to Him.” (1-4 / Translated by ITANI). Allah said in Surah An-Nisa : O FOLLOWERS of the Gospel! Do not overstep the bounds [of truth] in your religious beliefs, and do not say of God anything but the truth. The Christ Jesus, son of Mary, was but God's Apostle - [the fulfilment of] His promise which He had conveyed unto Mary - and a soul created by Him. Believe, then, in God and His apostles, and do not say, "[God is] a trinity". Desist [from this assertion] for your own good. God is but One God; utterly remote is He, in His glory, from having a son: unto Him belongs all that is in the heavens and all that is on earth; and none is as worthy of trust as God. Never did the Christ feel too proud to be God's servant, nor do the angels who are near unto Him. And those who feel too proud to serve Him and glory in their arrogance [should know that on Judgment Day] He will gather them all unto Himself: (171-172 / Translated by Muhammad Asad). Allah the Most Merciful said in Surah Ali-Imran : Behold, the only [true] religion in the sight of God is [man's] self-surrender unto Him; and those who were vouchsafed revelation aforetime took, out of mutual jealousy, to divergent views [on this point] only after knowledge [thereof] had come unto them. But as for him who denies the truth of God's messages - behold, God is swift in reckoning! Thus, [O Prophet,] if they argue with thee, say, "I have surrendered my whole being unto God, and [so have] all who follow me!" - and ask those who have been vouchsafed revelation aforetime, as well as all unlettered people, "Have you [too] surrendered yourselves unto Him?" And if they surrender themselves unto Him, they are on the right path; but if they turn away - behold, thy duty is no more than to deliver the message: for God sees all that is in [the hearts of] His creatures. Verily, as for those who deny the truth of God's messages, and slay the prophets against all right, and slay people who enjoin equity - announce unto them a grievous chastisement. It is they whose works shall come to nought both in this world and in the life to come; and they shall have none to succour them. (19-22 / Translated by Muhammad Asad).. God said : Say, “We believe in Allah, and in what was revealed to us, and in what was revealed to Abraham, and Ishmael, and Isaac, and Jacob, and the Patriarchs, and in what was given to Moses and Jesus, and in what was given to the prophets from their Lord. We do not differentiate between any of them. And to Him, we surrender.” (2:136 / Translated by Community) Salam (Peace)
There’s an old adage: “the superior pilot uses his superior judgement to avoid situations which may require his superior flying skills…” This ended well, but had several severe flight path excursions which could have resulted in a full crash. With all hell breaking-loose, but the aircraft still flyable, the Captain has to pull back and assess the problems and come up with the best course of action. He didn’t…
@@tonyledsham2810I can’t remember the fine details on this nightmare flight as it was some time ago I watched it, but just because there’s an “old saying” doesn’t mean it fits every occasion. Whatever the circumstances, I don’t believe it was very fair to ask the same crew to pilot the plane back with no adjustments made. The crew did OK anyway. Maybe it was because he handled the situation well that he was asked to fly the plane again. If nobody could find out what was wrong with it, after a detailed inspection on the ground, the Captain can hardly be expected to, in the heat of the moment, several thousand feet in the air. If the crew had been totally incompetent, they’d have had their test pilots fly the plane back. I’m with the last commenter, the blame probably lies with Boeing. That is Maximus38 - not the previous person with the spam.
Well Moira, I suggest you watch the video again. Mentourpilot does a great job of explaining it. If you didn’t like my previous adage, I’ve got another one for you: “aviate, navigate, communicate” I’m no fan of Boeing, but they did issue a service bulletin. Air Maroc didn’t action it, but the IRS issue could have been handled by a competent crew. Despite lots of fuel, they just wanted to get the airplane on the ground, without properly troubleshooting the problem.
As a former military avionics technician, I am dismayed that the repeat, intermittent fault was allowed to persist for such a long time. When you keep changing the same black box (in this case, the ADIRU) and get the same intermittent fault you have to realize that black box is not the problem and that it has to be something else. Some years ago, we had an intermittent fault with the AN/ARN-84 TACAN system on a C-130H. In flight, the "OFF" flag would suddenly drop on both the pilot's and copilot's ADI even though the system was switched on, then anything from a few seconds later to minutes or even an hour later, the flag would lift. This would keep happening throughout the flight. No matter how long we ran the system on the ground, even after changing the Receiver-Transmitter unit (RT-1022) twice, we could never get it to repeat, but the pilots still reported the fault. Then we did a test during an engine ground run (for a different issue) and bingo - when the throttles were pushed beyond "Flight Idle" the TACAN flag started intermittently dropping and lifting. Long story short, it turned out that just ONE captive pin in the 56 pin socket on the RT-1022 mounting rack was loose. On the ground it would make enough contact to work, but in flight, with the engines running, the vibrations were sufficient for the pin to vibrate loose. We change that mounting rack, and the problem disappeared, never to return. I would bet this fault ended up being found to have been caused by something like what I have written about here... an electrical connection issue.
I've seen millions worth of equipment scrapped as 'jinxed' hardware. Some problems simply get too expensive to be worth keep trying, some minor manufacturing fault can keep inducing errors. Hardware and software side is similar, ram issues, voltage issues, ram causing software issues. One bizzare one i saw one is a power surge overwrote the voltage on a motherboard, overvolting the cpu. That still doesn't make sense to me. Alas, the worst kind of problem is an intermittent one.
Personally think the crew did well here. Let’s not forget that the first warning that came was not known to the crew. The captain genuinely believed keeping the aircraft in the air was far more of a danger than getting it on the ground.
Yeah, it seems very reasonable to me that the captain went for it when he got a visual. There wasn't enough fuel to just keep circling around until they figure it out, and it was also unclear if the state of the aircraft is further deteriorating with new failures popping up at seemingly random. And what a precise landing it was, I think the captain was really good with the manual controls. (A bit worse with tech log though.)
It may not have been done "perfectly" in terms of flying a stabilized approach, but I think his call to get the airplane on the ground considering how strangely it was acting and just how much stuff was failing in and out, was 100% correct.
As a GA pilot who flew many flights into IMC I can certainly relate. Once he established a clear visual of the runway environment and realized he could continue visually it made perfect sense to land albiet it was not the usual stabilized approach. He knew it was within his experience and ability to land safely. This is actually why they train and what they train for... to deal with the unexpected, think quickly and clearly. Kudos to both of them. Another great video from Mentour. Keep em coming!
I’m with the captain on this one: I can see the runway, I have enough control to land, let’s get on the ground and sort this mess out on stand. Astonishing that they would AGAIN put the aircraft back into passenger service without fully resolving the issue. That made everyone on the next flight a maintenance test pilot, which I’m pretty sure they did NOT sign up for!
Totally agree. There's *no way* I would've flown that plane again until all the faults were found and fixed. Take it up for a test flight (or several) in good weather, until the problems can be reproduced and solved.
Yes, it's hard for me to understand what was happening in the pilot's mind. He was so eagar - understandably - to get that plane on the ground, but then he's willing to fly it a 2nd time?
This is such a relatable story. I hope the crew didn't get into too much trouble. The Captain was at the end of his rope, saw his chance to get that plane on the ground and took it. His actions were completely understandable.
This. There comes a point where the objectively wrong thing to do is actually the best possible course of action. In this case, it was "get that bird on the ground and end the ever worsening situation while it's still somewhat manageable"
I dont think the pilot did anything majorly wrong. What would you do if your vehicle started doing this? Say, it would accelerate or brake slightly on its own or it would turn itself. Would you choose to drive it around town after you had already made it to your home street? I know its not an exact example but when electronic systems start to fail me I get real nervous. I am far more comfortable with mechanical failures because when its broken, then it doesnt work in a predictable way which means its reliably broken. If electronics intermittently fail then their unreliability is even more worrisome.
@@LavenderSystem69Indeed. At that point, he must have expected to lose all instrumentation if he did another go-around. That would have been fine on a clear day, but getting into visual range for a VFR landing would have been very questionable with such a low cloud cover. So, with the airport in sight, he ignored the instruments and warnings and did what was effectively, if not by name, a visual landing.
Hats off to the pilots, I can only imagine being in such a situation! The ending really took me off guard, so because the issues couldn't be reproduced the plane was considered OK to fly back home with the same crew and a new group of passengers? That's really disappointing on RAM's end giving the pilots no chance to recover and allowing dozens of passengers to board an unreliable aircraft...
@@flagmichael Yes. Indeed unbelievable. And that crew after that experience was definetely not in a condition to fly ANY aircraft, not to talk about the same one.
@@flagmichael forewarned is forearmed. Or something. They'd seen it happen first hand, and managed to make it work.... sort of. I'd certainly put more faith in them than a pilot who hadn't seen it.
My opinion: the crew should have been within their rights to refuse to fly that same plane any further, until the fault(s) that explained all unexplained failures of the previous flight had been found and fixed. The engineer reporting "no fault found" doesn't cut it. The fact that a fault demonstrably exists, but that you can't find it, doesn't make it OK. That said, intermittent faults can be hard to find, and two independent intermittent faults on the same bird is sheer bad luck, human error creeping in somewhere, or a sign of too much complexity in the design.
I totally would have refused to fly that thing again without it being fixed. Would have called in sick and warned my replacement if the airline didn’t want to listen.
Spoilers lol. Just scanning comments while listening to all the background summary. Top comment in the list gives me the outcome even before the plane starts to suffer the first problems!
So, once on the ground maintenance could not correct the multiple faults and then made the same Captain fly the plane again with passengers! Wow, I bet he enjoyed that flight 😳
Can't imagine any sane pilot believing it was all ok after a flight like that and flying it again unless they were coerced or lied to about it being fixed.
I've rejected a plane that had a fault in the air that could not be duplicated on the ground. It was a serious issue that would have resulted in a loss of all flight instrumentation, save for the standby/backup instruments. I wasn't going to fly that bird again unless the actual problem could be identified.
@@constantinc9034 Nah he is right, Moroccan pilots are professionals, this issue was with Boeing plane which Morocco stopped buying with a lot of countries.
Great pilot who made the right decision He did not have time to log in issues or go for long radio chats, he had to focus on what mattered which is getting everyone back down safely.
yeah its insane to imagine, oh yeah breaks on your car dont work? well it worked for me so i fixed nothing so go ahead and drive 100 km of mountain roads. what worst that can happen.
To be fair its done quite often. Alot of the time its becuase the pilots didnt give enough info on the fault they just go "hey this system wasnt working, xx bit code was displayed", nothing specific for maintenence to go off of. Thats not a whole lot of info to go on especially if the tech data doesnt have much info on the bit code and it cant be duplicated on the ground. With a situation like this, espicially since the write up is not a grounding condition, it would be proper to do a second flight verification of the system. From how it sounds in the video it was good for 5 flights after. If it came back again and same situation, replace the most common to go bad component or possibly just swap the adiru and have the pilots do an "in flight ops check". Alot of these components are just miniature computers though and its very common for the system to just need to be restarted and/or reseated to properly work again just like a normal home computer.
@@Nitro91 _"You can't trace a fault accurately that's not active or if it only sometimes acts up."_ True, but then you take it out for a test flight (or several) in good weather to recreate the problem.
I always enjoy these investigation videos from a pilots standpoint. Much more informative than just reading a report or watching these from a documentary type perspective
I enjoy these from a passenger’s perspective. I had no idea the complexities, training and vast amount of knowledge pilots must have. It’s amazing how much you’re expected to know. Hats off to you and thanks to all the great pilots out there. Great series
It's hard to believe that after this nightmare (my stomach is in knots!) the same plane took off again with the same crew, and passengers, back to Paris and down to Marrakesh without having any clear fix!
Well, some of the passengers did end up disembarking to continue their journey to Paris by train (presumably on the LGV Lyon high speed train line) instead of waiting on the plane, apparently being too scared to stay on the flight. Source: one of the top comments is from a passenger of the flight
@@randomentity6553I'm pretty sure that seat belongs to whatever company controller made the decision to send the plane out again instead of paying for a full technical verification, including in-flight diagnosis.
@@HenryLoenwind Not true, it's because of Boeing who try at every problem to blame the crew to preserve it reputation, the new 737 (what Morocco was one of the buyers) had a serious software problem in that time till it was stopped flighting by the majority of companies who own it (including Morocco), what escalade to a huge problem even with the US GOV VS Boeing!! in such cases Boeing is contacted, as the plane had to be verified by French engineers after the landing... Boeing did blame the crew for not doing a correct job, so the company trusted it and somehow punished the crew as Boeing asked for, but after same multiple problems with different companies, Boeing faced finally the truth and did a huge callback for all the planes!!!
