Seconds from IMPACT! United Airlines flight 1722

2024 ж. 4 Мам.
1 545 220 Рет қаралды

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This incident took only a few seconds but what caused this giant #Boeing 777 to suddenly start #diving down towards the #sea, only a minute after #takeoff, sparked a lot of questions when happened. Did it happen due to inexperienced #pilots, making mistakes or was it something completely different that caused it? Stay tuned
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Below you will find the links to videos and sources used in this episode.
SOURCES
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The Air Current - United Dive a􀅌er Maui Departure adds to the list of industry close calls
htps://theaircurrent.com/avia􀆟on-safety/united-maui-dive-ua1722-close-call/
NTSB - Public docket DCA23LA172
htps://data.ntsb.gov/Docket?ProjectID=106734
ABC7 Chicago - United flight nosedives a􀅌er takeoff, comes within 800 feet of Pacific Ocean, data shows
htps://abc7chicago.com/united-airlines-flight-ua-1722-nose-dive-maui-hawaii-777/12810680/
blancolirio - NTSB Final Report UAL#1722 Maui Dive A􀅌er Takeoff
htps:// • NTSB Final Report UAL#...
KGNS+ - At least 36 injured a􀅌er Hawaii-bound flight hits severe turbulence
htps://www.kgns.tv/2022/12/19/least-36-injured-a􀅌er-hawaii-bound-flight-hits-severe-turbulence/
United B777 Opera􀆟ons Manual
htp://www.ameacademy.com/pdf/boeing/Boeing-777-FCOM.pdf
FlightRadar24 - United Airlines 777 dives a􀅌er departure
htps://www.flightradar24.com/blog/united-airlines-777-dives-a􀅌er-departure/
NTSB - Final Report on UA1722
htps://www.flightradar24.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/NTSB_United_777_Al􀆟tude_Final_Report.pdf
CHAPTERS
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00:00 - Intro
01:59 - Pilot error?
05:06 - Bad signs
08:23 - Flap oddity
10:31 - Last-minute change
13:14 - Miscommunication
15:31 - Flaps five! Flaps five!
17:36 - Nosedive
20:19 - Late investigation

Пікірлер
  • Get Your Exclusive NordVPN deal here ➼ nordvpn.com/pilot It's risk-free with Nord's 30-day money-back guarantee! Every purchase of 2 years plan will receive +4 bonus months on top

    @MentourPilot@MentourPilot7 ай бұрын
    • no

      @CptJake07@CptJake077 ай бұрын
    • ​@@CptJake07Go on, you know you want to.

      @Kev5565@Kev55657 ай бұрын
    • @@CptJake07 How brave!

      @Argumemnon@Argumemnon7 ай бұрын
    • So when completing an order, the other pilot doesn't do a verbal confirmation such as "Setting flaps to 15". We do this a lot in the medical field to help reduce our errors.

      @dimitri1515@dimitri15157 ай бұрын
    • I love my nordVPN

      @rickcampbell4934@rickcampbell49347 ай бұрын
  • “First officer weather” for the walk around. I’m sure 74Gear couldn’t agree more

    @Vonononie@Vonononie7 ай бұрын
    • Hahaha!!

      @MentourPilot@MentourPilot7 ай бұрын
    • Free breakfast weather.

      @BishopStars@BishopStars7 ай бұрын
    • 😅

      @NicolaW72@NicolaW727 ай бұрын
    • ​@@MentourPilotLL lp😊😊0ppp00😊😊0

      @Island_proper@Island_proper7 ай бұрын
    • Check the snacks being loaded 😅

      @brentea65@brentea657 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for the explanation. I was a passenger on the flight and we were never given any. The only thing the pilot did was come on the PA and remark that we just experienced 2.7 g's. As a Physics teacher it was great to experience that force. I also had my students do some calculations and we found that we were just under or at 2 seconds from hitting the water. Our numbers could have been a bit off since we did not know the exact angle. I wouldn't wish that experience on anyone. The pilot kept us alive and for that I am grateful.

