HOW This Aircraft FELL 30 000 Feet in Less Than 2.5min! | China Airlines 006

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  • Опубліковано 8 тра 2024
  • Join The Airline Pilot Club for FREE here 👉 www.theairlinepilotclub.com/r...
    On the 19th of February 1985 a Boeing 747SP, China Airlines flight 006, was operated a scheduled passenger service between Taipei in Taiwan to Los Angeles in the United States.
    After about 10 hours in flight, the number 4 engine started having issues and eventually failed. The way the pilots handled the engine failure led to a loss of control inflight event with disastrous consequences.
    In this video I will tell you all about it. Stay tuned.
    If you want to support the work I do on the channel, join my Patreon crew and get awesome perks and help me move the channel forward! 👇
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    Below you will find the links to videos and sources used in this episode. Enjoy checking them out!
    Sources
    -------------------------------------------
    Messy cabin 1: @ Oscar Munoz via Twitter
    thepointsguy.co.uk/news/15-in...
    Crash 1: NTSB
    www.thisdayinaviation.com/tag...
    Crash 2: NTSB
    www.thisdayinaviation.com/tag...
    Crash 3: UNKNOWN
    2.bp.blogspot.com/-UpSSue4Aro0...
    Crash 4:
    static.thisdayinaviation.com/...
    Engine: aeroexcelengine.com/
    aeroexcelengine.com/previouspr...
    Engine Maintenance: mechanicaleducation
    i.pinimg.com/originals/2a/b8/...
    HREQADBRZGZKM22E
    Chapters:
    -------------------------------------------
    00:00 - Intro
    00:35 - Flight History
    01:01 - Crew Information
    01:39 - Equipment
    01:39 - Turbulence
    02:56 - Issues with Engine 4
    02:56 - Thrust Asymmetry
    08:12 - Can We Descend?
    08:51 - Radio Silence
    09:57 - Fighting the Yaw
    09:57 - The Roll
    09:57 - Through the Clouds
    09:57 - Engine Issues Remain
    17:41 - Emergency Declared
    19:39 - Final Approach
    20:18 - Aftermath
    23:04 - Findings

КОМЕНТАРІ • 5 тис.

  • @MentourPilot
    @MentourPilot  2 роки тому +224

    Are you interested in knowing more about Pilot training, joining a great community and getting loads of other perks completely for FREE? 👉🏻 www.theairlinepilotclub.com/register

    • @Russeljfinch
      @Russeljfinch 2 роки тому +10

      Just my observation of all these flight dramas is...pilots should first learn to fly gliders (not rely on engines ) that way they will actually FLY .Then introduce engines.They seem to lose all perspective when they have no engine power !

    • @tarassu
      @tarassu 2 роки тому +5

      15,494.5 hours of flying time is irrelevant information. Please keep it up to 2-3 "significant figures" for flying times. And pretty much most data (maximum 3 significant figures is acceptable as all extra is memory clutter inside our brains) like weight, fuel on board etc (you can also add "about" to specify rounding). Therefore 15.500 hrs of flying time and 7700 hrs of flying time. DO NOT be more precise. Thank you :)

    • @tarassu
      @tarassu 2 роки тому +4

      Or "more than 15 thousand hours" is even better.

    • @ansgar9289
      @ansgar9289 2 роки тому

      Hi, could you please make a video about the collision of DHL 611 and Bashkirian-Airlines 2937 in Germany 2002?

    • @michaelmansun6203
      @michaelmansun6203 2 роки тому

      No. Zero interest.

  • @paperburn
    @paperburn 2 роки тому +2076

    WoW this is the classic swiss cheese model, I work in aircrew training and the hardest thing to teach is trust your instruments, the second hardest to to get the first officer to speak up when things go wrong.

  • @Cruminum
    @Cruminum 2 роки тому +2798

    Reasons why I like this youtuber:
    Not clickbait
    Very entertaining
    Very informative
    Very well edited

    • @AviationNut
      @AviationNut 2 роки тому +62

      Not only a UA-camr, but also a 737 Captain. Calling him only a UA-camr is a little disrespectful, when his full time job is being a 737 Captain and only during his free time he films and posts video's. But all the rest I agree with you.

    • @smasheduptoaster9186
      @smasheduptoaster9186 2 роки тому +119

      @@AviationNut He has a UA-cam channel with 900k subscribers and he dedicates a large amount of time to it. It is not disrespectful to call him a UA-camr. Just because he is a UA-camr doesn't mean he isn't a full time captain. He's both and both captain and UA-camr are respectful titles.

    • @allenfuda6431
      @allenfuda6431 2 роки тому +7

      Actually that's captain Peter the great pilot at all times

    • @SparrowwithaMachinegun
      @SparrowwithaMachinegun 2 роки тому +37

      Little bit clickbaiting. but when the content is this good i'm oaky with it.

    • @rogervonschleusingen4603
      @rogervonschleusingen4603 2 роки тому +3

      AND VERY PROFESSIONAL BROTHER !!

  • @Aranimda
    @Aranimda Рік тому +1092

    "And perhaps there was one other hero that day. The Boeing 747 itself. It was put through manoeuvres and stresses that far outweighed it's known limits and yet, despite it all, the aircraft survived and landed safely." -ACI, Panic over the Pacific

    • @spoppy3060
      @spoppy3060 Рік тому +79

      Agreed, with no human eror, 747 is a tank in the sky, it's strong, durable and have unique design

    • @framedthunder6436
      @framedthunder6436 Рік тому +35

      Literally this plane needed to be shutdown by a rocket to be destroy in pieces

    • @jorge_781
      @jorge_781 Рік тому +77

      Actually the 747 was the unique hero. The crew made every mistake they could in order to crash the plane.

    • @Aranimda
      @Aranimda Рік тому +70

      @@jorge_781 In the ACI episode, one commentator said that even tho the pilots caused the incident themselves, they also performed a great recovery and after the plunge they handled the damaged plane carefully and made a safe landing. "The one big thing they did right, and one only ever has to do one big thing, is: They saved the airplane. And in principle, that's all you ever need to do right when something happens to your airplane. You need to save the airplane and you need to save the passengers. And that is what they did."

    • @jorge_781
      @jorge_781 Рік тому +23

      @@Aranimda If someone put the airplane in that condition you're already not a hero by definition. 1) not trusting in your instruments when you're the middle of a cloud formation - disregarding the best information 2) incorrect procedure to re-fire the #4 engine 3) not use rudder to correct the heading 4) negligence on recovering airplane attitude when they're had all information and resources to do that 5) bad cabin management and wrong procedures after engine fail and the list just goes on.
      Just imagine a person who throws a baby by the window and runs to save her/him being very kick going down the stairs, and get the child. Hero?

  • @jasonsong86
    @jasonsong86 Рік тому +795

    It's crazy they would start to question the instruments so quickly. They were lucky when they got below the clouds with ample altitude to recover. A lot of times this type of dive coupled with low clouds is certain death.

    • @marioluigi9599
      @marioluigi9599 Рік тому +30

      That's Chinese guys for you. Hehe

    • @typ044
      @typ044 Рік тому +70

      They probably thought the instruments were made in china.

    • @feralcatgirl
      @feralcatgirl Рік тому +12

      taiwan*

    • @budthecyborg4575
      @budthecyborg4575 Рік тому +29

      Pulling out of a dive at 9,000 feet means they were seconds away from cratering.
      Whenever I'm doing stupid stuff in Flight Sim I never attempt dramatic maneuvers below 10,000 feet, it almost always ends hitting the ground.

    • @georgeholloway3981
      @georgeholloway3981 6 місяців тому +4

      Taiwanese made products are much more reliable, actually.

  • @-eternal
    @-eternal 2 роки тому +932

    This is one of the most insane stories I've seen you present yet. The fact that they recovered and landed in mostly one piece after falling 30,000 feet is UNBELIEVABLE.

    • @VDAVK
      @VDAVK 2 роки тому +59

      You're right..I mean..look at the condition of that plane..looks like God was holding onto that plane while it went thru hell....I guess they all survived cause the Sun was still up.

    • @TheGodParticle
      @TheGodParticle Рік тому +19

      I guess those 747's are built like tanks.

    • @malcolmwhite6588
      @malcolmwhite6588 Рік тому +39

      Yes-but it does illustrate one phenomenon that conspiracy theorists have… “5G” really is harmful!!😂

    • @carpetjam1264
      @carpetjam1264 Рік тому +17

      @@malcolmwhite6588 absolute dad joke lol

    • @T3hderk87
      @T3hderk87 11 місяців тому +6

      You can thank the US army for how tough the 747 is. The only heavy lift aircraft stronger than a 747 is the C-5 Galaxy, and that's saying something.

  • @captainyossarian388
    @captainyossarian388 2 роки тому +989

    "It's okay, we landed in one piece."
    External inspection engineer: "Well, technically....no, you didn't."

    • @superomegaprimemk2
      @superomegaprimemk2 2 роки тому +96

      Any landing you can walk away from, is a good landing!

    • @peterebel7899
      @peterebel7899 2 роки тому +16

      @@superomegaprimemk2 But they were towed...

    • @M4RC90
      @M4RC90 2 роки тому +71

      @@superomegaprimemk2 If you can fly the plane again it's a better landing.