Have to say, I think the pilots did a great job here given the circumstances. Definitely should’ve reported the GPWS alerts et al but can understand that fear for your job comes into play at that point. I’m more amazed that they were willing to fly the plane again after all that. As far as the flight itself, totally understand that once he had visual contact he just wanted to get on the ground. Everything seemed to be progressively deteriorating, and you never know if you end up going around if that would have ended up being the last time you’re able to see the runway.
They could not have known that the rapid progressive deterioration was the "expected" effect of the single point failure. Imagine the case of a sneaky fire in the avionics. You lose instrumentation one-by-one slowly as the fire progresses and kills the aircraft. You may never get the fire warning because the system giving the warning is destroyed first.
I can almost understand the "fear for your job"... BUT from my time in the Navy, I learned that it's ALWAYS better to put more information than you need in the log... In the case of an unreliable aircraft where I'm employed to be the Captain... I'd likely quit on the spot if told they hadn't reproduced the faults and I was to fly it anywhere else for any reason... SO no... I don't think I'd hesitate to add the GPWS warnings, regardless of consequences. If there's additional training or some legitimate reason I shouldn't fly again, it's simply not worth being post-humously recognized as "The mass murderer of flight XXX"... There aren't many reasons I'd happily tell the owner(s) of a company to f*** themselves, but putting a hundered or more passengers at risk in an aircraft I already KNOW is unreliable or faulty outright is one of those kinds of reasons. I won't go as far as blame the pilots. Obviously they have different ideals of just how screwed up that plane was and whatever dubious nature their decisions were at the time... That's between them and God as far as I'm concerned... I just know (and can honestly say) what I would do in that situation. They DID a hell of a job just getting the plane safely on the ground at Lyon... AND for that, yes... my hat's off. Maybe the closest I'll ever come (on the ground) to that nature of concern and stress is on a faulty motorcycle on the Interstate... BUT I'd happily rather ride a known reliable "old school brute" kind of bike than a possibly faulty electronically overloaded "nanny bot" type of bike... The worst kind of safety system is a system that seems to be good but isn't. It give you the false sense of security that it will help you accomplish maneuvers with "relative forgiveness" when in fact, you're confidence in it is GOING to get you killed... Just like "bad gear" is even worse than no gear. You think you're being safe and reasonable, when you might as well be naked. ;o)
@@gnarthdarkanen7464 in my private company, my boss says that information takes time to write, transfert, and read, thus costs money. So, the less info, the less cost you spend. Just ask the client to pay, and that's the only important thing. I have quit this job.
@@Benoit-Pierre As a tech', myself, I've often gotten "bitched" for my write-ups when troubleshooting and effecting repairs or replacements... BUT just as often, I've uncovered patterns among seemingly unrelated issues and actually expedited repairs and rebuilds over the longer run. Just my experience, but as a tech', once you've twisted a single screw or bolt, YOU OWN IT and whatever else goes wrong with it... Clients don't like to pay for "crap". Most of them are much like us. They JUST want the g** d*** thing to WORK! The last time I worked in a shop environment for someone else, I was there for 5 years, and after my first year, I was routinely fired at least twice a week... Rather often (even though it was just the boss and me "going round and round") I got customers coming to my defense and even had one threaten the boss outright over it... I think you can understand how that works. At least, I hope so. If you never ever compromise your own values, you'll do GOOD work, and clients won't need "convinced" to pay you for it. Be proud you quit that job... AND I wish you all the best going forward. ;o)
Pilots are the heroes. The captain took the situation in hand, against the failed machine. And brought it all to safety. Risking his career. Bravo. A real pilot which is not based only on the computer, like many other operators are. Fly the plane, don t just operate it.
That's honestly where the pilots lost me. I totally get the non-stabilized approach, I think given their mental model it was the right thing to do. But there's no way in hell I'm getting back in that plane after the engineers said "sorry didn't find anything"
@justmoritz if weather conditions got any better after their first landing in lyon then flying a plane all manual with no trust given to instruments doesn't sound that bad tbh. The most dangerous thing about this flight was that the instruments were untrustworthy in a weather situation where you absolutely need them.
I’m Moroccan and I was on that plane too .. that was scary the only thing I regret Is taking the train instead of finish the flight .. I guess I didn’t want final destination movie vibes 😂😂
One day per trip, I encourage the FO to follow along with "No autopilot wednesday" where we'll hand fly unless the SOP requires the use of the AP.. Turn off the autothrottles and actually manage the aircraft during the SID, STAR, and instrument approach. It's all fun and games being a child of the FCP but we get paid the bucks to be competent pilots.
I binge watched the "Mayday" series recently and your videos are both more insightful and informing and visually more impressive. And you're like two guys on what I guess is a much smaller budget.
These are absolutely better then anything I have ever seen on broadcast TV, and shows like "seconds from disaster" were some of my favorite to watch back when I used to watch TV
Much better, simpler yet information packed contents, no nonsense graphics and/or over dramatized acting. Better than ones produced n shown by big networks n "professionals", and thats the reason (one of) me and others alike keep coming back for more.
Hats off to the captain. If I were the management I would give him a Medal of Honor. Also a 💜. And to be able to take the same flight back again ? Wow. 2 medals. I wouldn’t fly this plane a second time unless someone told me what was wrong in the first place.
It was foolhardy of the pilots to fly the aircraft again, with passengers without rectifying the fault(s) in the instrument/computer system(s). How did the airline or Boeing Co. make the aircraft serviceable again? Have you followed it through? To become a good pilot one should be thorough in manual flying, like a good physician ought to be good at clinical diagnosis. I gather this is the right way about it, right?
As always - an amazing and detailed breakdown of this incident. I have to say - if I was the Captain and I saw the runway and I thought I could land that failing aircraft I absolutely would have done it. I appreciate that you didn't cut down the crew on this flight. It's so easy to sit at my computer and see what they were doing wrong, but in the moment - with a failing aircraft, over a hundred lives at risk, poor weather, and potential low fuel concerns they were human and yet had a successful outcome. I call that a win!
think that the pilot's actions are entirely justified in this case, despite not being textbook-perfect. I think I would have felt the same about getting the bird on the ground
I was just about to comment the same thing..with the airplane seemingly getting worse and worse, after having eyes on that runway I would also not go around...but hey, thats why we can't all be pilots :p
@@MentourPilot I also like the fact that you're giving us ones (not that this is new to you, of course) where the point is about the pilot psychology and not the horrible outcome. I'm a software engineer, not a pilot, but I remember the time I was driving a then-new electric vehicle from our corporate car pool as a relatively new driver and it went dark and rebooted _while I was merging into the highway._ A mere four seconds of “oh sh--!” with no eventual negative outcome-the vehicle still steered and everything else came back before I was forced to do anything that would badly surprise other drivers-but four seconds I won't easily forget. That workload multiplying effect of “if this doesn't work what else won't work?” _while you're already doing the tricky bit_ is very real and worth understanding.
@@chrispy104k Yeah. It might have been better to abandon it on the shoulder, though (this is California) there was pretty much nothing but interchange between the point where it misbehaved and its home lot. In the moment-and I'm not defending this, in fact I think it relates to the decisions made under pressure in the incident in the video-nothing seemed substantially safer than driving it back.
Flying a 737 myself, during these videos I always ask myself: what would I do now? Honestly, during this one I also thought " what a complex failure", especially in low vis conditions. IRS failures are not much trained in a sim. I was the whole time on the same line as this crew EXCEPT when it became time to just handfly the plane in a raw data ILS. In my company this is a mandatory training for all pilots. We encourage them to manually handfly these approaches without flight director. Occasionally there is one or two that state: "why do this, we never encounter a problem with the flightdirectors". So here it was: Murphy came in: low vis and IRS issues. Conclusion: initially top handling of the crew right until the part where flying manually became the biggest threat of all. The plane could have crashed and the reason for this was NOT the internal failures but the poor handlfying skill of the pilot flying. Please aviatiors around the world: keep those skills alive, you never know when they can save the day (and your life)
As an instrument pilot, I was cringing when they were deviating from the localizer and glideslope, thinking I could do better than that; seems to me they had become robots more than pilots and could stand a few hours in the sim doing ILS's.
This one had me on the edge of my seat, the tension really builds. But what a nightmare set of circumstances for the crew to deal with. And the fact that they flew back to Marrakesh in the same aircraft on the same day is jaw-dropping.
I would not have had the nerve to fly the same plane again, given the multitude of problems, and for the company to expect them to do so is unbelievable. A tortuous act!
I can't tell you how relieved I was when that plane landed. You couldn't have paid me a million dollars to fly that plane back up! Thank God that nobody was killed! What an incredibly brilliant explanation of events and details. You Sir are one hell of a professional in every sense of the word. You always have me on the edge of my seat praying for a miracle. Thank you!
I used to suffer from flight anxiety but since I’ve started watching your videos (about a year ago), I have zero anxiety when flying. I’m flying out of town this Thursday - I’m super excited, and not nervous at all. 😁🙌🏻
Check out some of his very early videos where he breaks down everything that is going on and addresses concerns about specific fears people may have about flying.
You are ready for your own show on NetFlix, Petter.. there are plenty of interesting channels about aviation on YT, but there is nothing like a pro presenting and interpreting this sort of event. That's combined with excellent editing and visuals. Much respect!
@@MentourPilot I always find your voice so calming even after a few dozen errors has occurred on a flight. It is total cluster F of problems but do not worry he will guide you through it so it all makes sense anyway.
I spent a fair amount of time testing software. One thing I learned is that there is no such thing as an intermittent bug, you just haven't figured out what triggers it. And honestly, I think the Captain made the right decision... get the piece of crap on the ground. I'm just surprised they agreed to fly the dammed thing again!
Problem is that in the physical world things like heat, contamination, corrosion etc. can produce infinitely complex faults that would require you to simulate the universe to find out.
Intermitent bug means you dont know how to reliably reproduce the issue. So no idea what you are talking about. Saying the bug is intermittent doesn't mean it isnt a bug. Never has.
@@deth3021 Ever repaired a crackly potentiometer? a corroded input jack? those kind of problems can start or go away when a device stretches with heat, or the moisture level in the air increases, or the device is being exposed to cycles of these conditions like in the case of a plane... Unless you can predict the conditions a part has gone through by modeling with your infinitely fast supercomputer (or godlike brainpower) some faults will be intermittent if you accept the limits of technology or yourself. [This is getting way too existenial lol]
@@VeraTR909 did you reply to the wrong person? Im not the one who said there wasnt intermittent bugs. Also bugs are software, you described hw issues. Which would be more typically be called intermitent faults.
As an industrial electronics designer, I think I would have been tearing out my hair with this one. Those sort of intermittent faults are hard enough to find with machines that don't fly. It's interesting the way the maintenance team couldn't reproduce it, so they just cleared it. I would never have taken such a risk. I would have gone and sat in the cockpit for a test flight. That's the only way to know something is really fixed.
I maintain a shop full of industrial manufacturing equipment, and as often as I complain about some poorly designed and intermittent failure prone equipment, in order to put things in perspective I often comment that "Well, thank god these people don't build airplanes"
Very few situations warrant a test flight. That is a gigantic net loss that 99% of airlines will not permit except under specific things like dual engine changes. Source: am airline technician.
The strangest thing in this story isn't that so many faults and so many warnings hit the same plane in the same flight over two successive foggy airports, but that they actually came out of it alive.
This is terrifying. Throughout your career it is drilled into your head to trust your instruments, and then your instruments start giving false information? I can't imagine a situation more frightening.
And more problems. Your instrumentation seems correct, but then because of something, the auto pilot recieves wrong informations from one of the biggest and only working instrumentation of that type left onboard.
Hello, I am 12 years old and a av-geek and your videos are some of the best out there these videos are just magnificent. Better then others. Keep going.
I managed to lister the recordings between the PNF and the ATC. the co-pilot's voice was so stressful with the gpwrs shouting sink rate... the captain was trying to get out of the cloud layer to see the runway and go land … the passages were lucky to have 2 very good pilots in this cockpit
the captain did the right thing, (considering unreliable navigation information) take control, hand fly and get the aircraft on the ground. a 3rd go around attempt may have resulted in more instrument failure. get the plane on the ground and figure out the problems later. better to run off the end of the runway at 50 knots, than controlled flight into terrain at 150 knots.