    @harrysokol4109@harrysokol41096 ай бұрын
    • What an experience! Turning this incident into a teachable subject is wonderful.

      @2catsnodog@2catsnodog6 ай бұрын
    • Grateful you are still with us, Amen ❤️🙏❤️

      @ticamatthews@ticamatthews6 ай бұрын
    • Sure you were buddy

      @Special_Tactics_Force_Unit@Special_Tactics_Force_Unit6 ай бұрын
    • Lol, I like your kind of attitude! "Hey, people. I almost got killed on my flight the other day. Let's find out how close it was!" I bet none of your students will ever forget this lession just by it's emotional relevance.

      @thomaskositzki9424@thomaskositzki94245 ай бұрын
    • So glad you are safe and able to share your experience with the community!!

      @NewyorkRican2191@NewyorkRican21915 ай бұрын
  • In my flight sim, flying a Kodiak (don't remember which one) I have twice looked away at my kid messing around with a hot stove, almost crashed twice with a vertical speed of 996 At my work unloading lorries I have looked away at my boss trying to show me paperwork and once almost destroyed a pallet with goods worth about 230K Euros At home I have been distracted while handling electrical tools and almost cut my left hands fingers Walking across the street when I was younger I have not seen a bus fast approaching who thankfully stamped on the brakes while I at the last moment ran out to the curb My lesson is always keep your attention in one place and do not start with demanding tasks while not having finished less demanding tasks Never underestimate this, it can cost you dearly. Very nice incident report otherwise, it is so valuable when you guys teach people through such videos. Top presentation as usual!

    @Konstantinos143@Konstantinos1437 ай бұрын
    • Well that doesn't sound very encouraging or reassuring for nervous flyers I would say

      @dreamthedream8929@dreamthedream892917 күн бұрын
  • It's good that he emphasizes how rapidly the situation deteriorated. I get the impression sometimes from viewers who watch these air crash investigation-type videos that they're critical of how "long" it took for the crews to react to a developing emergency, when really these things often happen in a matter of seconds. Just because the video/documentary is taking the time to detail every (mis)step leading up to the crash, doesn't mean that's how long it took in real time.

    @chantalgroot4275@chantalgroot42756 ай бұрын
    • Absolutely! Actually, if you look at some of his earlier investigation videos, there is a simulator recreation of the real-time progression of the accident. Like u said, It’s amazing how quickly things happen, and interesting how seemingly on-pace explanations of the event are still much slower.

      @aviationandotherstuff6571@aviationandotherstuff65713 ай бұрын
    • I wish all air-crash video viewers were as amazing as you!

      @lukecarvill7721@lukecarvill77212 ай бұрын
    • @@aviationandotherstuff6571 I wonder why he stopped doing that. I thought it was pretty nice to get a picture of the real timeline. Maybe a lot of viewers would skip that part and the youtube algorithm penalizes him because it thinks people were leaving early because they were getting bored by the video?

      @flamingspinach@flamingspinach2 ай бұрын
    • I was amazed when I watched Mentour's video on the Sullenberger "Miracle on the Hudson" flight. The explanation was thorough, and took maybe 15 or 20 minutes. But then he showed a recreation of the flight with actual ATC audio, and it was amazingly short. I don't remember exactly, but I think it was maybe only a minute or less from the geese impacting the engines to landing on the Hudson.

      @Paul71H@Paul71HАй бұрын
    • I get the impression that you’re actually referencing yourself when you say “viewers”…

      @ImNotAnAlienLizardPerson@ImNotAnAlienLizardPersonАй бұрын
  • Relieved that an incident like this was (a) reported (b) investigated and (c) learned from. It's a sign of a healthy safety culture and responsible crew. Safety advances should be written in blood pressure spikes, not in lost blood.

    @CheatOnlyDeath@CheatOnlyDeath7 ай бұрын
    • and (d) non-injurious, though this should come before (a)!