    • @isabellind1292
      @isabellind1292 2 роки тому +1

      Lol!😌✈

    • @USERZ123XD
      @USERZ123XD 2 роки тому +7

      another happy landing

  • @Eyetrauma
    @Eyetrauma Рік тому +127

    Imagining the cold chill felt by the flight crew when they finally connected the fact that the false horizon and the real horizon were in sync with each other.

    • @goaway6786
      @goaway6786 Рік тому

      Snigger.

    • @Cjmm007
      @Cjmm007 11 місяців тому +14

      You’d think they could feel they were upside down. I know pilots are suppose to rely on instruments not feelings but I know damn well you can feel when your body goes upside down.

    • @solderpro9725
      @solderpro9725 11 місяців тому +17

      @@Cjmm007 pretty sure you don't know how pulling 3 or 5 gs feels like, i do neither but i assume it would mask the feeling of being upside down

    • @swapnilmankame
      @swapnilmankame 9 місяців тому +24

      @@Cjmm007 You wont feel you are upside down when you are moving fast and rolling at the same time. there are multi directional inputs going to your brain making you lose complete spatial awareness. hard to re-create on the ground,

    • @mb2776
      @mb2776 2 місяці тому +6

      @@Cjmm007 Even with an old flight sim like falcon 4.0, it's easy to experience yourself how easy it is to get lost. For example, flying at night really feels like you don't move at all. Like sitting in a complete void. Now imagine that with an AR headset.

  • @metarotta
    @metarotta Рік тому +435

    absolutely insane that after pushing the aircraft far past any safe limits they still wanted to fly to their intended destination instead of landing down safely as fast as they could

    • @jtlast9600
      @jtlast9600 Рік тому +11

      unbelievable

    • @mdaniels6311
      @mdaniels6311 Рік тому +79

      Yep, and didn't think to check the passengers. Incompetence.

    • @KillertoastGaming
      @KillertoastGaming Рік тому +39

      Honestly this was one episode with the dumbest pilots

    • @missraeray
      @missraeray Рік тому +6

      Arrogance mainly

    • @johnsrabe
      @johnsrabe Рік тому +29

      It demonstrates a real lack of knowledge of aeronautical engineering. They wouldn’t need to know exactly how many g’s they were pulling to know they stressed the shit out of the airframe.

  • @Hybris51129
    @Hybris51129 2 роки тому +903

    5g's in a 747. All these years and I thought my experiences in Microsoft Flight Simulator as a child using the biggest plane as a stunt plane were baseless. Still terrifying for everyone on board.

    • @TheSupradude26
      @TheSupradude26 2 роки тому +39

      Hey I’ve done the exact same thing countless times, only as an adult!! 747 all the time doing the biggest aerobatics as possible!! Haha

    • @hauntedshadowslegacy2826
      @hauntedshadowslegacy2826 2 роки тому +56

      For another real-world example of using big planes like stunt planes, look up Tex Johnson; he barrel-rolled a 707 in front of spectators... twice (the second time was to make sure they really believed what they saw). For a flight sim thing, I've seen plenty of people use the ol' 'stall 'n' drop' technique to land 747s on aircraft carriers or remote, tiny runways around the world. It's pretty challenging, so give it a go if you're confident.

    • @azmax623
      @azmax623 2 роки тому +24

      I had an old Commodore 64 flight simulator (Acrojet maybe?) where I'd fly up as high as I could at 110% power until the engine died. Then I'd glide down to the runway for the next five minutes.

    • @JDMHaze
      @JDMHaze 2 роки тому +9

      Those G forces haf to feel like someone was a literally pushing you into your seat and forcing you there Whatever you experience on a roller coaster this had to of been 20 times more firm

    • @lsswappedcessna
      @lsswappedcessna 2 роки тому +6

      Ah, FSX. The good old days for me. I played that game enough I'd wager I could take control of a small aircraft in an emergency. I want to get a proper sim set up and play the new one but that's a lot of money currently best spent on other things. Same with actually becoming a general aviation pilot, I'd love to do it but it's very expensive.

  • @WayneM1961
    @WayneM1961 2 роки тому +674

    Anyone who flies and is frightened of turbulence and wondering "at what stage the wings are going to fall off" needs to watch this, A quite incredible account of just how much punishment an airframe can take, yet still land safely. What the crew did or didn't do in a timely manor to avoid this situation altogether has to be excused by the fact they got the aircraft safely on the ground with everybody living to tell the tale. Another great video Captain Petter, thanks for all your efforts in keeping these truly excellent studies coming.

    • @MentourPilot
      @MentourPilot  2 роки тому +92

      Thank YOU for being here supporting and interacting. 💕

    • @thom1218
      @thom1218 2 роки тому +89

      "has to be excused" - The end never justifies the means and does not and should not absolve the flight crew of remediation to train and fix their errors. Had the flight crew understood bleed load hogging and closed the pressure valves to slowly bring engine number 4 back up to speed at a proper altitude, then they would have increased their chances to gracefully recovered from the pending disaster without risking all the passengers' lives. The only commendation here goes to the engineering of the aircraft for holding together through over 5g accelerations. Future passengers now get to unknowingly endure the horrific possibility of repeating these events with the same as-yet-untrained flight crew as they continue to fly with no remediation and therefore no belief they themselves could have done anything differently.

    • @WayneM1961
      @WayneM1961 2 роки тому +26

      @@thom1218 Pilots are humans too and can make mistakes like anyone else

    • @millomweb
      @millomweb 2 роки тому +28

      ​@@thom1218 'not believing their instruments' -SO many times (other crashes) it is really time simulators showed one on-screen 'out of the window' image and give a different picture as displayed on the instruments - and see which the pilots believe - if they follow the 'on-screen' image they crash and if they believe their instruments and fly by them, they don't crash.

    • @primmakinsofis614
      @primmakinsofis614 2 роки тому +34

      Boeing has a long-standing reputation for building strong, rugged aircraft, going all the way back to the famous B-17 Flying Fortress.

  • @chapo619
    @chapo619 Рік тому +186

    This aircraft is now stored at the Tijuana International airport and has been for years. It sticks out like a sore thumb near the end of the runway. Great video!

    • @CoSmicGoesRacing
      @CoSmicGoesRacing 10 місяців тому +45

      It's a shame that it's just there collecting dust. That thing should be repainted back to its period-correct China Airlines livery and put on display at an aviation museum as a testament to the 747's resilience.

    • @raptorhacker599
      @raptorhacker599 7 місяців тому +3

      How did it go to Tijuana?

    • @CoSmicGoesRacing
      @CoSmicGoesRacing 7 місяців тому +7

      @@raptorhacker599 probably it was a near enough airport that wasn’t in the US that allowed it to be accommodated.

    • @sal_strazzullo
      @sal_strazzullo Місяць тому +1

      ​@@CoSmicGoesRacingyup Tijuana is pretty close, just south of San Diego in California

    • @mistertagnan
      @mistertagnan 9 годин тому

      Is it still there? In googling it was reported that they were considering scrapping it, but I can’t find any more information

  • @14112ido
    @14112ido Рік тому +157

    I had expected this to end with everyone onboard lost, so it was a nice surprise that everyone got out (mostly) okay. Still, considering how bad the damages were to the aircraft especially to the control surfaces, it's a miracle they could land safely.

  • @keremmorgul367
    @keremmorgul367 2 роки тому +902

    That these pilots managed to create such a big mess out of a single engine failure is very disheartening from a passenger's point of view.

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 2 роки тому +32

      Indeed.

    • @MichaelStawowy
      @MichaelStawowy 2 роки тому +138

      15000 hour captain - and probably 13000 of those hours flown on autopilot. even worse today. lots of professional pilots talking about it.

    • @tomk4199
      @tomk4199 2 роки тому +61

      Agree. I have watched quite a few of these and this seems like some of the worst piloting. They got off lucky

    • @Xoman08
      @Xoman08 2 роки тому +27

      @@MichaelStawowy Indeed, AF447 is an example of the problem, when things go wrong a % of pilots are not well prepared / not able to diagnose correctly and losing "situation awareness" can lead to a crash.

    • @nueziger2691
      @nueziger2691 2 роки тому +90

      I hope these pilots all retired after this flight. This should have been the recommendation of the final report.

  • @Denzarki
    @Denzarki 2 роки тому +550

    Its so good to hear of an emergency that actually ended in everyone surviving. This actually makes me, with an extreme fear of flying, feel better about flying because it shows not all emergencies end in disaster.. well except for the guy with a broken foot

    • @David-ud9ju
      @David-ud9ju 2 роки тому +31

      This should never have been an emergency though. It was a simple engine failure that any pilot should know exactly how to deal with but apparently these pilots didn't.

    • @revenevan11
      @revenevan11 2 роки тому +16

      @@David-ud9ju right, but even in the case of pilots dealing with the situation this poorly, it still managed to be recovered without loss of human life. Just loss of some underwear, I'm sure, and consequences for the pilots, I'm sure. At the very least severe retraining *AND* a look at the airline's training programs and crew culture that could allow for such complacency and confirmation bias. It's a difficult scenario for me to judge, as I'm not a pilot, just an armchair enthusiast who watches too many videos like this lol, and because although the pilots were the main cause of the issue, they also did end up getting it on the ground safely once they removed their heads from their asses! (Should've added a "remove before flight" tag there too!!!)🤣

    • @Quon6810
      @Quon6810 2 роки тому +2

      I would’ve cussed them tf out when I walked past them getting off the plane.