He safely landed the plane, which is the MAIN thing. Kudos for that. But why didn’t he run the checklists? Why didn’t he follow procedure to figure out what was wrong? What if he hasn’t been such an accomplished pilot? Not everyone could have landed that safely. This is a training opportunity. They had the fuel to figure it out, but they didn’t know that - because they didn’t check. And they were failed by the mechanics and pilots before them - for sure.
@@CritiqueAI The checklists are written by engineers on the ground who know all the details about the plane and have days and weeks to consider all possibilities and downsides of certain actions. I think the actual problem is that the pilots here had to run like 6 different non-normal checklists at the same time (lots of failures) and the workload just got too high.
Still I think that pilots deserve more praise than hate in spite of flying unstabilized approach, one more go-around could potentially lead to even more problems that might have ended in a disaster.
I can't believe the pilots were made to fly the same plane on two more legs without the issues being resolved. It should've been grounded. The pilot did the right thing by going forward with the landing once he saw the runway.
I have been in similar situations during my career as a nuclear plant operator - things are seen that don't make sense, things are just inches away from being under control, heavy mental workload to carry out time-critical operations. In my case it came down to something similar to "Aviate, navigate, communicate" - break the situation down to the basics to get through safely and successfully. It helped me to clear away everything running around in my mind and allowed me to be calm enough to focus on the basic critical needs of the situation. Automation of systems to reduce workload and increase efficiency is great...until it isn't. My situations occurred on a process with minimal automation but relied upon reliable instrumentation to operate safely and successfully and this lack of automation actually aided me where these pilots had to fight it. I'm not a pilot and I'm not sure whether or not these folks could have gone back to a Cessna 172-Level of operation of this aircraft to bypass all of the conflicting indications/system alarms/system disconnects earlier. Thanks for the video - I am always interested in the consequences of automation in our world and the unintended consequences when it fails us.
Wow, you did an excellent job presenting the events of this incident. What I found really surprising was that the pilots never declared an emergency in such a dire situation.
I always think before starting to watch that the videos are too long but once I started, I can never believe how good the quality of these videos are and how they help me as a pilot to adapt the checklist to the King Air I fly privatly. I have never regretted to watch any of your bideos! Please continue, these are a huge contribution to make aviation safer!!
I think that the pilot's actions are entirely justified in this case, despite not being textbook-perfect. I think I would have felt the same about getting the bird on the ground.
@@ALEXWORLD11 Yeah, if it were me, I'd have at least declared PAN-PAN and told the controllers a bit about what was going on. They can't help you if you don't tell them what's happening. They could have gotten more attention and position information from the controllers if they had used PAN-PAN or MAYDAY. One thing I (as an American) have found kind of weird, though, is it seems that pilots in Europe and recent European colonies are somewhat more hesitant to declare an emergency than we're taught to be in the U.S. I even see a lot of criticism from European pilots on videos from incidents in the U.S. about pilots declaring when they didn't think they should have. In the U.S., it generally seems to be taught more along the lines of "If there's any doubt, declare." The worst that can happen from declaring when it wasn't completely necessary is that you need to fill out some extra paperwork after landing and possibly some other flights have to hold or get vectored a few minutes longer. The worst that can happen from not declaring when you should have is much, much worse than that. Even if the situation is generally under control but there's some significant doubt about the state of the aircraft and/or crew, there's no harm in declaring. The controllers then know to focus more on your flight and they can help relieve some of the pressure and task saturation on the pilots. It's a lot better to be back on the ground with some extra paperwork to fill out than to risk damage to the aircraft... or the people inside it.
@@vbscript2 Agreed on that part, they should have issued PAN-PAN, as the aircraft had multiple systems failure. The landing showed some really good piloting skills, though.
I still have my (15 years outdated) 737-800 manuals I kept after retirement. Going through them in my office chair daylight VFR I can see how even if they had gone through all the checklists correctly there still would have been confusion. I flew both military and airline for 32 years. I realize that time is money, but the Air Force training in my early years went into much more depth on systems training. Granted, the transport category aircraft I flew in the begining of my career did not have FMC’s IRU’s, sophisticated air data computers, or glass displays, just steam gauges, a basic autopilot, a rudimentary flight director, a living, breathing navigator, a flight engineer, and a radio operator. In normal operations all instrument approaches were hand flown as there was no approach mode on the autopilot. Before everyone gets up in arms I am not saying this is better, it just prepared me personally to be a very good pilot.
I feel like those pilots needed a medal, recommendation form the report sounded like a reprimand. I can’t imagine having to deal with all that at once and it ending so well.
It was a light reprimand but they were assumed reasonable. If the cockpit voice recordings were there it might've been lighter- they could've easily been fired for this if any reasonable pilot could say this was inexcusable or could never happen to them. I doubt there was any quibble about retraining manual IRS, help build their own confidence back. Not something to forget in a hurry. I think they'd be much better pilots after an experience like that.
@@mandowarrior123 Yep, not pulling the cockpit voice recorder made it appear the pilots had something to hide. I'm sure that only made their "punishment" a lot worse.
I’m a long time subscriber and the quality of your videos have been rising constantly. I’m not a pilot yet I find the technical depth in your videos highly educational and satisfying. Hats off to these pilots putting the plane down safely but hats off to you too for providing such good quality content. Thank you.
That was intense! Your voiceover, together with the amazing visuals, had me at the edge of my seat through the entire episode! I can REALLY symphatize with the flight crew in this story. Can anyone really blame them for doing any of the misses they did? I know I can't!
I so feel for pilots with all the conflicts they have to deal with: "Always trust your instruments; except when you shouldn't" "Always run the checklists; expect when you don't have time." "Always stabilise the approach or go around; except..." Well, you all know the score. But that's why the best pilots are the ones who can show initiative when it's called for. I could never have the skills or concentration required to be a pilot; but I do remember what my driving instructor told me. He said there was one rule you could always fall back on if you were confused about what do do in a situation. "Always do the safest thing." Of course spotting what that is is often the battle. He also added "sometimes that might be driving on the pavement"; which did give me pause. Although I can imagine situations.
OMG!.. you had me on the edge of my seat as I had no idea of the final outcome. All I wanted was to be on the ground and get my heart rate back to normal. I cant even begin to imagine how the pilots felt at the time. Great video and well presented.. thank you.
I’m absolutely loving this series ! You basically go through every mistake the pilots do , but you try your best to make them not look bad . Keep up the great work !
I wish you'd also cover how the captain handled the same accident on the way back, and having an audio/video illustration with his reaction would be brilliant. Jokes aside, the crew did great job. You as well. Thank you.
Never followed aviation in the past, but since COVID isolation and this channel I have LiveATC and Flightradar on my tablet and have been seen planespotting. Thanks for the new hobby! (But my feet remain firmly on the ground). So, thank-you.
There's many CRM problems obviously but actually I can see that having the runway insight and with multiple apparently unconnected and escalating failures given that he was able to safely land the aircraft I can see why he did it - it's only with hindsight that we know that there wasn't some common and deteriorating situation. I'm amazed that the pilot flew it back to Paris Orly and Marakech without a fault being identified though - absolutely no way you'd have gotten me to do so. You also didn't explain what happened to the aircraft in the end and what the cause of the various faults were (please tell me this plane still isn't flying around with them!).
Even as a technical person, this kind of phantom intermittent error nonsense reaaaaaly makes you think that gremlins (or Machine Spirit if you are so inclined) are a real thing. Sure, this is probably some weird interaction between systems that nobody could predict is a thing, but given that it can't be reproduced on the ground, makes it nearly unfixable. At that point you either mark this machine as cursed or rip it apart and rebuild it completely in hopes that fixes SOMETHING.
This episode made the hairs on my neck stand up. I’m reminded of the captain of a Swiss flight who had to deal with an engine failure after takeoff on camera, and after dealing with the initial steps pulled out a chocolate bar and casually ate it to calm himself.
The aircraft involved, CN-ROJ is performing domestic flight AT1413 between Laayoune and Casablanca as we speak...😅 To be fair, it's five years ago so I hope we can assume the issues were resolved in the end.
I can only imagine how thrilled that pilot was to have to get back in the plane, after maintenance could not find what was causing the issues. Oh, and with passengers aboard, at that. Jeepers.
Thank you so much for your amazing content as always. It is always a great day to see you have uploaded. Your way of explaining things is very informative and never blames or over dramatises the story. Thanks!
I love your stuff! It is so informative and doesn't morph into sensationalism. It makes me feel more comfortable with flying, as it points out how rare fatal accidents are given the massive number of flights taken each year, and also how systems are upgraded if problems do occur!
This was a gripping episode, wasn’t sure how it was going to end. I like the fact you cover incidents and not just accidents. Even the small incidents which don’t have their own Wikipedia pages are interesting videos to watch
Great video, really well presented and researched 👍 35:20 The most amazing thing to me as a motor mechanic, now in mining maintenance control, is that the plane was allowed back into the air again with critical systems faults 😬 In our mining company prestarts, there is a list of critical systems that require the machine is parked up and not used again until the fault is found and rectified. Something as critical as autopilot and autoland are surely such systems. Yes, maintenance checked it on the ground and could not find the fault in a brief inspection, but quite obviously the fault was still present and remained a real hazard. This is the worst thing to me.
Yes, indeed. It is real hazard to put pressure on the crew to perfom a two-legs-return-flight with uncovered critical systems failure´s - while putting passengers into the cabin of this plane during this flight.
Excellent presentation again, Petter. Not only are you a good and entertaining storyteller, your knowledge of flying as a pilot makes the whole thing deeply fascinating!
Thanks for the great reporting on these accidents. I used to fly Cessna's mustering cattle in Australia. Doing VFR most of the time but also being type rated for 'Instruments' and multi engine. You explain things well and have helped some of the students now mustering in the Cessna's, Re; Fatigue, fly the plane etc. Thank you.
@@MentourPilot "...and right at that moment the pilots realized.... that everything was configured correctly. BUT THEN, they realized to their shock, the coffee was actually quite good this time!"
@@subbss (in Mentour's voice): Something you have to understand about company drink containers is that they are quite slippery. For this reason the pilot had developed a habit of sliding their pinky finger underneath the container to better maintain positive control. As it turns out, this was an excellent thing to do, as you'll understand later on.
@@MentourPilot Oh, yes! I know one element. When, a long time ago, I first went flying with pets (not in the cabin), to emigrate for the first time, I was quite nervous about how that would go (for the pets, I mean, two cats at the time and one of them had been quite worried). But that landing was the smoothest EVER! Made me feel very grateful..
Beautiful job, Captain. Your objective explanations, combined with the pinpoint video, make this so realistic. Really enjoy your work and appreciate the time you put into it.
Thank you again Petter, the more I hear what went wrong here means that all pilots need to actually get further training specifically for what to do when something crops up.
Well done for flying the plane and not getting bogged down in worrying about the warnings. Only slight failure was not to check fuel and carry on to 3rd destination.
I don't understand why they did not give a pan pan call to the approach controller and ask for approach vectors all the way down. All they needed to say was "autopilot is not functioning - running low on fuel, request talk down". Lyon radar has this capability. Also the aircraft should never have been allowed on line in the first place until the fundamental issues were completely fixed.
The primary thing I didn't like was the floating issue basically ignored and not even noted in big red letters for the next crews flying this aircraft.
You can only vector an aircraft to intercept the ILS. The tower can't make the minor corrections fast enough to keep you on the localiser and, as was said in the video, the tower couldn't even tell if they were above or below the glideslope. The tower simply didn't have the tools.
@@ImperrfectStranger - still... This is not a passenger trying to land a 747. This is an experienced crew. If they can't take - let us call it navigational hints to make sure they are coming in on the right heading - and get under the cloud cover and descend at some reasonabel rate while flying manually, they should not be allowed into a cockpit. Sure, some busy city bureaucrats might complain 2 weeks later about violating noise levels over residential areas by flying to low, or almost snipping the top of a chimney, but it gets the plane on the ground in one piece.
@@JanBruunAndersen They may have been "professionals", but their basic flying skills were seriously atrophied. They couldn't even intercept and maintain an altitude without the autopilot. Even with ILS signals they flew consistently and dangerously below the glideslope. What professional pilot ignores terrain warnings? There were probably a lot of navigational cues available to them but they failed to read them (probably due to poor CRM).