      @johnburgess2084@johnburgess20847 ай бұрын
    • @@johnburgess2084 Non-injured is the status before A, so it would be a -A,

      @dthomas9230@dthomas92307 ай бұрын
    • nicely said at the end

      @aguasadonas8346@aguasadonas83467 ай бұрын
    • Great comment. Just Culture concept is a hot topic in the UK and needs pushing globally.

      @ThomsonAirwaysFs@ThomsonAirwaysFs7 ай бұрын
    • I'm stealing your blood pressure line!

      @aggiebtz@aggiebtz7 ай бұрын
  • I'm a Hawaiian Airlines pilot (captain).. and with regard to the other incident mentioned, I can say without any doubt that the pilot of the A330 that same day did everything he was supposed to but encountered that severe turbulence completely by surprise .. there was no indication of any convective weather on the radar nor visually just prior to the incident.

    @Sams911@Sams9117 ай бұрын
    • I’m with AS. Anytime we fly into Maui the passengers are informed right before approach that there could be unexpected winds and turbulence upon approach and landing

      @tritontransport@tritontransport7 ай бұрын
    • My heart aches for you guys; talk about a high stress job! Thank you for keeping calm under pressure over and over again and getting us safely where we need to be. My husband flies constantly for business and I don't worry at all because of you guys and the seemingly insurmountable odds you overcome or try to overcome in these incredible videos this channel creates. You would think these stories would make me worry more, not less but they don't honestly. I see how most of the pilots are by FAR extremely competent to the point of being heroes. Thank you for keeping him safe!

      @wednesday8397@wednesday83977 ай бұрын
    • ​@@wednesday8397unfortunately you can't half ass being a pilot because it is harder to crash only the back of the plane than not at all. One of the few times you as a customer are guaranteed a full effort, at least in regards to safety. Don't get that with lawyers, doctors, or plumbers.

      @justcommenting4981@justcommenting49817 ай бұрын
    • @@justcommenting4981 how right you are!

      @wednesday8397@wednesday83977 ай бұрын
    • Also, that HA flight with all the injuries was going into HNL, which is not Maui as Petter said.

      @rbryanhull@rbryanhull7 ай бұрын
  • Hi guys, I'm flying as a 777 captain in Seoul, Korea. Personally, I would like to commend the United Airlines captain for his appropriate response. Because all of us with flying experience know that any pilot can find himself in an unexpected situation. If that situation was not what the captain had intended, I think the captain handled it well in a situation that could not have been expected. As you all know, the B777 engine is powerful enough, so if you are in manual flight, you must use appropriate trim during acceleration. Otherwise, it shows a powerful tendency to pitch up with increased speed. However, the video shows that the situation got worse due to the pitch-down during the climb. Due to the sudden increase in speed, the Nose Up Pressure would have been felt very strongly. Afterwards, as it reaches the acceleration altitude, the climb power decreases and flaps up and out of the wind shear area, causing a sudden increase in speed. It appears to have changed to Pitch Down. It is believed that the captain, who had to scan many things simultaneously, such as adverse weather, ATC, flap instructions, and instrument monitors like speed significant change, lost situational awareness for just a few seconds due to the suddenly increased workload. The unintentional nose-down occurred, probably because of the down-trim the captain set a few seconds ago to protect the pitch up high with significant speed increases. It is believed that the nose-down occurred in an instant. As a fellow pilot, I respect the captain who completed the flight safely without panicking in such a situation and without losing focus on the mission. If a pilot flew safely until the end, he accomplished his mission and could review any mistakes later on the ground.

    @brightskyhan6969@brightskyhan69697 ай бұрын
    • ...always good to have the viewpoints of senior professionals like yourself

      @anand-menon@anand-menon7 ай бұрын
    • Why do you think he was handflying?

      @alk672@alk6727 ай бұрын
    • I don't believe you are a pilot. .. As a pilot I think his lack of competent intrument scanning during departure in a perfectly serviceable aircraft was totally unacceptable. He completely lost it at a critical part of the departure. Nobody said it was an easy job.. That is NOT panicking ???? Excuses....excuses.. I thought standards in Korean Air had improved !!