    • @Yamyatos
      @Yamyatos Рік тому +6

      Honestly, this is one of the stories less well suited to build trust in the aviation system, as the pilot(s) mishandled it quite a bit. Cant say i blame them, but still. He has a few stories like that, which is a bit disheartening. Like the one with the pilot that felt superior due to his experience and started lecturing and looking down on his second pilot, which ended in a huge tragedy. Or the one with the airport that had horrible safety standards and a lot of broken stuff, where you just end up asking yourself how that's even possible. But those are the exceptions, not the norm. There is also a planeload of videos that really make you look up and respect those pilots for their decisionmaking and how they handle stress. Like the Hudson Miracle, or his currently newest video about a beoing nearly crashing into a mountain, which i really enjoyed. Or the one where a passender had to land a plane, where you really felt all the experts coming together to help. Amazing stories.. even more so because they are real.

    • @STITCHWA
      @STITCHWA Рік тому +2

      Um yeh nah not everyone survived the lady that got sucked halfway out died

  • @KeenlyJohnas
    @KeenlyJohnas 6 місяців тому +73

    It is amazing how an experienced crew can allow a situation that seems manageable to escalate that quickly out of control 😮

    • @sarahlouise7163
      @sarahlouise7163 4 місяці тому

      amazing and very scary indeed

    • @spacecoastz4026
      @spacecoastz4026 4 місяці тому +5

      And not understand why a #4 engine-out could present some aerodynamic issues. Why they didn't slightly back off thrust on #1 and #2 and start descending is just basic.

    • @sentientdogma1206
      @sentientdogma1206 3 місяці тому

      What ethnicity and race were the pilots? Thats why 😅

    • @ChonnyD
      @ChonnyD Місяць тому

      Racist trash

  • @johannahunderwood4596
    @johannahunderwood4596 Рік тому +116

    Astonishing! Everyone on that flight is lucky to be alive. It shows how a small problem can mushroom into a huge problem when there is a loss of situational awareness.

    • @lukamilas8648
      @lukamilas8648 Рік тому +9

      When you have people who don’t know how to properly solve a problem. They were extremely fortunate.

    • @goaway6786
      @goaway6786 Рік тому +1

      Absolutely.

  • @BucsFan-vc5nl
    @BucsFan-vc5nl 2 роки тому +635

    The scariest thing about this is it happened with so much experience in the cockpit.

    • @mef12727
      @mef12727 2 роки тому +98

      90% experience on auto pilot

    • @rafael502
      @rafael502 Рік тому +48

      @@mef12727 more like 99.9%

    • @LeutnantJoker
      @LeutnantJoker Рік тому +60

      Experience as glorified bus drivers. Und unlike bus drivers they don't even have to handle the controls. I'd trust an experienced truck driver more than one of these bozos

    • @Ice.muffin
      @Ice.muffin Рік тому +10

      @@LeutnantJoker Experienced bus drivers are also to be trusted 🤨🤨.

    • @wideseen
      @wideseen Рік тому +2

      @@rafael502 Experience in not falling off the chairs.

  • @nathanwilliams8222
    @nathanwilliams8222 2 роки тому +211

    "We can control the aircraft" just killed me. I wonder if air traffic controler [who probably had not been apprised of prior situation] wanted to ask the obvious question - "was there a point where you couldn't control the aircraft?"

    • @dmytrogubskyi4355
      @dmytrogubskyi4355 2 роки тому +46

      Still a right thing to inform. The controller is aware something is very wrong if you do not respond to multiple calls, during wich your aircraft is teleporting 20 thousand feet down.

    • @hauntedshadowslegacy2826
      @hauntedshadowslegacy2826 2 роки тому +22

      I know, right? It's like a kid saying, 'hey, mom, don't worry about your garden, because it looks okay now'. Like, gee, sounds suuuuuuper trustworthy right??? (ahem SARCASM)

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 2 роки тому +1

      @@dmytrogubskyi4355 Indeed.

    • @thenasadude6878
      @thenasadude6878 2 роки тому +15

      Kennedy Steve would probably have roasted them with something like "yes, that's what you're paid for"

    • @comvnche
      @comvnche 2 роки тому +7

      Air traffic probably did not trust their instruments either! xD

  • @thee0581
    @thee0581 Рік тому +33

    When your coffee starts flying upwards out of your cup but you re still convinced the instruments are wrong.

  • @adriansmith7730
    @adriansmith7730 Рік тому +132

    I live in Tijuana, Mexico and since little I remember a parked 747 in our locale airport and until now I decided to look into the history of the aircraft. Crazy to think that the 747 involved in this specific incident has been sitting in my city for 15+ years, it feels so weird to know everytime I watch this video I can just drive a few miles and appreciate the actual 747 in all it's glory. Loved the video btw, great job as always c:

    • @aquilifergroup
      @aquilifergroup 11 місяців тому +1

      Puedes tomar una foto amigo?

    • @eetuthereindeer6671
      @eetuthereindeer6671 6 місяців тому +1

      I wish Mexico was a native american country. It should have been. It sucks that europeans ended up becoming a majority there despite the civilizations of americans there. I wonder how much tourism they would be getting if instead of maya ruins there would be maya cities

    • @planespottingoliver7317
      @planespottingoliver7317 5 місяців тому +12

      @@eetuthereindeer6671one small question, how does this have anything to do with the video and aviation in particular 😅😅

    • @eetuthereindeer6671
      @eetuthereindeer6671 5 місяців тому

      @@planespottingoliver7317 it does not 🤔 good point

    • @MoAtreides
      @MoAtreides 3 місяці тому

      Awebo yo soy de playas de tijuana, no sabia que era el mismo avión

  • @A1BASE
    @A1BASE 2 роки тому +1789

    Hey Frank, I'm not sure what I'm seeing here. I think we've got a simultaneous failure in 3 redundant flight instruments.
    Sounds about right to me, Captain! Also, sir, I'd just like to take the opportunity to say how much I admire your new seating position on the ceiling! Very avant guarde!

    • @MentourPilot
      @MentourPilot  2 роки тому +266

      😂😂😂

    • @andrewf7822
      @andrewf7822 2 роки тому +59

      Thats hilarious

    • @michaelschwartz9485
      @michaelschwartz9485 2 роки тому +53

      Ding ding ding! We've got a winner! Great comment!!

    • @josedomingovegaviera2371
      @josedomingovegaviera2371 2 роки тому +7

      they also make the video 25 minutes longer than it should be by repeating the same crap over and over.

    • @CaptainPanick
      @CaptainPanick 2 роки тому +134

      Captain, another amazing thing is how your coffee cup is sitting upside down on the ceiling and not spilling, so not only are all our instruments faulty, but gravity itself seems broken now. Do they have anything about that in the manuals?

  • @theduke7539
    @theduke7539 2 роки тому +70

    I never cease to be amazed at how seasoned professionals can make sustained rookie mistakes. I'm not immune to this, but when I make a mistake, I just lose a few hours of work, nobody is gonna die if I make a mistake, even a relatively bad one.

    • @swedneck
      @swedneck 9 місяців тому +2

      The thing that always boggles me is people in high-risk environments being willing to tolerate even further risks.
      To err is human, but taking chances with something as potentially dangerous as flying implies a profound lack of risk-assessment i feel.
      It's one thing to try to cut in line in a traffic jam, but when you're in an airplane taking risks can lead to you and everyone else PLUMMETING TO YOUR DEATH (as we just saw), which one would think is a pretty good motivation to not take any risks.

  • @ColonelKlink100
    @ColonelKlink100 Рік тому +198

    I wouldn't be surprised if some of the passengers swore off of airplane flights after this incident. It must have been terrifying. 😧🥺

    • @Argumemnon
      @Argumemnon Рік тому +7

      Gee I hope people who get into car accidents don't swear off automobiles, that way.

    • @SgtHappyHands
      @SgtHappyHands Рік тому +67

      @@Argumemnon Some do.
      Often, it can even extend past the type of vehicle an accident occurred in. Or even develop into general anxiety disorders, where their whole sense of risk assessment changes. It can take years of effort and therapy to readjust after such an experience. If they ever manage to readjust at all.

    • @Valsorayu
      @Valsorayu Рік тому +32

      @@Argumemnon Trauma exists. If you feel like shit when getting in a car then you won't get in a car.

    • @Kgosha
      @Kgosha Рік тому +24

      @@SgtHappyHands Yeah, it took me almost a year to not be terrified every time I went through an intersection after I got t-boned.