This one had me at the edge all the time, lots of errors, so much info coming out and the fact that I didn't know what to expect as an outcome drived me nuts. Oh my god... I would crash that faulty system with my own hands to take revenge on the aircraft haha. Nerve-wracking experience for sure, I'm soo glad the pilots made it
True, also after Petter said “things are gonna get much worse” I was 100% sure that they’re gone, but luckily it’s a happy end…almost spoiled in Marrakesh…
Yeah, multiple seemingly unrelated failures occuring more or less at once is scary. Even if the systems affected are not vital, the simultanous failures are not trained for in anyway and I don't blame the pilots at all for wanting to get down as soon as possible. Since we don't know what was actually causing this, or how severe it really would be if more systems would start to fail, the decision to not go around once they were visual was absolutely the right one I feel. Qantas 72 come to mind. Scary stuff. Great video!
Moroccan pilots are one of the best in the world 👨✈️!! Matter of fact, they’re highly respected in the aviation industry. They undergo rigorous training and often serve in both civilian and military capacities. The Royal Moroccan Air Force, in particular, has a strong reputation, and Moroccan pilots have been recognized for their skill and professionalism. they have earned a solid international reputation.
Brilliant instinctual flying by the Captain, given all the circumstances. He flew the plane, and he got it down, under what must have been horrible pressure, when his first officer practically bottled it. ...Boeing 🤦♂ It was great seeing you with Juan Browne in Barcelona. You guys should collaborate more often.
Excellent review of a difficult situation. Re: logbook review, during my 25 years as a captain for a major airline, I would always flip back through the log history at least a month to see if there were any recurring gripes. I would often see repeated gripes and then be well prepared.
I would do this as a motorcoach operator as well. But there were always the guys that would show up at the last minute and wouldn't have the time to look at the logs.
Thank God Petter exists, such an original way of explaining these aircraft related mishaps, a lot of work both explaining and practically showing us how and what happened. Thank you!
This was so explained so damn well. I can't believe they had to fly the aircraft twice more that day. Your videos are amazing. This is such valuable content.
I would prefer watching mentour pilot flight incidents vid over those produced by big networks n names 10 times over. The information were clear n concise, simple yet informative, no over dramatized acting n graphics... Rarely there'll be a dull moment when watching the contents. Best wishes n life for Mentour Pilot, safe flight all the times...👍
❤Not sure if you see this. But anyway your blog is absolutely fascinating. i am a retired systems engineer, so my instincts remain. I had a thought…. On many of your shows that require it, I notice a recurring problem. Hand luggage. Suggestion: auto locks on overhead storage controlled by the cabin crew with reminders at briefings that the overhead will remain locked during. emergency.Evacuations. Might help in turbulence also. Love the dogs. Even though they seemed bored😢😢😢😢
See some common threads here between the issues the Air Maroc 737-800 had and the 737 MAX AOA sensors (MCAS system) problem. Very much enjoyed hearing about this incident I'd never heard about before, thank you sir..
I know I am repeating myself but the visuals are absolutely stunning; down to actually displaying the check up list in the cockpit; it is actually scarry as we feel in the plane!!
CRAZY! So many small things that piled up… this could easily have been a disaster but somehow they landed without aircraft damage or injury. I don’t think I would’ve felt comfortable flying the same plane on the same day. Hopefully they got the explanations and fixes they were looking for. Just so crazy!
The crazy part was that the maintenance engineer just inspected the plane and said he or she couldn't find any problem with it. So the pilots were sent to new trip *with plane full of passangers* with zero fixes or explanations. I'm pretty sure I will not be entering any Royal Air Maroc planes in the future. This seems more like company level issue than about skill of these pilots.
I love it when you say"...but things are about to get much much worse." Then "...things are about to get really hairy." But your videos are always getting ..."much much better!" Thank you!
Get 20% discount on the yearly subscription of Brilliant by using this code 👉🏻 brilliant.org/Mentourpilot/
Finally a non propaganda video..
so refreshing.. UA-cam channels need to stop this, talking about politics, which they have no capacity of understanding..
That would be like me, a graduate with a degree in politics, giving my opinion to you on piloting 🤦♂️
Moulton college n r connected in Oxford university not sure how
........
@@vvac201 🤣 You get what you pay for.
7:43 why don't those logbook have red papers on corners so captain or first officer get direct attention on the paper which actually having fault reported.... As you said they are not going to check whole log book, but if someone see that this particular aircraft having many more red flags in log book they might get interest to check those errors happened 6 or 8 months ago
I was on board the plane. When we landed in Lyon, most passengers wanted to get out of the plane as they were too scared to continue to Paris. The screw were not willing to let them leave the plane but the passengers eventually got out and took the train. Only 35 minutes later we took off and made it safely to our destination. Of course no one told us that the situation was so serious and I happened to come across this video completely by chance and realise that I was a passenger on that flight 😅
Omg such weire coincidence hhhh i was searching in the comments section for morrocan people hhhh wasnt expecting to find a morrocan passenger
Glad you are safe. Hi from Texas.
@@danielaramburo7648 🙏
Hi there Zakaria, I'm glad that you are in the land of the living - things could have been so much worse.
@@johannahunderwood4596 thank you Johannah
I can empathize with the pilot. When you feel like the plane is falling apart around you and you have a window to put the thing on the ground safely, I'd probably do the same thing and just take the slap on the wrist for not following procedures. The fact he reverted to his native French is plenty of evidence how stressed this entire situation made him.
I can imagine the pilots were getting towards the point of "how long till we lose even more instruments? Do we risk trying to do a better/more standard stabilised approach not knowing if we will have displays/systems etc" This are the situations where you will ALWAYS need a human pilot.
Unfortuantely this is something that is only going to get worse as systems get more automated/advanced relying on more and more systems and engineers will always be battling with the beancounters in acceptable risk/cost analysis (think 737 MAX and single point of failure being acceptable)
@@PantherSerpahin I argue until I'm blue in the face with the "get rid of human pilots" crowd. First, I can't make them understand that we aren't arguing opposites. They are arguing to remove the humans and fly with only automated systems. I am not arguing we eliminate automation. I'm arguing we need both. They have a disturbing faith in man-made systems, as if, somehow, the humans making the system are less fallible than the humans flying the aircraft.
@@excavatoree As anyone who works with computers on the regular will tell you. Computers are as stupid as the person using/programming them. I am 100% behind relying on automation more and more as it does remove the human variable from equations.
However, the Human variable should ALWAYS be there in an oversight role as a very minimum to go "This doesnt look/feel/seem right," and is able to stop, review and possibly correct/abort what the computer is programmed to do.
@@PantherSerpahin if automation causes one crash but prevents multiple human error crashes it seems like a reasonable trade off
@@excavatoree critical systems are not really redundant, because of cost and complexity reasons. So the first thing would be to make everything _actually_ redundant for full autonomy. That is an enormous task in itself.
The second would be in case of full autonomy, to employ pilot-engineers. Basically the two pilots should be trained to work with the normally autonomous system, and understand it well in case of a malfunction. This is a _very_ high bar.
This way autonomy in aviation can lower the chance of accidents an order of magnitude or even more, but it would not lower the costs at all. The opposite: pilots would need even more training.
Airlines using autonomy to replace humans, to make things cheaper would produce just as many accidents as humans nowadays. Even highly intelligent autonomy is vulnerable to massive coincidences, there always should be two human pilots on board (at least until AGI becomes truly superhuman in every conceivable way)
Don't stop until you have every aviation accident covered. The content is gold.
For one covered, another accident is in the works.
Just looking at the top 25 countries with the most fatal air crashes since 1945 he'd have to do 3,370 videos. And that's without doing videos on all the non-fatal crashes, near misses, incidents etc. At 1 video per week it would take 200 years, if all air accidents and incidents ceased from today.
So damn true.
@@daverussell457 you have too much time on your hands
@@daverussell457 nice
11:10 As an engineer, problems 'sorting themselves out' scare me just as much as problems which persist.
Nah just means I can pretend the problem doesn't exist until someone else is on call 🤣
As an engineer too, problems that fix themselves scares the shit out of me since it means something critical is acting randomly; so I expect more problems that on the surface dont relate to each other. You feel like someone on paroll one mistake and you're back to jail lol
@@MrTsatia as a programmer, I share this fear. Granted, a malfunction on my part means that my shitty game will crash, not a fucking plane, but if something "sorts itself out" you know shit is giga fucked
@@RealRaven6229 what engine are you using for making games?
@@shahriarhakim6673 processing. I can't recommend it.
I cannot believe that poor Captain and First Officer had to fly the *same* plane back to Marrakech without any of the faults addressed! How their hearts must have sunk when the autopilot disconnected on their final approach. “Here we go again.” The report into the accident in my opinion, fails to recognise that hindsight is wonderful. It’s very easy to criticise the actions of the crew from the safety of the ground, with all the time in the world to think about the best course of action. At the end of the day, the Captain made decisions which got everyone safely on the ground, on the runway and with no (physical) damage to the aircraft. The plane’s mental state was in turmoil and I can just imagine the crew’s relief evaporating in an instant when they learned that they had to fly it again!
it's because of Boeing who try at every problem to blame the crew to preserve it reputation, the new 737 (what Morocco was one of the buyers) had a serious software problem in that time till it was stopped flighting by the majority of companies who own it (including Morocco), what escalade to a huge problem even with the US GOV VS Boeing!!
Hello ! May Allah protect and guide you to his light and happiness in this life and the hereafter, God bless, Ameen. Excuse me for giving a little presentation of Islam, because it is very misunderstood nowadays, especially on those « Antichrist's » times, where media and politics are mixed to distort history and truth. And terrorists (puppets of the Antichrist) who misinterpret verses, out of ignorance and political motivations, and take them out of historical context (just like radical atheists do by the way) don't help either. Thank you very much for your time.
First of all, if you have any questions regarding Islam and yourself, just open the Quran randomly, and you will find the answer in front of you, like a miracle and a sign from God.
Islam is an arabic word that means the Surrender to the One and Only God, our Creator, Protector, Provider, who gives us life and all that we have, we are safe and sound by his will and grace, we are His and to Him we return, and we have to thank him in this trial life by submitting to him by our free will, or later in the Day of judgment when it's too late to save our own skin. Islam was the original Religion descended to earth from heaven with Adam and Eve (peace and blessing be upon them) in the beginning of humanity. and was passed to people with the succession of the 124 000 prophets and 315 messengers of God to all nations and civilizations since, passing by Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Ismaël, Joseph, Moses, Aaron, Joshua, David, Solomon and Jesus (Peace and blessing be upon them) during the history of mankind, the last replaces and completes the previous, until the succession of the last messenger of God fourteen centuries ago, Muhammad (Peace and blessing be upon him) to complete the noble morals of all mankind, to bring humans and jinns out of darkness into light, and to purify people's religion and belief from corruption and polytheism, and return it to purity and true monotheism, like it was in the times of the prophets (Peace and blessing be upon them).
Many Religions that we know nowadays, at their beginning were true and under Islam, initiated by one of the prophets of God, but their original teachings, history and scriptures have been corrupted over time with falsification and polytheism, or lost and replaced with false ones. That's why Islam is the only Religion accepted by God nowadays, which consists in bearing witness that there is no god besides Allah (God in Aramaic, the original language of Jesus and the Gospel), and that Muhammad is His servant and messenger, just like Jesus and Moses and others are His servants and messengers. Never a messenger of God said he was God or literally son of God, it was the people after him who changed the words of God and corrupted the Religion. God is unique and absolute, He does not need to have a family and sons or to associate anyone else with His kingdom, He can simply create whatever He wants, everything belongs to Him, and to Him everything will return. Allah said in Surah Al-Mu’minun : “God has never begotten a son, nor is there any god besides Him. Otherwise, each god would have taken away what it has created, and some of them would have gained supremacy over others. Glory be to God, far beyond what they describe. The Knower of the hidden and the manifest. He is exalted, far above what they associate. (91-92 / Translated by ITANI).
Allah means the one and only God, the God of all prophets and creatures, the creator of the universe and mankind, and the Master of the Day of judgment, where our destiny, Hell or Paradise, is decided based on our faith and deeds in this trial life, and above all, Allah's mercy.
Allah said in Surah Al-Ikhlas : In the name of God, the Gracious, the Merciful.
Say, “He is God, the One. God, the Absolute. He begets not, nor was He begotten. And there is none comparable to Him.” (1-4 / Translated by ITANI).