      @daftvader4218@daftvader42187 ай бұрын
    • @@daftvader4218- I also agree with you. This is utter incompetence from the pilots, both of them. A big thing was made of the Captain only having 300 hours PIC. Surely the other 4700 hours on the 777 taught him something? Apparently not. The 777 windshear configuration can use flap 15, so no problem there. Engage the autopilot at 500ft and let the plane fly itself. Much easier to have 2 pilots monitoring. The autopilot wouldn’t have oversped the flaps. VNAV SPD pitches for speed, so it would have maintained 5kts below the flap limit speed. If you want more margin than 5kts then use speed intervention. Even a 500 hour FO would know this about the 777.

      @EdOeuna@EdOeuna7 ай бұрын
    • There is absolutely *nothing* to commend here. This was a pilot-induced close call that never should have happened. Everyone on board is lucky to be alive today. Pity, the pilots names were redacted in the NTSB report.

      @JC-cw1ww@JC-cw1ww7 ай бұрын
  • I'm not a pilot but I watch this series of videos every chance I get. My personal interest is in accident analysis and understanding how errors happen. These lessons learned have application in many, many areas of our lives. Thank you, Petter, for an outstanding line-up of informative videos. Cheers from British Columbia, Canada.

    @paulmaxwell8851@paulmaxwell88517 ай бұрын
    • I agree. I am a software engineer and I work for a financial company which has many customers. Recently, our team delivered a functionality which had a defect in it and affected many customers. In such cases, we have to do a Root Cause Analysis. Since I was the developer by which this defect was caused, I had to give my report and I noticed that I followed Mentour Pilot's way of analysis. I even included the swiss cheese model in my report. The managers were intrigued by that.

      @shubh_1999@shubh_19997 ай бұрын
    • Great comment! I agree as well that the lessons derived from these incidents have applications in many areas of life. I am intrigued by how the slightest seemingly minor decision can bring about such a drastic result in many of these cases. Also, the relationship dynamic is key. It is important for every player to feel free to speak up and that their input is welcome. A friendly, non-intimidating environment is critical in any workplace. Finally, I've noticed also that many of these crashes were a result of cutting costs, or inadequate maintenance. It is truly sad that so many lives have been lost for these kinds of oversights and considerations.

      @cbesthelper404@cbesthelper4047 ай бұрын
    • @@cbesthelper404 Absolute rubbish. .. Unsubstantiated excuses, speculation and opinion..... Not fact. Fact..... This crew could not fly.... You are only as good as your last flight. This should be their last flight. For the sake of the travelling public.

      @daftvader4218@daftvader42187 ай бұрын
    • This most mortem and recent experience driving one leads me to ask: Should airplanes have inattention detectors like Teslas do? And when should airplanes have full autopilot? I guess never according to any selfish pilot or pilot's union...

      @MatthewElvey@MatthewElvey7 ай бұрын
    • Good point. I'm in IT and find the analysis and understanding approach very helpful.

      @JasonTepoorten@JasonTepoorten7 ай бұрын
  • I guess the question I have is this: why don’t commercial pilots do what submariners do? Captain: “Flaps 5”; FO: “Flaps 15”; Captain: “Negative, flaps 5”; FO: “Flaps 5”. I’ve watched several videos of mishaps where one of the pilots misheard, assumed, or wondered silently why the other was doing or asking for something but either did it anyway or said nothing. This feels like something avoidable, no?

    @seanLeprechaun@seanLeprechaun7 ай бұрын
    • Hi Seant That is exactly what professionals do in the best airlines...it's SOP... CRM here was appalling. ..

      @daftvader4218@daftvader42187 ай бұрын
    • Later the Captain did call "Flap 5" twice again and had no confirmation from the FO. Not sure he should then override the FO and set the flap himself, if it is physically possible.

      @d2009wong@d2009wong7 ай бұрын
    • Also saying "zero-five" rather than just "five"

      @JourneysADRIFT@JourneysADRIFT3 ай бұрын
    • I've noted that difference, more typically between the aircraft and ATC, as I'm a sub veteran too. in response to another comment, I don't think CRM was appalling, as this happened very quickly, and both crew members had their hands full. I do question how "five" and "fifteen" can be confused, with different vowel sounds and number of syllables. I think more likely the FO was just anticipating "flaps 15" and heard what he thought. Had captain not looked over, they may still have experienced the flaps overspeed anyway, but probably without the severe height/pitch excursion.