    • @BundasaurusPecs
      @BundasaurusPecs 5 місяців тому +3

      @@ArgumemnonI mean, yeah, people do. Stuff’s scary

  • @bret9741
    @bret9741 Рік тому +20

    I’m an ATP and an FAA gold seal flight instructor certificate. Also hold every fixed wing certificate out there over the past 35 years. I’m medically retired now but need an aviation fix often and these videos really go along way toward keeping me in touch with the knowledge I can no longer use but still enjoy thinking about.
    I, like so many others, believe pilots should go through aerobatic training and when an airline pilot should have extensive training in simulation recovering from severe unusual attitudes. I had some great sim instructors who loved to place me in unusual attitudes to recover from. One instructor would place us in a night IMC scenario with a mix of malfunctioning instruments or engine loss. Once successful and time permitting, we be given nothing but our emergency instruments.
    One thing I noticed, while instructing, a lot of pilots panic more when they loose automation than when they loose an engine. Hand flying in a high mental load environment often results in an incomplete sim session or an outright failure.
    I realize these scenarios are extremely rare in real life but they do occur therefore we need to train for them.

    • @Heyu7her3
      @Heyu7her3 Рік тому

      Your comment reminds me of a comment I read under another video. The person mentioned the book "Children of the Magenta Line" which the author, who's a retired pilot, wrote about how automation changed piloting skills.

  • @peregrina7701
    @peregrina7701 2 роки тому +236

    Kind of blown away by how they didn't trust _three_ separate horizons all in agreement.... Even if the agreed situation was horrible..... Human beings are curious things. Thank goodness for a safe if really scary outcome. (How did they even have pitch control with the tailplane in that condition???) Great video Sir, keep them coming!

    • @Kalumbatsch
      @Kalumbatsch 2 роки тому +23

      When your senses tell you that down isn't where down really is and all you see around you is the cockpit, that is a powerful impression and that is what you trust instinctively.

    • @kristianfagerstrom7011
      @kristianfagerstrom7011 2 роки тому +10

      They probably didn't look at them actively with the intent of comparing instruments to antcipated situation.
      The pilot probably jus glanced at one of them, stating his initial reaction - Presumably the flight engineer should have checked them acively when the pilot made the satement.

    • @matthewking5612
      @matthewking5612 2 роки тому +5

      Their brains were being subjected to high vertical loads dude.

    • @ahstrewth
      @ahstrewth 2 роки тому +24

      Tunnel vision and panic response developed quickly. Assisting crew - sometimes better positioned to see the big picture - disabled by g forces. But armchair evaluations are easy. Flight in turbulence at altitudes near the flight altitude limits demands constant awareness....crew do not have a pause button. Remarkable that the aircraft held together.

    • @WorldTravelerCooking
      @WorldTravelerCooking 2 роки тому +10

      One of the fundamental problems though is that we, as humans, only understand facts when they are situated in narratives. If you don't understand how the instruments are showing something so heavily messed up, it will be very, very hard to understand them. Confirmation and continuation bias both come from this.
      I totally understand how this works. I am not in aviation but I have worked on large, complex IT systems and I have been bit by similar cognitive biases.
      What I am wondering is how the captain (pilot flying here I think) failed to notice the roll until the upset was so heavily developed. I would have expected an instrument scan to notice the roll before that point.

  • @mdbryan9525
    @mdbryan9525 2 роки тому +259

    Retired B747 classic captain here. Your analysis was pretty awesome. I was impressed by your knowledge of the 747 systems and the use of cockpit video simulations. Kudos.

    • @1ibnebatuta
      @1ibnebatuta Рік тому

      Sir please guide me to be become a pilot with very limited resources 😔

    • @mdbryan9525
      @mdbryan9525 Рік тому

      @@1ibnebatuta where are you located. ?

    • @mdbryan9525
      @mdbryan9525 Рік тому +10

      @@1ibnebatuta Because of the worldwide pilot shortage, now is an excellent time to become a pilot. Many of the airlines have started their own pilot training program. I’d check those out. The other option is to buy a small Cessna 150 or something similar and hire an instructor to teach you and build your hours that way. Even if you have to borrow the money, you can frequently sell the airplane after your done for more than you paid for it. If you buy wisely that is. If you decide to go this route, hire a A&P mechanic to do a pre buy inspection. It’ll pay dividends if you do.

    • @1ibnebatuta
      @1ibnebatuta Рік тому +2

      @@mdbryan9525 a huge thanks sir for even considering my comment. Another barrier in my mind is my age. I'm already 38 years old. Can I still persue my dreams.

    • @mdbryan9525
      @mdbryan9525 Рік тому +11

      @@1ibnebatuta No problem. Your age is a plus, not a negative. The airline is going to see you as being more mature. Able to act with less drama in case of an emergency. Anybody can fly a plane when everything is going right. It takes a professional to handle an airplane when everything is going wrong.

  • @cryptosurjgill5856
    @cryptosurjgill5856 Рік тому +143

    Crazy to think that they could only straighten out when they came out the clouds ☁️ and saw the horizon,what if it was misty or nighttime,surely your gyroscope can’t be faulty

    • @seventh-hydra
      @seventh-hydra Рік тому +10

      If you mean the artificial horizon, attitude indicators can definitely fail, and the most likely reason is from a loss of power scenario. Which they thought they were experiencing.
      They can also fail as a result of rapid changes in speed or direction, which they definitely did experience.

    • @B_-.-
      @B_-.- Рік тому +10

      They can fail, but there's several and they'd fail independently. The chances of all 3 failing at the same time is extremely low.
      What's more, is there are vertical speed indicators and altimeters that would've shown that the plane was actually diving also.
      In essence, there should always be enough info to know if you're flying level in terms of altitude. Bank not so much, but it's still extremely unlikely you'd lose all instruments indicating bank angle.

    • @AndyJarman
      @AndyJarman Рік тому +2

      Why a gimballed ship's compass isn't fitted to all airline dashboards I'll never understand! Seems too much emphasis on automation and too little on remaining "situationally aware" (knowing up from down for instance!).

    • @seventh-hydra
      @seventh-hydra Рік тому +1

      @@B_-.- Keep in mind reliability, and awareness of systems from pilots, was a lot lower in 1985. I can understand where these pilots were coming from. And they took the right procedures to attempt to correct the false "issue." Aside from attempting to re-light the engine too soon.
      I feel like people are coming down way too hard on these pilots. Especially compared to the reaction I saw for Air France 447, a modern crew on a modern plane, yet somehow everyone acts with sympathy towards the "confusion" of the pilot who was doing nose hard-up in a stalling aircraft. 🤦 After being told to go nose down by his co-pilot _and_ captain.

    • @B_-.-
      @B_-.- Рік тому +1

      @@seventh-hydra I didn't say a word about the pilots. I just explained that a failure of every instrument indicating that the plane is climbing/descending is extremely unlikely, even in 1985.
      "Pilot error" is an overused phrase that pushes blame onto pilots when in actuality, the people who are responsible for them - airlines - should be held responsible. There are some causes where a pilot does something totally stupid, but 90% of the time, you can root the issue back to lackluster training, lackluster experience, or a trail of small issues that no one put together previously.

  • @Takyodor2
    @Takyodor2 Рік тому +68

    I find it ridiculously impressive that such a large, clumsy-looking plane can take those forces well enough to be able to land!

    • @hia5235
      @hia5235 Рік тому +16

      Its the safest most durable plane ever built. Respect it.

    • @jacquelinekemp4074
      @jacquelinekemp4074 5 місяців тому +5

      beautiful plane

    • @NickanM
      @NickanM 3 місяці тому +1

      _They were executing fighter jet moves with that plane, giving the passengers the ride of a life time..._ 😱
      Kudos & respect to the manufacturer; Boeing.

  • @markbryan9989
    @markbryan9989 2 роки тому +166

    "Trust you instruments" This was pounded into my head during flight training. They can fail but if the redundant systems agree, they are probably correct. Amazing amount of damage to that aircraft! They were fortunate it wasn't worse.

    • @tankthearc9875
      @tankthearc9875 2 роки тому +6

      pitot tube incidents .

    • @thaneoffife6904
      @thaneoffife6904 2 роки тому +4

      I think It had something to do with their visibility. Because they had no visual reference they didn't think the aircraft was actually doing what the artificial horizon said it was doing. It seemed the captain wasn't aware of the gradual banking either so from his perspective the artificial horizon just went crazy.

    • @Kalumbatsch
      @Kalumbatsch 2 роки тому +10

      @@thaneoffife6904 That and our inner ear can only sense acceleration, not which way is actually up. It's possible to think you're flying level but you're actually upside down, pulling back on the stick, and gradually going vertical crashing into the ground.

    • @cr10001
      @cr10001 2 роки тому +11

      They were very lucky to survive. One that wasn't - check out Atlas Air 3591. Perfectly functional 767 that the co-pilot kamikaze'd into the ground under the impression they were stalling.

    • @coryCuc
      @coryCuc 2 роки тому

      @@Kalumbatsch Yep. That's what happened in the Kobe crash.

  • @ThomasPH123
    @ThomasPH123 2 роки тому +143

    I cannot imagine the level of absolute terror that all those passengers had to endure. 5 g’s is enough to make a grown man cry and I’m sure some people lost consciousness for a brief moment only to wake up to more terror.

    • @louissanderson719
      @louissanderson719 2 роки тому +1

      Having pulled 5g’s before, I wouldn’t have been impressed 😂

    • @sundhaug92
      @sundhaug92 2 роки тому +35

      5 g would be blackout-territory for a healthy person

    • @slipknottin
      @slipknottin 2 роки тому +6

      @@louissanderson719 what were you doing that you pulled 5Gs?