Allah said in Surah An-Nisa : O FOLLOWERS of the Gospel! Do not overstep the bounds [of truth] in your religious beliefs, and do not say of God anything but the truth. The Christ Jesus, son of Mary, was but God's Apostle - [the fulfilment of] His promise which He had conveyed unto Mary - and a soul created by Him. Believe, then, in God and His apostles, and do not say, "[God is] a trinity". Desist [from this assertion] for your own good. God is but One God; utterly remote is He, in His glory, from having a son: unto Him belongs all that is in the heavens and all that is on earth; and none is as worthy of trust as God. Never did the Christ feel too proud to be God's servant, nor do the angels who are near unto Him. And those who feel too proud to serve Him and glory in their arrogance [should know that on Judgment Day] He will gather them all unto Himself: (171-172 / Translated by Muhammad Asad).
Allah the Most Merciful said in Surah Ali-Imran : Behold, the only [true] religion in the sight of God is [man's] self-surrender unto Him; and those who were vouchsafed revelation aforetime took, out of mutual jealousy, to divergent views [on this point] only after knowledge [thereof] had come unto them. But as for him who denies the truth of God's messages - behold, God is swift in reckoning!
Thus, [O Prophet,] if they argue with thee, say, "I have surrendered my whole being unto God, and [so have] all who follow me!" - and ask those who have been vouchsafed revelation aforetime, as well as all unlettered people, "Have you [too] surrendered yourselves unto Him?" And if they surrender themselves unto Him, they are on the right path; but if they turn away - behold, thy duty is no more than to deliver the message: for God sees all that is in [the hearts of] His creatures.
Verily, as for those who deny the truth of God's messages, and slay the prophets against all right, and slay people who enjoin equity - announce unto them a grievous chastisement.
It is they whose works shall come to nought both in this world and in the life to come; and they shall have none to succour them.
(19-22 / Translated by Muhammad Asad)..
God said : Say, “We believe in Allah, and in what was revealed to us, and in what was revealed to Abraham, and Ishmael, and Isaac, and Jacob, and the Patriarchs, and in what was given to Moses and Jesus, and in what was given to the prophets from their Lord. We do not differentiate between any of them. And to Him, we surrender.”
(2:136 / Translated by Community)
Salam (Peace)
There’s an old adage: “the superior pilot uses his superior judgement to avoid situations which may require his superior flying skills…” This ended well, but had several severe flight path excursions which could have resulted in a full crash. With all hell breaking-loose, but the aircraft still flyable, the Captain has to pull back and assess the problems and come up with the best course of action. He didn’t…
@@tonyledsham2810I can’t remember the fine details on this nightmare flight as it was some time ago I watched it, but just because there’s an “old saying” doesn’t mean it fits every occasion. Whatever the circumstances, I don’t believe it was very fair to ask the same crew to pilot the plane back with no adjustments made. The crew did OK anyway. Maybe it was because he handled the situation well that he was asked to fly the plane again. If nobody could find out what was wrong with it, after a detailed inspection on the ground, the Captain can hardly be expected to, in the heat of the moment, several thousand feet in the air. If the crew had been totally incompetent, they’d have had their test pilots fly the plane back.
I’m with the last commenter, the blame probably lies with Boeing. That is Maximus38 - not the previous person with the spam.
Well Moira, I suggest you watch the video again. Mentourpilot does a great job of explaining it.
If you didn’t like my previous adage, I’ve got another one for you: “aviate, navigate, communicate”
I’m no fan of Boeing, but they did issue a service bulletin. Air Maroc didn’t action it, but the IRS issue could have been handled by a competent crew. Despite lots of fuel, they just wanted to get the airplane on the ground, without properly troubleshooting the problem.
As a former military avionics technician, I am dismayed that the repeat, intermittent fault was allowed to persist for such a long time. When you keep changing the same black box (in this case, the ADIRU) and get the same intermittent fault you have to realize that black box is not the problem and that it has to be something else. Some years ago, we had an intermittent fault with the AN/ARN-84 TACAN system on a C-130H. In flight, the "OFF" flag would suddenly drop on both the pilot's and copilot's ADI even though the system was switched on, then anything from a few seconds later to minutes or even an hour later, the flag would lift. This would keep happening throughout the flight. No matter how long we ran the system on the ground, even after changing the Receiver-Transmitter unit (RT-1022) twice, we could never get it to repeat, but the pilots still reported the fault. Then we did a test during an engine ground run (for a different issue) and bingo - when the throttles were pushed beyond "Flight Idle" the TACAN flag started intermittently dropping and lifting. Long story short, it turned out that just ONE captive pin in the 56 pin socket on the RT-1022 mounting rack was loose. On the ground it would make enough contact to work, but in flight, with the engines running, the vibrations were sufficient for the pin to vibrate loose. We change that mounting rack, and the problem disappeared, never to return.
I would bet this fault ended up being found to have been caused by something like what I have written about here... an electrical connection issue.
Yes, most probably.
I've seen millions worth of equipment scrapped as 'jinxed' hardware. Some problems simply get too expensive to be worth keep trying, some minor manufacturing fault can keep inducing errors.
Hardware and software side is similar, ram issues, voltage issues, ram causing software issues.
One bizzare one i saw one is a power surge overwrote the voltage on a motherboard, overvolting the cpu. That still doesn't make sense to me.
Alas, the worst kind of problem is an intermittent one.
Indeed. It will be some common component (wiring or connectors most likely) causing something like this. Just ignoring it is not good.
It goes in my mind, correctly or otherwise, that the Apollo systems claimed to be in triplicate.
@@mandowarrior123 I don't know why my brain generated this idea, buuuut: what if we built a plane out of jinxed hardware and see where it goes 😅
Personally think the crew did well here. Let’s not forget that the first warning that came was not known to the crew. The captain genuinely believed keeping the aircraft in the air was far more of a danger than getting it on the ground.
Yeah, it seems very reasonable to me that the captain went for it when he got a visual. There wasn't enough fuel to just keep circling around until they figure it out, and it was also unclear if the state of the aircraft is further deteriorating with new failures popping up at seemingly random. And what a precise landing it was, I think the captain was really good with the manual controls. (A bit worse with tech log though.)
I'll give credit were it's do these guys used crm veary well and kept the rules aviate navigate communicate tech log needs work but good flying
It may not have been done "perfectly" in terms of flying a stabilized approach, but I think his call to get the airplane on the ground considering how strangely it was acting and just how much stuff was failing in and out, was 100% correct.
As a GA pilot who flew many flights into IMC I can certainly relate. Once he established a clear visual of the runway environment and realized he could continue visually it made perfect sense to land albiet it was not the usual stabilized approach. He knew it was within his experience and ability to land safely. This is actually why they train and what they train for... to deal with the unexpected, think quickly and clearly. Kudos to both of them. Another great video from Mentour. Keep em coming!
i mean to him it seemed that everything around him was fk breaking and if he kept it in air who knows what else might fail
I’m with the captain on this one: I can see the runway, I have enough control to land, let’s get on the ground and sort this mess out on stand. Astonishing that they would AGAIN put the aircraft back into passenger service without fully resolving the issue. That made everyone on the next flight a maintenance test pilot, which I’m pretty sure they did NOT sign up for!
Indeed, exactly.
Totally agree. There's *no way* I would've flown that plane again until all the faults were found and fixed. Take it up for a test flight (or several) in good weather, until the problems can be reproduced and solved.
Yes, it's hard for me to understand what was happening in the pilot's mind. He was so eagar - understandably - to get that plane on the ground, but then he's willing to fly it a 2nd time?
Yeah, the longer we're airborne with that many faults, the more likely things are going to keep getting worsez
This is such a relatable story. I hope the crew didn't get into too much trouble. The Captain was at the end of his rope, saw his chance to get that plane on the ground and took it. His actions were completely understandable.
Yes, my thoughts exactly. He identified an opportunity to land from his position and took it.
Totally agree
This. There comes a point where the objectively wrong thing to do is actually the best possible course of action. In this case, it was "get that bird on the ground and end the ever worsening situation while it's still somewhat manageable"
I dont think the pilot did anything majorly wrong. What would you do if your vehicle started doing this? Say, it would accelerate or brake slightly on its own or it would turn itself. Would you choose to drive it around town after you had already made it to your home street?
I know its not an exact example but when electronic systems start to fail me I get real nervous. I am far more comfortable with mechanical failures because when its broken, then it doesnt work in a predictable way which means its reliably broken. If electronics intermittently fail then their unreliability is even more worrisome.
@@LavenderSystem69Indeed. At that point, he must have expected to lose all instrumentation if he did another go-around. That would have been fine on a clear day, but getting into visual range for a VFR landing would have been very questionable with such a low cloud cover. So, with the airport in sight, he ignored the instruments and warnings and did what was effectively, if not by name, a visual landing.
I had no idea of the complexities of piloting a modern commercial airplane. They are absolutely bewildering. The pilots have my admiration.
☝️What you said. 🇺🇸
Hats off to the pilots, I can only imagine being in such a situation! The ending really took me off guard, so because the issues couldn't be reproduced the plane was considered OK to fly back home with the same crew and a new group of passengers? That's really disappointing on RAM's end giving the pilots no chance to recover and allowing dozens of passengers to board an unreliable aircraft...
Indeed. Boarding a plane that might have serious defects is one thing; boarding a plane that is _known_ to have serious defects is quite another.
@@flagmichael Yes. Indeed unbelievable. And that crew after that experience was definetely not in a condition to fly ANY aircraft, not to talk about the same one.
@@flagmichael forewarned is forearmed. Or something. They'd seen it happen first hand, and managed to make it work.... sort of. I'd certainly put more faith in them than a pilot who hadn't seen it.
My opinion: the crew should have been within their rights to refuse to fly that same plane any further, until the fault(s) that explained all unexplained failures of the previous flight had been found and fixed. The engineer reporting "no fault found" doesn't cut it. The fact that a fault demonstrably exists, but that you can't find it, doesn't make it OK.
That said, intermittent faults can be hard to find, and two independent intermittent faults on the same bird is sheer bad luck, human error creeping in somewhere, or a sign of too much complexity in the design.
I totally would have refused to fly that thing again without it being fixed. Would have called in sick and warned my replacement if the airline didn’t want to listen.
I actually felt a sense of relief when the plane touched down. I've watched so many of your videos and many don't have good endings like this.
It was making me feel stressed just listening, I cannot imagine the stress for the crew.
yes it had the hallmarks of a deadly accident: Multiple malfunctions and super overloaded pilots.
Spoilers lol. Just scanning comments while listening to all the background summary. Top comment in the list gives me the outcome even before the plane starts to suffer the first problems!
@@heavyecho1 Yes, this is the most stressful listen to one of these incidents I've heard from Mentour.
Damn spoiler alert thanks for ruining the ending
So, once on the ground maintenance could not correct the multiple faults and then made the same Captain fly the plane again with passengers! Wow, I bet he enjoyed that flight 😳
Can't imagine any sane pilot believing it was all ok after a flight like that and flying it again unless they were coerced or lied to about it being fixed.
I'm shocked that both pilots agreed to fly that aircraft again without any work being completed on it
It would be like: "Hey, isn't this same crappy plane that we just turned in as complete garbage a few hours ago?"
You made it work once, we name you "expert" in flying this plane in particular. You will always fly this junk from now on!
I've rejected a plane that had a fault in the air that could not be duplicated on the ground. It was a serious issue that would have resulted in a loss of all flight instrumentation, save for the standby/backup instruments. I wasn't going to fly that bird again unless the actual problem could be identified.
I worked for this company for more than 4 years, I can say that all the pilots are professionals 🇲🇦🇲🇦
Sure bud.
they are@@constantinc9034
@@constantinc9034 Nah he is right, Moroccan pilots are professionals, this issue was with Boeing plane which Morocco stopped buying with a lot of countries.
Great pilot who made the right decision He did not have time to log in issues or go for long radio chats, he had to focus on what mattered which is getting everyone back down safely.
I would like to congratulate the pilots who managed to land safely regardless of everything around.
How can ANYbody force this aircraft back in the air without tracing the actual fault? This is insane. Thanks for yet another fantastic video, Petter.
Not finding a fault which has been reported by the pilot = fault "cleared" 🤣
You can't trace a fault accurately if it's not active or If it only sometimes acting up.
yeah its insane to imagine, oh yeah breaks on your car dont work? well it worked for me so i fixed nothing so go ahead and drive 100 km of mountain roads. what worst that can happen.