      @pault726@pault726Ай бұрын
  • Would closed loop communication have avoided this? Cap: "Flaps 5" FO: 'Flaps 15 selected" Cap: "No flaps 5" FO: "Oh, selecting flaps 5 now. Flaps 5."

    @RobKinneySouthpaw@RobKinneySouthpaw7 ай бұрын
    • Great idea.

      @dfeuer@dfeuer7 ай бұрын
    • Even closed loop can break sometimes, in particular when words are sounds a bit close or in noisy environments (like a cockpit under heavy rain...), but indeed it divides the error probability by about 2.

      @elnalaombrebois5665@elnalaombrebois56657 ай бұрын
    • Airbus uses this closed loop

      @VergilAckerman@VergilAckerman7 ай бұрын
    • @@VergilAckerman Always used closed loop on radio nets. Even then, it's not error free.

      @ohgosh5892@ohgosh58927 ай бұрын
    • @@elnalaombrebois5665 Yeah, I can easily imagine a situation where the FO sets flaps 5 but repeats "flaps 15" because that's what he heard (The ear-to-mouth path in the brain is an easy situation to get into if it isn't properly and periodically drilled into you that you don't say what you hear but what you do). That said, it does add another layer to that swiss cheese model thing.

      @StarkRG@StarkRG7 ай бұрын
  • I've been in a plane taking off in a storm. I could tell that the crew set the speed for full throttle and held it that way until they got above the turbulence. I felt the plane get bumped pretty good, but I'm guessing since the plane was pointed slightly upward to climb and had the throttle cranked up the plane handled it very well. I was grateful the pilot decided to handle it this way. I know it puts a little more wear on the engines and uses more fuel, but it's rare I feel comfortable landing or taking off near a storm, and because I could tell what the pilot was doing I didn't worry about those downdrafts pushing the nose down and I never felt that happen. And yes it was nice getting above that storm quickly and then I hear the engines spin down a little and there was then clear sky and a nice smooth ride. So thank you to the pilots that handle that situation this way.

    @johndoh5182@johndoh51827 ай бұрын
    • First of all they should never even take off in such conditions to begin with. This was also not noted by mentour pilot in this video

      @dreamthedream8929@dreamthedream892917 күн бұрын
  • I'm an electrical engineer for medical technology in Germany and I love investigating a fault on a critical machine (human lives affected), why it did happen, how it did and what can be done to fix and avoid the fault/malfunction. Watching your detailed and fascinating videos makes me overthink my job career and rather become an aircraft engineer. :D Thank you so much for your amazing work Petter! You are really making impacts on people in many different ways. :)

    @alina.b.@alina.b.7 ай бұрын
  • Friday upload we struck lucky today

    @GravyOverload@GravyOverload7 ай бұрын
    • Yes indeed

      @spacefan_1@spacefan_17 ай бұрын
    • Aye. We did

      @PaleoVirus@PaleoVirus7 ай бұрын
    • Yes!

      @carolvassallo26@carolvassallo267 ай бұрын
    • Indeed we did.

      @jaws666@jaws6667 ай бұрын
    • I thought it was an old one and nearly passed it by😳

      @adriaba790@adriaba7907 ай бұрын
  • Really appreciate your thoughtful and detailed approach to these incidents. Speculation was rampant before the final report came out including stuff like "the captain was an overbearing jerk that spent the whole time berating the FO instead of paying attention", thank you for clearing this all up. After watching all these videos I've found myself not jumping so quickly to finger-pointing blame game conclusions and asking myself "but why?" and "what could have led up to this?" more often in my every day life. Thanks for another great episode!