    • @louissanderson719
      @louissanderson719 2 роки тому

      @@slipknottin aerobatics

    • @gorillaau
      @gorillaau 2 роки тому

      Oof! That sounds horrific!

  • @thor3279
    @thor3279 Рік тому +20

    you have an incredible ability to explain complex information simply and clearly without ego. your productions are engaging without dramatics or blame. I'm glad for the work you do.

  • @thatsaniceboulder1483
    @thatsaniceboulder1483 Рік тому +17

    I’m sitting here gobsmacked that they came out of that so unscathed. I can’t help thinking of JAL 123. For some reason that battle the captain so valiantly fought has stuck in my head. Pulling those g’s… staying with it and fighting, just amazing.

    • @HidInMistProductions
      @HidInMistProductions 10 місяців тому +4

      JAL 123 haunts me as well. I'm so glad that this flight had a happier ending.

  • @CertifiedDynamite
    @CertifiedDynamite 2 роки тому +45

    The 747SP is one tough bird. N4522V was repaired and continued to fly until 2006 which is pretty incredible.

    • @lucianistoc1264
      @lucianistoc1264 6 місяців тому +2

      I could swear that the airframe would be deemed un airworthy after pulling those Gs

  • @mcb187
    @mcb187 2 роки тому +110

    Man, that pullout must have been insane! To put that in perspective, most roller coasters are designed to have no more than about 4 seconds of 4g. The closest comparison I can find would be a now defunct Japanese coaster, that had a maximum g force of about 6.5, and sustained around 5g for about 2 seconds. People have said that they felt like they couldn’t breathe. I have actually been on a coaster that pulled 4g for around 5 seconds, and it was intense as hell!

  • @R1CK3RS
    @R1CK3RS Рік тому +74

    The Air crash investigation episode on this is my favourite of all time. The visualisation of this was incredible, and the way the captain snapped his plane back level after glimpsing the horizon was absolutely nothing short of spectacular. The fact the crew caused the disaster is irrelevant compared to the way the captain leveled and landed what was left of his plane.

    • @MegaTechpc
      @MegaTechpc Рік тому +13

      Agreed. They lost situational awareness and that is not good, but at the end of the day they managed to save the plane and safely deliver their passengers to the airport. People make mistakes and the hope is that they were able to learn from this incident and become better pilots as a result.

    • @goaway6786
      @goaway6786 Рік тому +6

      He bent it. With 10000 feet of air left. He's lucky he didn't break it.

    • @user-lv7ph7hs7l
      @user-lv7ph7hs7l 11 місяців тому +1

      Yo what season? I can't find it.

    • @R1CK3RS
      @R1CK3RS 10 місяців тому +2

      I don't know what the episode was called but can tell you this from watching the episode: China airlines 006, flown by captain Ho.

    • @R1CK3RS
      @R1CK3RS 10 місяців тому +1

      I don't know that we will ever see flying like this again with no fatalities in our lifetimes.

  • @IrisRiedel6
    @IrisRiedel6 Рік тому +20

    The fact that this aircraft was still intact (minus the stabilizers) and the passengers lived to go to the hospital or board another plane is astounding to me. I'm both freaking out and laughing hard at this whole situation. Amazing flying by the crew and amazing craftmanship of the plane. Also can't imagine the G forces.

  • @WT.....
    @WT..... 2 роки тому +33

    I love how the pilot was like "we're in a sudden pitch maneuver. Our 3 redundant instruments are unreliable because it all says we're pitching down, which can't be true, despite having inputed commands to descend to a lower altitude before. Most importantly why does the speed keep increasing when I'm doing nothing?"

  • @Scott1433
    @Scott1433 2 роки тому +102

    fantastic level of detail here. An episode of "Mayday" covered this incident, but you went into much finer details and explained things that were not covered. Great stuff

  • @kipwheeler7188
    @kipwheeler7188 Рік тому +7

    Wow! I'm an Army rotary wing NDI inspector and I love these videos. Stress and fatigue on those wings and for them to stay working is amazing.

  • @valuedhumanoid6574
    @valuedhumanoid6574 2 роки тому +160

    I was on a ATA (American Trans Air no longer in business) L1011 coming home to Indy from Vegas back in the 90's that made a 1000 foot drop in a split second. We actually went over a patch of turbulence so strong and the captain later told us over the intercom that there was a downdraft that robbed all of the lift from the wings. When we finally stopped dropping and the lift caught back up, the amount of G force we felt was incredible. Just before it happened the attendants were going up the aisle with the little drink cart and they suspended drink service. If they had not, that cart would have been airborne for sure. I know if I didn't have my seatbelt on I would have smashed the overhead. We were flying over the Rocky Mountains in the late summer/early fall. To fall 30,000 feet in 2.5 minutes would have been so much worse. We diverted to Omaha immediately and spent 6 hours there while they checked over the plane. 7 hours later we were airborne again. Scariest flying incident of my life to date.

    • @MentourPilot
      @MentourPilot  2 роки тому +36

      Scary stuff!

    • @Daniele858585
      @Daniele858585 2 роки тому +4

      yeah the airdrop are the funniest part of flying, low and high g are fantastic! i wish i could try 9g in a jet, is my life dream :X

    • @halweilbrenner9926
      @halweilbrenner9926 2 роки тому +4

      One of the best large commercial planes was overbuilt & therefore not a financial success.

    • @isabellind1292
      @isabellind1292 2 роки тому +9

      Terrifying! You are very smart and that's precisely why there's NO excuse not to keep your seat belt fastened at all times when you're seated. The attendants don't have the luxury in a split second drop.

    • @anna_in_aotearoa3166
      @anna_in_aotearoa3166 2 роки тому +8

      The fact that the passenger & cabin crew were so little injured is just absolutely frickin' incredible to me, given they were experiencing forces stronger than those you'd get if strapped to the nose of a Saturn moon rocket!! 😳 Must have been psychologically terrifying though...

  • @naturallyherb
    @naturallyherb 2 роки тому +284

    I think I've watched this incident on the Air Crash Investigation documentary, and I think it's interesting to see a different perspective on the discussion this. Specifically the events from the engine failure to pretty much loss of control, and then recovery after.

    • @hanjitheeka1200
      @hanjitheeka1200 2 роки тому +20

      Mentor pilot does amazing job at explaining these videos

    • @toomanyhobbies2011
      @toomanyhobbies2011 2 роки тому +10

      Yes, MT is an expert pilot and understands the issues. Hollywood makes guesses and sensationalizes everything.

    • @unvergebeneid
      @unvergebeneid 2 роки тому +9

      @@toomanyhobbies2011 those documentaries are very well done though.

    • @fluuufffffy1514
      @fluuufffffy1514 2 роки тому +4

      Yeah, me too. And on Allec Joshua Ibay's channel. Always on the edge of my seat--this is an amazing story any way around!

    • @naturallyherb
      @naturallyherb 2 роки тому +5

      @@toomanyhobbies2011 Air Crash Investigation was run on the Discovery Channel in Canada so while it isn't exactly Hollywood, I think that their episodes are a bit sensationalized and incorrect at times. Like showing an 8-abreast economy cabin while showing an accident involving a 747 at one time, for instance.

  • @wolfchapz7669
    @wolfchapz7669 Рік тому +3

    I appreciate how you make this very detailed but easy to understand for us casuals. This is complicated stuff and lots to know and you are great at breaking things down

  • @boop53
    @boop53 Рік тому

    your videos are amazing - right to the point, no clickbait, well informed, explains the reasons behind accidents. thank you!

  • @haydenspencer6745
    @haydenspencer6745 2 роки тому +65

    I can’t believe the final report had no recommendations! That’s like saying “yeah we know this incident happened but we don’t know how make improvements to make sure it doesn’t happen again”. Kinda scary really. Aren’t these incidents supposed to improve safety…

    • @MentourPilot
      @MentourPilot  2 роки тому +36

      Yes, and sometimes the report in itself is the safety improvement.
      We can always recommend better training but these pilots had gone through the required training of inflight engine failure so it seems to have been a genuine mistake.

    • @aldenunion
      @aldenunion 2 роки тому

      "Convenient Amnesia"

    • @OwlRTA
      @OwlRTA 2 роки тому +1

      The NTSB really missed an opportunity to recommend measures to mitigate fatigue and monotony in the cockpit, because it was brought up in the report. Even jet lag was mentioned, as the captain went through so many time zones in the past week. Jeddah to Taipei, then a couple of round trips from Taipei to Japan, and then Taipei to LA all in the last week. The NTSB could've recommended limits on how much load a pilot takes on on a weekly basis, or how to make the autopilot more pilot-friendly, and not merely mask problems, or how to make sleeping in planes more achievable for the pilots.

  • @lknanml
    @lknanml 2 роки тому +96

    It usually takes a series of small events to cause a really big one.
    The fact they had all that minor to medium damage that DIDN'T lead to a major event is pretty amazing.

    • @sailaab
      @sailaab 2 роки тому

      True that

    • @GrEEnEyE089
      @GrEEnEyE089 2 роки тому +7

      to be fair, pulling 5g on a 747 is pretty major if you ask me

  • @pooryorick831
    @pooryorick831 Рік тому +1

    I have known about this incident for a while but this is the first real thorough explanation I have heard. Thank You.