To be fair its done quite often. Alot of the time its becuase the pilots didnt give enough info on the fault they just go "hey this system wasnt working, xx bit code was displayed", nothing specific for maintenence to go off of. Thats not a whole lot of info to go on especially if the tech data doesnt have much info on the bit code and it cant be duplicated on the ground. With a situation like this, espicially since the write up is not a grounding condition, it would be proper to do a second flight verification of the system. From how it sounds in the video it was good for 5 flights after. If it came back again and same situation, replace the most common to go bad component or possibly just swap the adiru and have the pilots do an "in flight ops check". Alot of these components are just miniature computers though and its very common for the system to just need to be restarted and/or reseated to properly work again just like a normal home computer.
@@Nitro91 _"You can't trace a fault accurately that's not active or if it only sometimes acts up."_
True, but then you take it out for a test flight (or several) in good weather to recreate the problem.
I always enjoy these investigation videos from a pilots standpoint. Much more informative than just reading a report or watching these from a documentary type perspective
Glad you think so!
Yess
Exactly! Very enjoyable and detailed, paired with a passionate presentation. Really good. 🙂🙂👌👌
@@adambazso9207 yea
I enjoy these from a passenger’s perspective. I had no idea the complexities, training and vast amount of knowledge pilots must have. It’s amazing how much you’re expected to know. Hats off to you and thanks to all the great pilots out there. Great series
It's hard to believe that after this nightmare (my stomach is in knots!) the same plane took off again with the same crew, and passengers, back to Paris and down to Marrakesh without having any clear fix!
Well, some of the passengers did end up disembarking to continue their journey to Paris by train (presumably on the LGV Lyon high speed train line) instead of waiting on the plane, apparently being too scared to stay on the flight.
Source: one of the top comments is from a passenger of the flight
I'd have insisted that the engineer accompany the flight in the jump seat
@@randomentity6553I'm pretty sure that seat belongs to whatever company controller made the decision to send the plane out again instead of paying for a full technical verification, including in-flight diagnosis.
I do not understand how this would even be allowed and why the pilots didn't refuse?
This plane was clearly unsafe to operate.
@@HenryLoenwind
Not true, it's because of Boeing who try at every problem to blame the crew to preserve it reputation, the new 737 (what Morocco was one of the buyers) had a serious software problem in that time till it was stopped flighting by the majority of companies who own it (including Morocco), what escalade to a huge problem even with the US GOV VS Boeing!!
in such cases Boeing is contacted, as the plane had to be verified by French engineers after the landing... Boeing did blame the crew for not doing a correct job, so the company trusted it and somehow punished the crew as Boeing asked for, but after same multiple problems with different companies, Boeing faced finally the truth and did a huge callback for all the planes!!!
It's episodes like this that make it really clear to someone outside aviation why they had an in flight engineers for as long as they did.
They still should have flight engineers, in my opinion.
Exactly 👌
Have to say, I think the pilots did a great job here given the circumstances. Definitely should’ve reported the GPWS alerts et al but can understand that fear for your job comes into play at that point. I’m more amazed that they were willing to fly the plane again after all that.
As far as the flight itself, totally understand that once he had visual contact he just wanted to get on the ground. Everything seemed to be progressively deteriorating, and you never know if you end up going around if that would have ended up being the last time you’re able to see the runway.
They could not have known that the rapid progressive deterioration was the "expected" effect of the single point failure.
Imagine the case of a sneaky fire in the avionics. You lose instrumentation one-by-one slowly as the fire progresses and kills the aircraft. You may never get the fire warning because the system giving the warning is destroyed first.
@@adamrak7560 Yes. So it was the right decision to put the plane down ASAP, alltough there was enough fuel left over to perform another Go Around.
I can almost understand the "fear for your job"... BUT from my time in the Navy, I learned that it's ALWAYS better to put more information than you need in the log...
In the case of an unreliable aircraft where I'm employed to be the Captain... I'd likely quit on the spot if told they hadn't reproduced the faults and I was to fly it anywhere else for any reason... SO no... I don't think I'd hesitate to add the GPWS warnings, regardless of consequences. If there's additional training or some legitimate reason I shouldn't fly again, it's simply not worth being post-humously recognized as "The mass murderer of flight XXX"...
There aren't many reasons I'd happily tell the owner(s) of a company to f*** themselves, but putting a hundered or more passengers at risk in an aircraft I already KNOW is unreliable or faulty outright is one of those kinds of reasons.
I won't go as far as blame the pilots. Obviously they have different ideals of just how screwed up that plane was and whatever dubious nature their decisions were at the time... That's between them and God as far as I'm concerned... I just know (and can honestly say) what I would do in that situation.
They DID a hell of a job just getting the plane safely on the ground at Lyon... AND for that, yes... my hat's off.
Maybe the closest I'll ever come (on the ground) to that nature of concern and stress is on a faulty motorcycle on the Interstate... BUT I'd happily rather ride a known reliable "old school brute" kind of bike than a possibly faulty electronically overloaded "nanny bot" type of bike...
The worst kind of safety system is a system that seems to be good but isn't. It give you the false sense of security that it will help you accomplish maneuvers with "relative forgiveness" when in fact, you're confidence in it is GOING to get you killed... Just like "bad gear" is even worse than no gear. You think you're being safe and reasonable, when you might as well be naked. ;o)
@@gnarthdarkanen7464 in my private company, my boss says that information takes time to write, transfert, and read, thus costs money. So, the less info, the less cost you spend. Just ask the client to pay, and that's the only important thing.
I have quit this job.
@@Benoit-Pierre As a tech', myself, I've often gotten "bitched" for my write-ups when troubleshooting and effecting repairs or replacements... BUT just as often, I've uncovered patterns among seemingly unrelated issues and actually expedited repairs and rebuilds over the longer run.
Just my experience, but as a tech', once you've twisted a single screw or bolt, YOU OWN IT and whatever else goes wrong with it... Clients don't like to pay for "crap". Most of them are much like us. They JUST want the g** d*** thing to WORK!
The last time I worked in a shop environment for someone else, I was there for 5 years, and after my first year, I was routinely fired at least twice a week... Rather often (even though it was just the boss and me "going round and round") I got customers coming to my defense and even had one threaten the boss outright over it...
I think you can understand how that works. At least, I hope so. If you never ever compromise your own values, you'll do GOOD work, and clients won't need "convinced" to pay you for it. Be proud you quit that job... AND I wish you all the best going forward. ;o)
Pilots are the heroes. The captain took the situation in hand, against the failed machine. And brought it all to safety. Risking his career. Bravo. A real pilot which is not based only on the computer, like many other operators are. Fly the plane, don t just operate it.
The fact that the pilot flew it and encounter the same faults again then land it 2 times a day was quite impressive and crazy
That's honestly where the pilots lost me. I totally get the non-stabilized approach, I think given their mental model it was the right thing to do. But there's no way in hell I'm getting back in that plane after the engineers said "sorry didn't find anything"
@justmoritz if weather conditions got any better after their first landing in lyon then flying a plane all manual with no trust given to instruments doesn't sound that bad tbh. The most dangerous thing about this flight was that the instruments were untrustworthy in a weather situation where you absolutely need them.
C’est grand bravo, a nos magnifique pilote marocain
@@drlahloubrazilianclinic jsais pas si c'était nécessairement des marocains mais ça a du shahad fort dans la cabine 😂
@@drlahloubrazilianclinic👍👍👍👍👍👍
I’m Moroccan and I was on that plane too .. that was scary the only thing I regret Is taking the train instead of finish the flight .. I guess I didn’t want final destination movie vibes 😂😂
It’s so nice to hear when everything ended up ok, no one was hurt, and the industry was still safer for it! Too bad it doesn’t always go that way!
One day per trip, I encourage the FO to follow along with "No autopilot wednesday" where we'll hand fly unless the SOP requires the use of the AP.. Turn off the autothrottles and actually manage the aircraft during the SID, STAR, and instrument approach. It's all fun and games being a child of the FCP but we get paid the bucks to be competent pilots.
Sounds like a good thing to practice for sure.
I binge watched the "Mayday" series recently and your videos are both more insightful and informing and visually more impressive. And you're like two guys on what I guess is a much smaller budget.
Get a room
These are absolutely better then anything I have ever seen on broadcast TV, and shows like "seconds from disaster" were some of my favorite to watch back when I used to watch TV
Mayday just can't stop reusing the same footage to achieve a proper runtime, it is so annoying!
Much better, simpler yet information packed contents, no nonsense graphics and/or over dramatized acting. Better than ones produced n shown by big networks n "professionals", and thats the reason (one of) me and others alike keep coming back for more.
@Eve Wait, how many of you are there then?
Hats off to the captain. If I were the management I would give him a Medal of Honor. Also a 💜. And to be able to take the same flight back again ? Wow. 2 medals. I wouldn’t fly this plane a second time unless someone told me what was wrong in the first place.
Completely agree. They actually did a fantastic job
Flying a desk is always cute.
It was foolhardy of the pilots to fly the aircraft again, with passengers without rectifying the fault(s) in the instrument/computer system(s). How did the airline or Boeing Co. make the aircraft serviceable again? Have you followed it through? To become a good pilot one should be thorough in manual flying, like a good physician ought to be good at clinical diagnosis. I gather this is the right way about it, right?
I was stressed out watching this... Bravo to the pilots for managing the aircraft amidst a myriad of issues.
I wonder how the pilot recognized LSE airport with almost every instrument disfunction.
@@SEACalifornia1 old school piloting..
Bravo? They failed so hard that im questioning why they were even allowed to sit in an airliners cockpit.
@@Zerusch tell me you don't know shit about aviation without telling me you don't know shit about aviation
@@Zerusch dude everyu system that is supposed to help them land in a foggy environment is malfunctionning.
As always - an amazing and detailed breakdown of this incident. I have to say - if I was the Captain and I saw the runway and I thought I could land that failing aircraft I absolutely would have done it. I appreciate that you didn't cut down the crew on this flight. It's so easy to sit at my computer and see what they were doing wrong, but in the moment - with a failing aircraft, over a hundred lives at risk, poor weather, and potential low fuel concerns they were human and yet had a successful outcome. I call that a win!
think that the pilot's actions are entirely justified in this case, despite not being textbook-perfect. I think I would have felt the same about getting the bird on the ground
I agree what ever happened to any Landing you can walk away from is a good landing.😁
I just made this exact same comment. Just get it out of the air. That is the only comment on my mind after watching this. To hell with go around.
I also agree! Going back up in the soup was certainly the last thing they wanted to do with all those faults.
I was just about to comment the same thing..with the airplane seemingly getting worse and worse, after having eyes on that runway I would also not go around...but hey, thats why we can't all be pilots :p
Nice bot comment
The presentation just keeps getting better and better. Loved the representation of the pilot's attention to different indicators!
Glad you liked it! Dom did a fantastic job with this one.
@@MentourPilot I also like the fact that you're giving us ones (not that this is new to you, of course) where the point is about the pilot psychology and not the horrible outcome. I'm a software engineer, not a pilot, but I remember the time I was driving a then-new electric vehicle from our corporate car pool as a relatively new driver and it went dark and rebooted _while I was merging into the highway._ A mere four seconds of “oh sh--!” with no eventual negative outcome-the vehicle still steered and everything else came back before I was forced to do anything that would badly surprise other drivers-but four seconds I won't easily forget. That workload multiplying effect of “if this doesn't work what else won't work?” _while you're already doing the tricky bit_ is very real and worth understanding.
@@stephenspackman5573
I would have parked it and called an Uber.
@@chrispy104k Yeah. It might have been better to abandon it on the shoulder, though (this is California) there was pretty much nothing but interchange between the point where it misbehaved and its home lot. In the moment-and I'm not defending this, in fact I think it relates to the decisions made under pressure in the incident in the video-nothing seemed substantially safer than driving it back.
@@stephenspackman5573 And now the US government is thinking of allowing the vehicles to have no steering column or pedals. Nuts!
Flying a 737 myself, during these videos I always ask myself: what would I do now? Honestly, during this one I also thought " what a complex failure", especially in low vis conditions. IRS failures are not much trained in a sim. I was the whole time on the same line as this crew EXCEPT when it became time to just handfly the plane in a raw data ILS. In my company this is a mandatory training for all pilots. We encourage them to manually handfly these approaches without flight director. Occasionally there is one or two that state: "why do this, we never encounter a problem with the flightdirectors". So here it was: Murphy came in: low vis and IRS issues. Conclusion: initially top handling of the crew right until the part where flying manually became the biggest threat of all. The plane could have crashed and the reason for this was NOT the internal failures but the poor handlfying skill of the pilot flying. Please aviatiors around the world: keep those skills alive, you never know when they can save the day (and your life)
As an instrument pilot, I was cringing when they were deviating from the localizer and glideslope, thinking I could do better than that; seems to me they had become robots more than pilots and could stand a few hours in the sim doing ILS's.