    @Crit_Power@Crit_Power7 ай бұрын
    • 👍

      @nakfan@nakfan7 ай бұрын
    • Well blame is never helpful, but 10 seconds is a very long time for a PIC to not be flying the aircraft, no matter the cause (close your eyes and count it out, then ask whether you would drive like that). Without the voice recorder we cannot be sure, but I would put money on him being fixated on the flap mistake, and 'aggressively querying' his FO on it. Possibly he did spent the whole 10 seconds berating the FO*, but while 10 seconds is a long time to not be paying attention to fast moving vehicle, it is pretty short for a berating. While a cockpit squabble could have been part of this, I don't think you could extend that to any sort of generalisation about the crew. Glad the backup systems (bitchin betty) did their job, but this seems like a crew meltdown, and I actually hope it was because of a squabble. A PIC ignoring the aircraft for no reason would be a far more worrying situation than one who got distracted by their FOs mistake. * A FO who was presumably disrespectfully not apologising on account of being distracted by the fact that they were crashing into the sea.

      @agsystems8220@agsystems82207 ай бұрын
    • @@agsystems8220 I think you're missing the part where we as humans experience tunnel vision. The PIC was probably observing the speed as well as any other flap related instruments while being in a slight state of confusion. 10 seconds of slight confusion with a pitch down is enough for such a thing to happen.

      @dusteyezz784@dusteyezz7847 ай бұрын
    • @@agsystems8220 Some communications require verbal confirmation. PIC "Flaps 5" -F/O "Flaps 5". if no "Flaps 5" is confirmed, PIC will say ""Flaps 5" and the flaps 15 is now 5, and confirmed with F/O's verbal "Flaps 5." That's just some protocol. Redundancy is a friend.

      @dthomas9230@dthomas92307 ай бұрын
    • @@dusteyezz784 No, I just would have hoped that tunnel vision in the event of a technical issue would be specifically trained against, while tunnel vision due to being pissed off at your FO's error might not. For one reason or another the PIC stopped flying the aircraft for 10 seconds, can we agree on that? If training is good then that should not happen in the event of a flap malfunction, whether technical or human factors related. If the flaps had jammed instead of been mis-set, would this have happened? If you are correct, and the answer is yes, then that is more worrying to me than it being a pure human factors issue where the PIC was distracted by the FO's mistake, rather the results of that mistake. The distinction is important to me.

      @agsystems8220@agsystems82207 ай бұрын
  • I flew that day on a 717 from ITO to HNL. I've flown dozens of times between the islands as I'm born and raised here. As such, I've never flown through a storm like that and it was the 1st time I was scared to be in am airplane. The turbulence was next level but it's a good thing that the 717 is built like a tank! I have a bunch of lightning vids from this flight that I'll upload one day. Literally, lightning on all sides of the plane, and you could see how towering the clouds were with each flash. Had to been 30 to 40 thousand feet high.

    @MixedMutt808@MixedMutt8086 ай бұрын
    • Where’s the video?

      @fernandocoronato4222@fernandocoronato42222 ай бұрын
    • She got you! Fell for that nonsense hook, line and stinker! There's some lunacy related to the Internet where random losers like to pretend "and you were there". The closest mixed-up-nutt has been to an airplane is when she remembers that "waiting at the liquor store 40 ounces to freedom so" she takes that walk and looks through the fence.

      @19thnervousbreakdown80@19thnervousbreakdown802 ай бұрын
    • @19thnervousbreakdown80 Yeah, ok buddy 🤙🤣

      @MixedMutt808@MixedMutt8082 ай бұрын
    • @@fernandocoronato4222 On my phone? 🤷🏽

      @MixedMutt808@MixedMutt8082 ай бұрын
    • @19thnervousbreakdown80 Also, I literally work for an airline. Moron 🤣🤣🤣

      @MixedMutt808@MixedMutt8082 ай бұрын
  • In a situation like this it’s best for any pilot to use as much help as possible and free their workload for other things so if he just used the autopilot then he could have simply just set the speed to flaps 15 speed or flap 20 speed until the first officer moved the flaps lever. If the autopilot is not doing what he wants the aircraft to do then he can take over control. This also shows how important communication is and how communication is not just from the person talking but also from the person receiving and understanding what is said. Two other things to mention is how important it is for one pilot to focus ONLY on flying the aircraft no matter what and for the pilots to prioritize flying first then navigating then answering radio calls.