  • @joshuadobson5245
    @joshuadobson5245 Рік тому +1

    The details, and effort you go into are unparalleled. Thank you

  • @JamesAlburyTheSkyAboveUs
    @JamesAlburyTheSkyAboveUs 2 роки тому +290

    It's a miracle this plane landed safely. My gosh. I would've been scared to death had I been on that flight. Boeing makes really good planes. I wonder if the 747-400 could handle that level of G's. The saving grace may have been that the 747-SP has a shorter body and the aerodynamic and physical stresses were closer to the plane's center of mass. Thanks for posting this video!

    • @iLLBiLLsRoastBeats
      @iLLBiLLsRoastBeats 2 роки тому +8

      Boeing sources out to Chinese slave labor factories

    • @GOLDVIOLINbowofdeath
      @GOLDVIOLINbowofdeath 2 роки тому +20

      I think what you meant to say was the stresses were less because the forces were closer to the body of the airplane which meant the moment arm was shorter and thus stresses were less

    • @iLLBiLLsRoastBeats
      @iLLBiLLsRoastBeats 2 роки тому +7

      @@ALFRED744 them and also google and every other tech lord. Selling all our data and tech to the CCP

    • @Paolo8772
      @Paolo8772 2 роки тому +3

      I think you're correct about that. I'm watching the Mayday version and it incorrectly CGId the plane to look like a 747-400.

    • @tokenlau7519
      @tokenlau7519 2 роки тому +9

      "Boeing makes really good planes." Not anymore... ;(

  • @theHDRflightdeck
    @theHDRflightdeck 2 роки тому +161

    Pilots: “That was nothing let’s continue”
    Aircraft: “Nope”

    • @jamesrau100
      @jamesrau100 2 роки тому +21

      If only the 747 could talk: "Pilots, I have a number for you to call!" 🙂

    • @MrChaza001
      @MrChaza001 2 роки тому +5

      @@jamesrau100 Haha!😂. Aircraft: “I have an incoming call for you….”

  • @rodanilupena6994
    @rodanilupena6994 10 місяців тому

    Dear Sir, You explained very well the accidents as well as flight crew background, as well as accurate transcript document that’s why I follow and always listen to your annotations.Thank you, Sir.

  • @pointbreak4490
    @pointbreak4490 2 місяці тому

    I would fly with this dude as my pilot anywhere. All the knowledge and awareness he gets from making all these videos must be insanely helpful. Great job all around. Happy flying.

  • @angustin6590
    @angustin6590 2 роки тому +155

    "...from Taipei in China... "
    John Xina approves of this

    • @NightBlado
      @NightBlado 2 роки тому +14

      Even through propaganda the Taiwanese flag is seen on the plane, instead of the communist flag

    • @LawpickingLocksmith
      @LawpickingLocksmith 2 роки тому +1

      So sad, where will it all end up?

    • @nottenarwle9906
      @nottenarwle9906 2 роки тому +27

      This was my thoughts as well. Immediately ripped me out of the video.

    • @lyhjiba
      @lyhjiba 2 роки тому +9

      Republic of China on Taiwan

    • @SWiTFSHoW
      @SWiTFSHoW 2 роки тому +2

      @@nottenarwle9906 yeeea wtf :(

  • @michaelschwartz9485
    @michaelschwartz9485 2 роки тому +83

    They were so close to completely tearing apart! Seeing the horizontal stabilizer ripped apart, I would have passed out! Their Guardian Angeles and Boeing engineers were definitely with them! Phew!

  • @kennethmcdonald2952
    @kennethmcdonald2952 Рік тому +1

    I have to say your videos are absolutely amazing. being a child growing up in a family of pilots, I definitely understand everything that you're explaining. You explain it so well, and the way you explain it is very professional. I would feel extremely comfortable with you being PIC on a trip if i were to take one. Thank you for the amazing content And keep Them coming.

  • @reyjusuf
    @reyjusuf Рік тому +3

    I remember the Mayday/Air Crash Investigation episode of this flight. One passenger interviewed said "we landed safely, thats all that mattered. They got us into it, but they got us out of it."

  • @comandanteej
    @comandanteej 2 роки тому +101

    I was actually hoping for this episode to come. -A horrifying event with a happy end. Thanks a lot Mentour!

    • @homefront3162
      @homefront3162 2 роки тому +1

      All men love a "Happy Ending"

    • @comandanteej
      @comandanteej 2 роки тому

      @@homefront3162 :)

    • @michaelmcneil4168
      @michaelmcneil4168 2 роки тому

      @@homefront3162 An happy ending would require the captain and second pilot be relieved of any further command and the promotion of staff confined to people capable of understanding how aircraft work.

  • @jozefvervloet766
    @jozefvervloet766 2 роки тому +162

    A bit unbelievable that after what happens during this flight, the captain decides not to fly to the closest airport. Knowing that this aircraft was exposed to extremely forces and you never know what damages could has been done at the aircraft. One of the recommendation should also be: required to land at the nearest airport. regardless of what happened or the captain his feelings.

    • @snowpawzvideos
      @snowpawzvideos Рік тому +12

      honestly I don’t think they were aware of the G forces, let alone the sheer extent of them, considering they couldn’t believe their instruments

    • @FriedrichHerschel
      @FriedrichHerschel Рік тому +37

      @@snowpawzvideos They lost 30,000 feet altitude in less then 150 seconds. That sink rate is waaaaaaaay beyond anything normal. Even in an emergency dive after loss of cabin pressure the sink rate is around 6000-7000 feet/minute ... they got to 12,000 ft/min. In one moment they knew they were at 41,000 ft, and then suddenly below the cloud level! And that is even AFTER the captain pulled the yolk so hard that they almost stalled!
      G forces aside - if they think they cant trust their instruments, they should land!

    • @sdtok527
      @sdtok527 Рік тому +13

      @@snowpawzvideos Well if everyone suddenly starts falling around you, one might wonder if there are some G forces involved.

    • @reeritz1280
      @reeritz1280 Рік тому +9

      Not a pilot, but I totally agree, especially as there is no way to view the outside of the plane to know if any damage or what kind. Common sense = land ASAP.

    • @remmyotieno8199
      @remmyotieno8199 Рік тому +8

      Watched this before on mayday episodes, but to watch it here and to learn after everything the captain still opted to fly around for fun with a wounded bird is nothing short of absurd

  • @benderandownz
    @benderandownz Рік тому

    I cannot wait to get to the majors Mentour! You and Captain Joe were somes big reasons I made the decision to stop waiting around and pursue it! Hopefully within the next one to two years I'll be sitting right seat in the airlines!

  • @johnt6022
    @johnt6022 Рік тому

    I luv the way you explain things in your videos. It certainly makes it easy for us to follow. Thanks hun. x

  • @andy_in_colorado7060
    @andy_in_colorado7060 2 роки тому +22

    Stuff like this is why the saying USED to be, "if it ain't Boeing, I ain't going." Absolutely amazing engineering (and probably no small amount of luck) that allowed a jumbo jet to survive conditions that would have doomed most any other aircraft available, anywhere.

  • @treschlet
    @treschlet 2 роки тому +195

    man, based on how thorough all these investigations are, I can't believe there were no recommendations. Like... it seems totally obvious that an engine out checklist and training on a multi-engine aircraft should have "apply rudder to counter assymetric thrust" as the very first order of operations (aviate, navigate communicate and all). You lose an engine, assymetric thrust is 100% guaranteed, so that just seems like it should be in muscle memory. lost engine? lemme give a little rudder. crisis averted

    • @Delibro
      @Delibro 2 роки тому +11

      Yea.
      Why are so many so basic things not done here?

    • @lanorothwolf2184
      @lanorothwolf2184 2 роки тому +23

      Recomendations: none. actually means "Never go full retard !!!" in this case. They just threw their hands up in the air.

    • @libertyprime1997
      @libertyprime1997 2 роки тому +36

      How the hell did they not recommend some kind of increased "trust your fucking instruments" training either?? These were *experienced* pilots, and by the way they were flying, if it was dark or foggy below 11k they would've just assumed the altimeter was wrong and flown it straight into the ocean.

    • @thomasfsan
      @thomasfsan 2 роки тому +23

      Because all these things already are in the training. There’s no multi-engine pilot license that doesn’t include what to do during asymmetric thrust..

    • @aeternusdoleo4531
      @aeternusdoleo4531 2 роки тому +4

      A warning signal for the autopilot when it keeps a long, persistent bank angle might also be in order. Without rudder authority, the AP is only capable of going straight. It shouldn't be banking the aircraft for very long.

  • @bromidedrag
    @bromidedrag Рік тому

    You truly have one of the best channels on UA-cam. Fantastic, professional content!