You were flying and watching the video at the same time?
@@behindthen0thing He simply stated he flies a 737 himself.
@@johan.ohgren "flying a 737 myself during these videos"
@@behindthen0thing chekc the “comma” after myself!
This one had me on the edge of my seat, the tension really builds. But what a nightmare set of circumstances for the crew to deal with. And the fact that they flew back to Marrakesh in the same aircraft on the same day is jaw-dropping.
Shows brutality of money concerns
I would not have had the nerve to fly the same plane again, given the multitude of problems, and for the company to expect them to do so is unbelievable. A tortuous act!
Sometimes you have to manhandle it and show it dominance lol
They should have put the engineer on that plane back to Marrakesh too so he/she can finally see the issue.
I can't tell you how relieved I was when that plane landed. You couldn't have paid me a million dollars to fly that plane back up! Thank God that nobody was killed! What an incredibly brilliant explanation of events and details. You Sir are one hell of a professional in every sense of the word. You always have me on the edge of my seat praying for a miracle. Thank you!
I used to suffer from flight anxiety but since I’ve started watching your videos (about a year ago), I have zero anxiety when flying. I’m flying out of town this Thursday - I’m super excited, and not nervous at all. 😁🙌🏻
I used to have flight anxiety before watching. Now I just take the bus...
This is amazing and something that I always love to hear about! 😍
Check out some of his very early videos where he breaks down everything that is going on and addresses concerns about specific fears people may have about flying.
Now don't jinx it
@@DavidM2002 🤗🥳🤣!!!
You are ready for your own show on NetFlix, Petter.. there are plenty of interesting channels about aviation on YT, but there is nothing like a pro presenting and interpreting this sort of event. That's combined with excellent editing and visuals. Much respect!
Thank you! So happy you think so!
@@MentourPilot I always find your voice so calming even after a few dozen errors has occurred on a flight. It is total cluster F of problems but do not worry he will guide you through it so it all makes sense anyway.
No, UA-cam is better. UA-cam can be free, Netflix is always payable :-D
@@toriless sorry for late reply.....i last saw this video 1minute after released...
Even i feel same...
I agree... He explains a lot of technical stuff... brilliant work.
I spent a fair amount of time testing software. One thing I learned is that there is no such thing as an intermittent bug, you just haven't figured out what triggers it.
And honestly, I think the Captain made the right decision... get the piece of crap on the ground. I'm just surprised they agreed to fly the dammed thing again!
Problem is that in the physical world things like heat, contamination, corrosion etc. can produce infinitely complex faults that would require you to simulate the universe to find out.
Intermitent bug means you dont know how to reliably reproduce the issue.
So no idea what you are talking about.
Saying the bug is intermittent doesn't mean it isnt a bug. Never has.
"no such thing as an intermittent bug, you just haven't figured out what triggers it." LMAO
@@deth3021 Ever repaired a crackly potentiometer? a corroded input jack? those kind of problems can start or go away when a device stretches with heat, or the moisture level in the air increases, or the device is being exposed to cycles of these conditions like in the case of a plane...
Unless you can predict the conditions a part has gone through by modeling with your infinitely fast supercomputer (or godlike brainpower) some faults will be intermittent if you accept the limits of technology or yourself.
[This is getting way too existenial lol]
@@VeraTR909 did you reply to the wrong person?
Im not the one who said there wasnt intermittent bugs.
Also bugs are software, you described hw issues. Which would be more typically be called intermitent faults.
As an industrial electronics designer, I think I would have been tearing out my hair with this one. Those sort of intermittent faults are hard enough to find with machines that don't fly. It's interesting the way the maintenance team couldn't reproduce it, so they just cleared it. I would never have taken such a risk. I would have gone and sat in the cockpit for a test flight. That's the only way to know something is really fixed.
I maintain a shop full of industrial manufacturing equipment, and as often as I complain about some poorly designed and intermittent failure prone equipment, in order to put things in perspective I often comment that "Well, thank god these people don't build airplanes"
Ditto that Robin!
Pete, Gas Electronics, london
Very few situations warrant a test flight. That is a gigantic net loss that 99% of airlines will not permit except under specific things like dual engine changes.
Source: am airline technician.
The strangest thing in this story isn't that so many faults and so many warnings hit the same plane in the same flight over two successive foggy airports, but that they actually came out of it alive.
This is terrifying. Throughout your career it is drilled into your head to trust your instruments, and then your instruments start giving false information?
I can't imagine a situation more frightening.
And more problems. Your instrumentation seems correct, but then because of something, the auto pilot recieves wrong informations from one of the biggest and only working instrumentation of that type left onboard.
Hello, I am 12 years old and a av-geek and your videos are some of the best out there these videos are just magnificent. Better then others. Keep going.
To be honest, I think that crew did an amazing job. As Petter says, they were completely overloaded, and they got the plane down in good shape.
And then had to fly the bloody thing back without getting to the bottom of the problems!
massive respect to pilots , dealing with such mess and landing without much help is impressive !
I managed to lister the recordings between the PNF and the ATC. the co-pilot's voice was so stressful with the gpwrs shouting sink rate... the captain was trying to get out of the cloud layer to see the runway and go land … the passages were lucky to have 2 very good pilots in this cockpit
the captain did the right thing, (considering unreliable navigation information) take control, hand fly and get the aircraft on the ground. a 3rd go around attempt may have resulted in more instrument failure. get the plane on the ground and figure out the problems later. better to run off the end of the runway at 50 knots, than controlled flight into terrain at 150 knots.
Yes... Before it less to another issue...Royal Air Marok should have reported that they have updated the systems to Boeing.....
He safely landed the plane, which is the MAIN thing. Kudos for that. But why didn’t he run the checklists? Why didn’t he follow procedure to figure out what was wrong? What if he hasn’t been such an accomplished pilot? Not everyone could have landed that safely. This is a training opportunity. They had the fuel to figure it out, but they didn’t know that - because they didn’t check. And they were failed by the mechanics and pilots before them - for sure.
@@jahbern because checklists are written by fallible humans like the fallible humans that allowed that plane to fly...?
@@CritiqueAI The checklists are written by engineers on the ground who know all the details about the plane and have days and weeks to consider all possibilities and downsides of certain actions.
I think the actual problem is that the pilots here had to run like 6 different non-normal checklists at the same time (lots of failures) and the workload just got too high.
Still I think that pilots deserve more praise than hate in spite of flying unstabilized approach, one more go-around could potentially lead to even more problems that might have ended in a disaster.
I can't believe the pilots were made to fly the same plane on two more legs without the issues being resolved. It should've been grounded. The pilot did the right thing by going forward with the landing once he saw the runway.
I have been in similar situations during my career as a nuclear plant operator - things are seen that don't make sense, things are just inches away from being under control, heavy mental workload to carry out time-critical operations. In my case it came down to something similar to "Aviate, navigate, communicate" - break the situation down to the basics to get through safely and successfully. It helped me to clear away everything running around in my mind and allowed me to be calm enough to focus on the basic critical needs of the situation. Automation of systems to reduce workload and increase efficiency is great...until it isn't. My situations occurred on a process with minimal automation but relied upon reliable instrumentation to operate safely and successfully and this lack of automation actually aided me where these pilots had to fight it. I'm not a pilot and I'm not sure whether or not these folks could have gone back to a Cessna 172-Level of operation of this aircraft to bypass all of the conflicting indications/system alarms/system disconnects earlier. Thanks for the video - I am always interested in the consequences of automation in our world and the unintended consequences when it fails us.
Wow, you did an excellent job presenting the events of this incident. What I found really surprising was that the pilots never declared an emergency in such a dire situation.
I always think before starting to watch that the videos are too long but once I started, I can never believe how good the quality of these videos are and how they help me as a pilot to adapt the checklist to the King Air I fly privatly. I have never regretted to watch any of your bideos! Please continue, these are a huge contribution to make aviation safer!!
I think that the pilot's actions are entirely justified in this case, despite not being textbook-perfect. I think I would have felt the same about getting the bird on the ground.
Seconded. I think the pilots reacted like normal people in a stressful situation.
They should have declared an emergency a long time before landing
@@ALEXWORLD11 Yeah, if it were me, I'd have at least declared PAN-PAN and told the controllers a bit about what was going on. They can't help you if you don't tell them what's happening. They could have gotten more attention and position information from the controllers if they had used PAN-PAN or MAYDAY.
One thing I (as an American) have found kind of weird, though, is it seems that pilots in Europe and recent European colonies are somewhat more hesitant to declare an emergency than we're taught to be in the U.S. I even see a lot of criticism from European pilots on videos from incidents in the U.S. about pilots declaring when they didn't think they should have. In the U.S., it generally seems to be taught more along the lines of "If there's any doubt, declare."
The worst that can happen from declaring when it wasn't completely necessary is that you need to fill out some extra paperwork after landing and possibly some other flights have to hold or get vectored a few minutes longer. The worst that can happen from not declaring when you should have is much, much worse than that. Even if the situation is generally under control but there's some significant doubt about the state of the aircraft and/or crew, there's no harm in declaring. The controllers then know to focus more on your flight and they can help relieve some of the pressure and task saturation on the pilots. It's a lot better to be back on the ground with some extra paperwork to fill out than to risk damage to the aircraft... or the people inside it.
@@vbscript2 Agreed on that part, they should have issued PAN-PAN, as the aircraft had multiple systems failure.
The landing showed some really good piloting skills, though.
I still have my (15 years outdated) 737-800 manuals I kept after retirement. Going through them in my office chair daylight VFR I can see how even if they had gone through all the checklists correctly there still would have been confusion. I flew both military and airline for 32 years. I realize that time is money, but the Air Force training in my early years went into much more depth on systems training. Granted, the transport category aircraft I flew in the begining of my career did not have FMC’s IRU’s, sophisticated air data computers, or glass displays, just steam gauges, a basic autopilot, a rudimentary flight director, a living, breathing navigator, a flight engineer, and a radio operator. In normal operations all instrument approaches were hand flown as there was no approach mode on the autopilot. Before everyone gets up in arms I am not saying this is better, it just prepared me personally to be a very good pilot.
to be a very good
Thank you for your service ❤️
@@columbus8myhw fixed it, thanks for the edit.
Oh no, I say it’s better.
Just like the African pilots still flying the 1960 model aircraft
I feel like those pilots needed a medal, recommendation form the report sounded like a reprimand. I can’t imagine having to deal with all that at once and it ending so well.
While they got the aircraft down safely, let's not forget that they made avoidable mistakes as well.
There were plenty of mistakes made by many but the pilots ultimately got the plane on the ground with nothing more than bad nerves on their part.
It was a light reprimand but they were assumed reasonable. If the cockpit voice recordings were there it might've been lighter- they could've easily been fired for this if any reasonable pilot could say this was inexcusable or could never happen to them.
I doubt there was any quibble about retraining manual IRS, help build their own confidence back. Not something to forget in a hurry. I think they'd be much better pilots after an experience like that.
They got lucky.
@@mandowarrior123 Yep, not pulling the cockpit voice recorder made it appear the pilots had something to hide. I'm sure that only made their "punishment" a lot worse.
I’m a long time subscriber and the quality of your videos have been rising constantly. I’m not a pilot yet I find the technical depth in your videos highly educational and satisfying. Hats off to these pilots putting the plane down safely but hats off to you too for providing such good quality content. Thank you.
That was intense! Your voiceover, together with the amazing visuals, had me at the edge of my seat through the entire episode! I can REALLY symphatize with the flight crew in this story. Can anyone really blame them for doing any of the misses they did? I know I can't!
I so feel for pilots with all the conflicts they have to deal with:
"Always trust your instruments; except when you shouldn't"
"Always run the checklists; expect when you don't have time."
"Always stabilise the approach or go around; except..."
Well, you all know the score.
But that's why the best pilots are the ones who can show initiative when it's called for.
I could never have the skills or concentration required to be a pilot; but I do remember what my driving instructor told me. He said there was one rule you could always fall back on if you were confused about what do do in a situation. "Always do the safest thing."
Of course spotting what that is is often the battle.
He also added "sometimes that might be driving on the pavement"; which did give me pause. Although I can imagine situations.
OMG!.. you had me on the edge of my seat as I had no idea of the final outcome. All I wanted was to be on the ground and get my heart rate back to normal. I cant even begin to imagine how the pilots felt at the time. Great video and well presented.. thank you.
I’m absolutely loving this series ! You basically go through every mistake the pilots do , but you try your best to make them not look bad . Keep up the great work !
I wish you'd also cover how the captain handled the same accident on the way back, and having an audio/video illustration with his reaction would be brilliant. Jokes aside, the crew did great job. You as well. Thank you.
I am a pilot i have 9000 hrs. It was very useful for me. Thank you. I appreciate all this effort for you and your staff
Never followed aviation in the past, but since COVID isolation and this channel I have LiveATC and Flightradar on my tablet and have been seen planespotting. Thanks for the new hobby! (But my feet remain firmly on the ground). So, thank-you.
Maybe you should check out Microsoft Flight Simulator. You can enjoy flying, with feet firmly on the ground.
I'm glad they got down safe, considering how confusing and terrifying this must have been for the pilots.
There's many CRM problems obviously but actually I can see that having the runway insight and with multiple apparently unconnected and escalating failures given that he was able to safely land the aircraft I can see why he did it - it's only with hindsight that we know that there wasn't some common and deteriorating situation. I'm amazed that the pilot flew it back to Paris Orly and Marakech without a fault being identified though - absolutely no way you'd have gotten me to do so. You also didn't explain what happened to the aircraft in the end and what the cause of the various faults were (please tell me this plane still isn't flying around with them!).
It wasn’t explained in the final report sadly.
Seriously, I wish we had an idea of that as well! I expect they dismantled it good
Even as a technical person, this kind of phantom intermittent error nonsense reaaaaaly makes you think that gremlins (or Machine Spirit if you are so inclined) are a real thing. Sure, this is probably some weird interaction between systems that nobody could predict is a thing, but given that it can't be reproduced on the ground, makes it nearly unfixable. At that point you either mark this machine as cursed or rip it apart and rebuild it completely in hopes that fixes SOMETHING.
This episode made the hairs on my neck stand up. I’m reminded of the captain of a Swiss flight who had to deal with an engine failure after takeoff on camera, and after dealing with the initial steps pulled out a chocolate bar and casually ate it to calm himself.
The aircraft involved, CN-ROJ is performing domestic flight AT1413 between Laayoune and Casablanca as we speak...😅
To be fair, it's five years ago so I hope we can assume the issues were resolved in the end.
I can only imagine how thrilled that pilot was to have to get back in the plane, after maintenance could not find what was causing the issues. Oh, and with passengers aboard, at that. Jeepers.
Moroccan pilote👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 Reminds me of a pilote of the Oman air who did the same while we were about to have a plane crash.
The production value of these is insane. You do such a great job. I'd love to see a video about how you do it.
Thank you so much for your amazing content as always. It is always a great day to see you have uploaded. Your way of explaining things is very informative and never blames or over dramatises the story.
Thanks!
I love your stuff! It is so informative and doesn't morph into sensationalism. It makes me feel more comfortable with flying, as it points out how rare fatal accidents are given the massive number of flights taken each year, and also how systems are upgraded if problems do occur!
Royal air maroc pilotes are great !!
This was a gripping episode, wasn’t sure how it was going to end. I like the fact you cover incidents and not just accidents. Even the small incidents which don’t have their own Wikipedia pages are interesting videos to watch
Great video, really well presented and researched 👍
35:20 The most amazing thing to me as a motor mechanic, now in mining maintenance control, is that the plane was allowed back into the air again with critical systems faults 😬
In our mining company prestarts, there is a list of critical systems that require the machine is parked up and not used again until the fault is found and rectified.
Something as critical as autopilot and autoland are surely such systems. Yes, maintenance checked it on the ground and could not find the fault in a brief inspection, but quite obviously the fault was still present and remained a real hazard.
This is the worst thing to me.
Yes, indeed. It is real hazard to put pressure on the crew to perfom a two-legs-return-flight with uncovered critical systems failure´s - while putting passengers into the cabin of this plane during this flight.
Amazing work as Always , from Morocco 🇲🇦🇲🇦
Thank you! Glad you liked it,
Excellent presentation again, Petter.
Not only are you a good and entertaining storyteller, your knowledge of flying as a pilot makes the whole thing deeply fascinating!
Thanks for the great reporting on these accidents. I used to fly Cessna's mustering cattle in Australia. Doing VFR most of the time but also being type rated for 'Instruments' and multi engine.
You explain things well and have helped some of the students now mustering in the Cessna's, Re; Fatigue, fly the plane etc. Thank you.
What a nightmare of a flight. Brilliantly explained. As ever, great video Captain 👍
can you make a video from a totally normal flight where everything went smooth , with a suspense tone of presentation ?
Haha! That would be very strange.. but a bit awesome
@@MentourPilot "...and right at that moment the pilots realized.... that everything was configured correctly. BUT THEN, they realized to their shock, the coffee was actually quite good this time!"
@@subbss (in Mentour's voice): Something you have to understand about company drink containers is that they are quite slippery. For this reason the pilot had developed a habit of sliding their pinky finger underneath the container to better maintain positive control. As it turns out, this was an excellent thing to do, as you'll understand later on.
@@MentourPilot Do it for April Fools Day!
@@MentourPilot Oh, yes! I know one element. When, a long time ago, I first went flying with pets (not in the cabin), to emigrate for the first time, I was quite nervous about how that would go (for the pets, I mean, two cats at the time and one of them had been quite worried). But that landing was the smoothest EVER! Made me feel very grateful..
Beautiful job, Captain. Your objective explanations, combined with the pinpoint video, make this so realistic. Really enjoy your work and appreciate the time you put into it.
Thank you again Petter, the more I hear what went wrong here means that all pilots need to actually get further training specifically for what to do when something crops up.
Well done for flying the plane and not getting bogged down in worrying about the warnings. Only slight failure was not to check fuel and carry on to 3rd destination.
I don't understand why they did not give a pan pan call to the approach controller and ask for approach vectors all the way down. All they needed to say was "autopilot is not functioning - running low on fuel, request talk down". Lyon radar has this capability. Also the aircraft should never have been allowed on line in the first place until the fundamental issues were completely fixed.
My thoughts exactly as pointed out in my own comment. When the workload gets too high to follow checklists, ask for help from the ground.
The primary thing I didn't like was the floating issue basically ignored and not even noted in big red letters for the next crews flying this aircraft.
You can only vector an aircraft to intercept the ILS. The tower can't make the minor corrections fast enough to keep you on the localiser and, as was said in the video, the tower couldn't even tell if they were above or below the glideslope. The tower simply didn't have the tools.
@@ImperrfectStranger - still... This is not a passenger trying to land a 747. This is an experienced crew. If they can't take - let us call it navigational hints to make sure they are coming in on the right heading - and get under the cloud cover and descend at some reasonabel rate while flying manually, they should not be allowed into a cockpit. Sure, some busy city bureaucrats might complain 2 weeks later about violating noise levels over residential areas by flying to low, or almost snipping the top of a chimney, but it gets the plane on the ground in one piece.
@@JanBruunAndersen They may have been "professionals", but their basic flying skills were seriously atrophied. They couldn't even intercept and maintain an altitude without the autopilot. Even with ILS signals they flew consistently and dangerously below the glideslope.
What professional pilot ignores terrain warnings?
There were probably a lot of navigational cues available to them but they failed to read them (probably due to poor CRM).
This one had me at the edge all the time, lots of errors, so much info coming out and the fact that I didn't know what to expect as an outcome drived me nuts. Oh my god... I would crash that faulty system with my own hands to take revenge on the aircraft haha. Nerve-wracking experience for sure, I'm soo glad the pilots made it
I was honestly anticipating a different end to that flight.
@@johnstreet819 same , I thought they were gone
True, also after Petter said “things are gonna get much worse” I was 100% sure that they’re gone, but luckily it’s a happy end…almost spoiled in Marrakesh…
@@johnstreet819 I just had to skip to the preview thumb at the end to see if the plane got down. It was too stressful!
drove
Yeah, multiple seemingly unrelated failures occuring more or less at once is scary. Even if the systems affected are not vital, the simultanous failures are not trained for in anyway and I don't blame the pilots at all for wanting to get down as soon as possible. Since we don't know what was actually causing this, or how severe it really would be if more systems would start to fail, the decision to not go around once they were visual was absolutely the right one I feel. Qantas 72 come to mind. Scary stuff.
Great video!
I have watched many flight documentaries, and Mentour Pilot is THE definition of the Best by far and away!
Moroccan pilots are one of the best in the world 👨✈️!! Matter of fact, they’re highly respected in the aviation industry. They undergo rigorous training and often serve in both civilian and military capacities. The Royal Moroccan Air Force, in particular, has a strong reputation, and Moroccan pilots have been recognized for their skill and professionalism. they have earned a solid international reputation.
Brilliant instinctual flying by the Captain, given all the circumstances. He flew the plane, and he got it down, under what must have been horrible pressure, when his first officer practically bottled it. ...Boeing 🤦♂
It was great seeing you with Juan Browne in Barcelona. You guys should collaborate more often.
Yes, indeed.
Excellent review of a difficult situation. Re: logbook review, during my 25 years as a captain for a major airline, I would always flip back through the log history at least a month to see if there were any recurring gripes. I would often see repeated gripes and then be well prepared.
Excellent, should be required for all pilots.
I would do this as a motorcoach operator as well. But there were always the guys that would show up at the last minute and wouldn't have the time to look at the logs.
Fantastic and ready to go Petter.
I feel sorry for the pilots here with all those faults. The pressure must have been immense.
This captain and co pilot are true heroes and had very tough nerves. Bravo ❤
Thank God Petter exists, such an original way of explaining these aircraft related mishaps, a lot of work both explaining and practically showing us how and what happened. Thank you!
This was so explained so damn well. I can't believe they had to fly the aircraft twice more that day. Your videos are amazing. This is such valuable content.
It's like a new episode of my favorite show. Always top videos about interesting events.
Yeah, the quality of this channel is second to none. It’s really impressive.
I would prefer watching mentour pilot flight incidents vid over those produced by big networks n names 10 times over. The information were clear n concise, simple yet informative, no over dramatized acting n graphics... Rarely there'll be a dull moment when watching the contents. Best wishes n life for Mentour Pilot, safe flight all the times...👍
I know nothing about aviation but when I saw it was about my country's airlines, I clicked the video and I gotta say I enjoyed it
❤Not sure if you see this. But anyway your blog is absolutely fascinating. i am a retired systems engineer, so my instincts remain. I had a thought…. On many of your shows that require it, I notice a recurring problem. Hand luggage. Suggestion: auto locks on overhead storage controlled by the cabin crew with reminders at briefings that the overhead will remain locked during. emergency.Evacuations. Might help in turbulence also.
Love the dogs. Even though they seemed bored😢😢😢😢
See some common threads here between the issues the Air Maroc 737-800 had and the 737 MAX AOA sensors (MCAS system) problem. Very much enjoyed hearing about this incident I'd never heard about before, thank you sir..
The B737 dual channel system is a 1960s dinosaur design, with many common single fault problems.
@@gordonrichardson2972 Nonsense, a dual system during Land config is used in most modern passenger jets.
I know I am repeating myself but the visuals are absolutely stunning; down to actually displaying the check up list in the cockpit; it is actually scarry as we feel in the plane!!
CRAZY! So many small things that piled up… this could easily have been a disaster but somehow they landed without aircraft damage or injury. I don’t think I would’ve felt comfortable flying the same plane on the same day. Hopefully they got the explanations and fixes they were looking for. Just so crazy!
The crazy part was that the maintenance engineer just inspected the plane and said he or she couldn't find any problem with it. So the pilots were sent to new trip *with plane full of passangers* with zero fixes or explanations.
I'm pretty sure I will not be entering any Royal Air Maroc planes in the future. This seems more like company level issue than about skill of these pilots.
After ALL those problems, these pilots didn't accurately report the issues they experienced and still flew the plane! Mind blowing! 🤯
Perhaps their airlines pressured them to continue. I’m Moroccan and I’m familiar with this bullshit airline.
I love it when you say"...but things are about to get much much worse." Then "...things are about to get really hairy." But your videos are always getting ..."much much better!" Thank you!