  • @aidanlacey8926
    @aidanlacey8926 Рік тому +1

    I love your videos! So full of information and so easy to follow the story’s. Thank you for your content

  • @hposnansky4222
    @hposnansky4222 2 роки тому +146

    At Hamilton Standard we designed and built the engine fuel control, as well as the stator vane control scheduler for that P&W engine.
    One of the tasks of the fuel control is to limit both the acceleration of the engine to prevent the turbine temperature to exceed a certain limit and the deceleration is also limited to prevent flame out.These functions override the power lever function as does the altitude compensation.
    In those days the TIT (turbine inlet temperature) could not reliably be measured. This temperature was computed by measuring the much lower compressor exit temperature and then a temperature increment was computed by the fuel controller based on the compressor pressure , to determine density, rpm to to determine airflow , and the fuel flow limit was computed based on the allowable increment to reach the TIT allowable.
    At high altitudes the density is low, nearly a fourth at 42000 feet, making the temperature very sensitive to fuel flow.
    Bleeding compressor air on that engine will reduce the compressor exit pressure significantly and limit the fuel flow more than on the other engines, resulting on exactly what was observed: a noticeably slower engine acceleration, to protect the turbine from overheating
    In other words: the engine (and fuel controller) were working as designed at that altitude.

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 2 роки тому +12

      Thank you very much for this information! Obviously and unfortunately the pilots of this flight weren´t aware of this.

    • @Buledde
      @Buledde 2 роки тому +6

      Makes sense, very early jet engines had to be operated very carefully at the thrust lever. Either they would catch fire or flame out.

    • @yazz3r
      @yazz3r 2 роки тому +4

      Great info. So many aviation related pros in these comments. Thanks.

    • @halweilbrenner9926
      @halweilbrenner9926 2 роки тому +4

      Man that was technical stuff.

    • @Jdalio5
      @Jdalio5 2 роки тому +1

      I would love to understand this comment...but that's OK I build fishing yachts and stay on the earth.

  • @Odin029
    @Odin029 2 роки тому +32

    I don't know about anybody else, but this episode actually makes me feel safer flying.

    • @geoh7777
      @geoh7777 2 роки тому +4

      You might be thinking that resting in death will make you safe from the threat of dying.

    • @aldenunion
      @aldenunion 2 роки тому

      @@geoh7777 I like that one...

  • @KONAMAN100
    @KONAMAN100 6 місяців тому +1

    What an expert story teller Mentour is. Stress is part of the ride!

  • @ryan1e
    @ryan1e 5 місяців тому +1

    all said and done... i know it is rare, but it is amazing to me that a plane in crisis hasn't collided with another aircraft.

  • @johnfranklin5277
    @johnfranklin5277 2 роки тому +63

    747, I always felt perfectly safe in it on trips to Europe from LAX. FANTASTIC AIRLINER. And obviously very forgiving of bad pilots. And what a beautiful looking aircraft.

  • @SinghAlokkrishna
    @SinghAlokkrishna 2 роки тому +54

    Once again, bang on. How these 25 min passed, watching it.. Quick and interesting. Knew some new terms with this video. Keep rocking captain.

    • @reconforsales7708
      @reconforsales7708 2 роки тому

      Watch it 1x5 speed

    • @TotalRookie_LV
      @TotalRookie_LV Рік тому

      What do you mean by "25 minutes"?! Oh sh...!

    • @SinghAlokkrishna
      @SinghAlokkrishna Рік тому +1

      @@TotalRookie_LV video time is 24.59 min, right? So I said 25 minutes. Means interesting and analystical videos wouldn't let you feel that how quick time will pass on. What's your query then.

  • @allergyahead8128
    @allergyahead8128 Рік тому +1

    I'm a row 17 seat C type person who most likely will never be a left or right seat flyer.Thank you for your educational feature / benefit way of explaining these cockpit air emergencies. That's why this only plastic wings pilot enjoys your channel so much.

  • @MrDophilus
    @MrDophilus Рік тому

    Great channel for a person that is hugely scared of flying. Many good inputs. Great work!

  • @IdeaBoxful
    @IdeaBoxful 2 роки тому +20

    Thank the engineers and the workmen who build these aircraft. They are some of the best examples of great engineering and craftsmanship. Lots of hardwork go into building these beautiful machines

  • @josephdeering4506
    @josephdeering4506 2 роки тому +22

    I was working at SFO when this happened. I was working for WestAir commuter airline, ( Now I believe it's part of United Express ) and saw this aircraft. One of our DH-6 pilots landed after this aircraft and even though he was a few miles behind the damaged 747 his windshield was getting hydraulic fluid on it and needed to be cleaned off. We were told by United mechanics, Boeing removed the wings and replaced the spars and attached new wings. United has a huge maintenance base at SFO and the plane flew out after the repairs. it was on the TV news that night also.

    • @davidjma7226
      @davidjma7226 2 роки тому

      Hopefully the two pilots were sacked.

  • @malinjohansson1986
    @malinjohansson1986 Рік тому

    Har alltid undrat hur denna incident kunde uppkomma, tack för utförlig förklaring🤗

  • @ArthurX-eg8bc
    @ArthurX-eg8bc 5 місяців тому +1

    Stories like this do not make me afraid to fly.
    Stories like this make me believe in the process.

  • @samibeemer7619
    @samibeemer7619 2 роки тому +88

    I'm actually really impressed by the B747 after all what happened to her, she was still be able to fly & land safely. We lost u Queen 😔

    • @teodoradamis6542
      @teodoradamis6542 2 роки тому +4

      God and angels saved the passengers !

    • @Gunsandjewels
      @Gunsandjewels 2 роки тому +17

      Yes in this case the aircraft was a hero, not the crew. It managed, away from all these tortures it received from humans...

    • @YTshashmeera
      @YTshashmeera 2 роки тому +1

      All hail the queen of the skies!

    • @geezushasrisen
      @geezushasrisen 2 роки тому +1

      @@teodoradamis6542 No, it was the incredible skills of the pilots.

    • @ryanvernali8829
      @ryanvernali8829 2 роки тому +5

      We didn't lose her, she was repaired and put back in to service after all that!

  • @MikeRees
    @MikeRees 2 роки тому +57

    How the hell did that plane not splinter into a million pieces? Truly a marvel of engineering. 274 people counting their blessings and changing their underwear!

    • @KevinDC5
      @KevinDC5 2 роки тому

      Aluminum doesn’t “Splinter” very easily, and aerodynamic forces alone cannot act as a “Shredder”.
      A lot like a “Ninja Turtle in a Half shell”, geometry can seem like sorcery! 😬

    • @stardustring
      @stardustring Рік тому

      Absolutely and praying

  • @godlesspagan459
    @godlesspagan459 Рік тому +2

    I grew up in Lincoln, UK, so was fortunate enough to regularly see the red arrows practice in the skies above my house. I even learned to swim in the Scampton airbase pools. The red arrows occasionally crashed into houses so they now practice over water and no children get the spectacle I enjoyed. They gave me a lifetime appreciation for their skills and partly inspired my single flight experience in adult life. Love ur channel❤ thanks for your fascinating work

  • @kathleenjory2731
    @kathleenjory2731 Рік тому

    Love you Mentour Pilot. Thanks very much for you thorogh analysis - always. Kindest regards to you and your family.

  • @OwlRTA
    @OwlRTA 2 роки тому +89

    This incident fascinates me so much, because it's the union of two things that rarely happens. Firstly, the pilots make big mistakes in dealing with their situation. Secondly, those mistakes resulted in the plane falling from the sky. Those two things would usually result in an in-flight breakup, or just a crash that would kill everyone on board, and the pilots would be seen as incompetent. However, that didn't happen. What happened instead was that the plane somehow stayed together, the plane was very high at the start, so they had more time to fall and figure out what to do, and they saved the airplane and managed to land it safely despite problems with the elevators (well, the problem with having almost no elevators left on the plane lol).
    It's the union of the pilots screwing up so bad AND the pilots getting themselves out of a situation that you would forgive a pilot if they couldn't recover from it. Usually it's one, the other, or neither, but almost never both. It's the union of the best and worst of what a pilot can do.
    Something not mentioned in the report nor the video was that the captain crossed so many timezones in the past few days, which may have affected his judgement via jet lag. He also didn't get good sleep during his rest period (rested for 5 hours and slept for 2 hours) to the point where he was in the cockpit at times during the rest period, which may have also caused problems with performance.

    • @jtjames79
      @jtjames79 2 роки тому +8

      Design flaw also.
      That first procedure with the bleeder switch should have required a checklist.
      These things only require checklist because Boeing doesn't know how computers work. So that's a design flaw, sort of an ongoing one.
      SpaceX can land a rocket booster on a boat with nothing but GPS coordinates and a few consumer computers.

    • @MartValja
      @MartValja 2 роки тому +11

      @@jtjames79 this was in 1985, computers were not what they are today back then.

    • @jtjames79
      @jtjames79 2 роки тому +8

      @@MartValja The 5160 came out in 1983, and Boeing is still not up to that level.
      The only reason there isn't autonomous fixed wing auto pilot is because nobody has paid for it. For multirotor I can solve the problem with the computer the size of a quarter. Not because it's easier but because the early adopter tax was paid a long time ago.
      Yes it requires a certain level of hacking skills, but that's almost entirely because there are no standards forthcoming from the FAA to automate against. Something that should have started in the early '80s.
      So like 40 years of "not invented here". Literally no one from Boeing ever thought to ask John Carmack to help.

    • @jamescaley9942
      @jamescaley9942 2 роки тому +4

      Engine failures may be rare but recovery from that should be well drilled SOP.

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 2 роки тому

      Indeed, absolutely correct. It´s the union of the worst and best what a pilot can do - and in this combination probably an outstanding unique event.

  • @georgecasillas9182
    @georgecasillas9182 2 роки тому +24

    My wife was on that flight ... it was a close call . She was not injured, but greatful to be alive. She was interviewed by a TV station crew. And took a Bus ride to LA . Thank God for the blessings and saving all those lives. .

    • @Mario87456
      @Mario87456 6 місяців тому

      You are lying don’t make up lies like that for attention.

  • @raymillar1499
    @raymillar1499 4 дні тому

    I love your videos Petter. What still amazes me is that experienced pilots ASSUME things so many times. And we all know what assume means.

  • @pellkovy27
    @pellkovy27 Місяць тому

    You are really good at explaining this using proper terminology, but helping people understand why things are important.
    Always interesting and engaging! Having to be responsible for flying a plane is one of my biggest fears because, well...

  • @GunnarLof
    @GunnarLof 2 роки тому +35

    And this is why you always should have your seatbelt on when seated!

    • @MentourPilot
      @MentourPilot  2 роки тому +8

      Correct

    • @tuunaes
      @tuunaes 2 роки тому +1

      Same when sitting into car.
      In January one coworker had left home to buy groceries and ended up waking in hospital with wrist and couple ribs broken and no idea of what happened in between...
      Pretty sure without seatbelt he would have been as totalled as the car whose wheel Mr. Newton had taken on icy road for meeting with tree.
      In another case like dozen or so years ago some driver did enough speeding that when car hit traffic island etc structure, engine and gearbox literally tore through car's front.... While only significant injury was broken wrist/arm.

    • @eramires
      @eramires 2 роки тому

      I never take my seatbelt off, ever, any flight I have been to, only to go to the bathroom, that's all.

  • @vaniahernandez9038
    @vaniahernandez9038 2 роки тому +36

    My dad is a pilot and he gets mad when he sees failures like this in the cockpit, because a lot would’ve changed if the pilot had declared emergency and used the rudder.

    • @dreamthedream8929
      @dreamthedream8929 21 день тому

      Do you manage to have a more or less normal life without anxiety way too high knowing that your dad spends so much time flying?

    • @vaniahernandez9038
      @vaniahernandez9038 14 днів тому

      @@dreamthedream8929 I would say I am very used to it, and I'm not really anxious about it. He's been flying since before I was born, so to be honest it's normal to me, I just trust him. The one thing that does make me anxious is bad weather, but even then it's not bad.

  • @paulmlemay
    @paulmlemay 15 днів тому

    What an incredibly robust plane was the 747. I loved flying on them. Great video.

  • @ranapratapsingh3416
    @ranapratapsingh3416 Рік тому

    Your videos make it so easy to be a safe pilot.

  • @gerrynightingale9045
    @gerrynightingale9045 2 роки тому +14

    *This demonstrates why the '747' was 'Queen of the Skies' for forty years*
    *For the airframe to withstand such tremendous G-forces is incredible* *That the wings withstood that that much flexion and torque is also incredible*
    ( *There must've been 20-degrees of arc involved!* )

  • @craigcrawford6749
    @craigcrawford6749 2 роки тому +279

    When I moved to Taiwan in 2000 we regarded China Airlines s one of the most dangerous in the world. It's way better now but there were so many accidents with them it was ridiculous. They started hiring foreign pilots in the mid 2000's and finally turned it around

    • @TheRedRaven_
      @TheRedRaven_ 2 роки тому +45

      The maintenance in China was another problem, it was shoddy at best.

    • @tjnucnuc
      @tjnucnuc 2 роки тому +15

      Leave it to China not to implement proper safety protocols. Everything they make that requires some level of mechanical safety can kill you in China.,

    • @littleblackpistol
      @littleblackpistol 2 роки тому +65

      In the 90s we referred to China Airlines as 'Always Crashes'. I worked in Japan and the Japanese would generally refuse to fly them at all. They were notorious for poor maintenance, especially domestically. Like Aeroflot on steroids.

    • @torgejh9189
      @torgejh9189 2 роки тому +17

      @@littleblackpistol I had an uncle who used to work for aeroflot, the old and the new one that is and I can say those are the truest words ever. Had me giggling into my potato soup.

    • @littleblackpistol
      @littleblackpistol 2 роки тому +24

      @@torgejh9189 I know a musician who used to regularly fly to and within Russia for gigs. He and the band started to demand non-Aeroflot flights after one too many hair-raising domestic flights, the worst of which included the outer door being taped shut in front of seated passengers' eyes.
      He also knew someone who worked at Shannon airport in Ireland and talked about an African airline whose plane was grounded there after they realised the cargo hold was held together inside using old car licence plates ...

  • @farmerlister3863
    @farmerlister3863 Рік тому +1

    This guy is a walking technical library. Bravo.

  • @Vickymumof4
    @Vickymumof4 Рік тому

    How amazing how you fly these things. I am in awe. All those buttons and switches 😳😳😳

  • @28_sk8_masturb8
    @28_sk8_masturb8 Рік тому +3

    What separates you from other flight channels is that you explain a bit by bit what is happening, and it really helps those who have no idea about planes and aviation. Keep being awesome ❤️

  • @kalle5548
    @kalle5548 2 роки тому +127

    Random person: Have you even pulled Gs??
    Passenger: Yeah once pulled 5Gs
    Random person: what fighter did you get to fly in??
    Passenger: Oh I didn’t do it in a fighter, it was in a commercial jet

    • @francislea4700
      @francislea4700 2 роки тому +6

      Managed to get 35 Gs back from Columbia once

    • @mjojrjr6231
      @mjojrjr6231 2 роки тому

      @@francislea4700 Hahaha 😂

    • @kodiak9869
      @kodiak9869 2 роки тому

      i mean thats a story you will never forget. sure, a fighter everyone can book a flight with Gs in, thanks to MyDays or what not, but a commercial flight? that ought to be the hardest rollercoaster ever.

    • @tankermottind
      @tankermottind 2 роки тому +2

      Boeing 747 dive bomber

    • @philippal8666
      @philippal8666 2 роки тому

      I wonder if this was after a meal

  • @Michael-zf1ko
    @Michael-zf1ko 2 роки тому +24

    I definitely hold the 747 as my favorite aircraft. It's pretty amazing how abuse it took and was still flying just fine.

  • @amiebhatia6868
    @amiebhatia6868 Рік тому +5

    I’m such a nervous flyer and watching these videos actually really help ease my fear. Thank you 😊

    • @gamecat2320
      @gamecat2320 Рік тому +4

      watching planes engines explode calms you down?

    • @Heyu7her3
      @Heyu7her3 Рік тому

      @@gamecat2320 😭

    • @Art_Vandalay97
      @Art_Vandalay97 8 місяців тому

      I’ve been watching these for the same reason. I’m hoping that more knowledge will calm my fears but I can’t tell if it’s helping or hurting. I have a 17 hour flight in December so we’ll see how it goes lol

    • @dreamthedream8929
      @dreamthedream8929 21 день тому

      ​@@Art_Vandalay97and how did it go? Your long flight

    • @Art_Vandalay97
      @Art_Vandalay97 21 день тому

      @@dreamthedream8929 well I lived but the way back was pretty horrifying because there was bad weather in pretty much all of Asia and that midair collision in Japan happened like 2 or 3 days before my flight home so that was fresh in my mind. I’m glad I didn’t let my fear stop me from seeing Asia but I for the foreseeable future all of my travels stateside will be by car or train lol

  • @didyouknowthat.channel
    @didyouknowthat.channel Рік тому

    Amazing video! I have subscribed to this channel. Thank you for sharing

  • @3dwag
    @3dwag 2 роки тому +88

    This aircraft was parked at SFO, visible on my many flights through there to/from Tokyo every few weeks or so for what seems like from my memory at least about a year after the incident. It was creepy, seeing that damaged tail in plain sight, parked on the tarmac off to the side as we were taxiing to and from the runway.

    • @friendlypiranha774
      @friendlypiranha774 2 роки тому +10

      Interestingly, this plane was repaired and flew for another 12 years after this incident.

    • @hasansaifi3319
      @hasansaifi3319 2 роки тому

      @@friendlypiranha774 Fr?

    • @friendlypiranha774
      @friendlypiranha774 2 роки тому +1

      @@hasansaifi3319- Yes, for real. Google the registration number and see the records.

    • @hectorbuelna2393
      @hectorbuelna2393 2 роки тому +2

      Now is in tijuana mexico just parked and abandoned

  • @Murph9000
    @Murph9000 2 роки тому +27

    I've intentionally pulled a little over 3G in a DHC-1, which is built to handle it. You really feel that crushing you down into the seat. It's incredible that they pulled 5G in a 747, and that he kept pulling as the force became overwhelming.

    • @CLL21
      @CLL21 7 місяців тому

      Would it be hard to let go of the yoke while experiencing those g's?

  • @rodrigopinchiari4027
    @rodrigopinchiari4027 Рік тому

    Greetings from Brazil!
    I love all of your videos.
    Keep it up Captain!
    😀