    @worlddxb@worlddxb7 ай бұрын
  • I am a current 777 pilot. I think it’s important to not just focus on the ‘what’ (the ‘first story) but also the ‘why’ (the ‘second’ story). There are a few things that strike me as odd in this account. Splitting the NDs between Terrain and Weather inhibits pop up wind shear advisories for the pilot on Terrain. In such severe weather conditions this could leave to confusion about an avoidance manoeuvre. The departure was clearly going to be a high workload situation; strange why the AP wasn’t used as a mitigating factor. In the event of a flap over speed the 777 has flap overspend protection. In the event that Vmo is exceeded the aircraft will also seek to correct the flight path in certain circumstances; naturally without the AP engaged this would merely be presented as a FD command. These things give us insight into the systemic culture within UA of operating this aircraft which is interesting. The pilots are a product of the system. No pilot wants to hear a EGPWS pull up caution (although increasingly this is happening as a result of GPS jamming in Asia) Terrific item as always, thought provoking for all. As you say, things develop very quickly and potentially could happen to any of us.

    @grahamsalmons2027@grahamsalmons20277 ай бұрын
    • Great question there. I myself wondered why the AP wasn't coupled as soon as they could, especially is you say that so many automated levels of protection become muted. Why try to hand fly in those horrendous conditions?

      @josephdefreitas56@josephdefreitas567 ай бұрын
    • @@josephdefreitas56 because it doesn't need to be... this "couple the AP" culture, though, seems to be a mantra in the middle east (and Cathay). There was a screwup on this UA flight, but "manual flight" wasn't it.

      @plab0187@plab01877 ай бұрын
    • @@plab0187if you’re telling me this would have happened during flight under AP, i will assume you’re just a sim “pilot”

      @muru3xi@muru3xi7 ай бұрын
    • @@muru3xi I'm telling you manual flight in these conditions isn't a big deal until someone stops doing their job. In any case, the AP isn't a crutch - I've seen the reports for how much it overspeeds and how poorly the AT really maintains airspeed control in gusty conditions. Though assume all you want (don't you know that just makes an "ass" out of "u" and "me"?)... my 3000+ hours in the left seat of the 777 alone say different.

      @plab0187@plab01877 ай бұрын
    • @@plab0187 would you, as someone with so many hours on the left hand seat of the 777, hand fly in weather like this with a fresh f/o acting as PM? you’re basically saying i can do everything by myself. he’s handicapped as it is, don’t make his job harder by trying to be the cool guy.

      @muru3xi@muru3xi7 ай бұрын
  • Can't wait for the Hawaiian flight video. Love the precision and factuality of your videos. I don't think anyone does it better

    @stwartic4296@stwartic42967 ай бұрын
    • That’s what I’m going for!! Thank you so much!

      @MentourPilot@MentourPilot7 ай бұрын
    • I agree 100% nobody does a better job covering these incidents than Mentour.

      @timwheeler1503@timwheeler15037 ай бұрын
    • I appreciate him too

      @kidsaviationmentour@kidsaviationmentour7 ай бұрын
    • ⁠​⁠@@MentourPilot Ha ha love your description of it was definitely first officer weather for the walk around😂 I did a small amount of private flying in New Zealand some years ago end and our aero club was used after work by the regional airline pilots. one of the captains used to have funny comments like that (Brian Bedwell was his name I think he flies for emirates or Royal Brunei )his other one was a funny take on CRM he used to say to new first officers: this is what the letters in Crm mean-together we are the crew ,you are my resource ,and I am management,with a cheeky grin on his face

      @malcolmwhite6588@malcolmwhite65887 ай бұрын
    • @@MentourPilot- the 777 trims for speed, not pitch. On take off the aircraft is trimmed for V2+15, so a pilot has to pitch towards 15° nose up, let the aircraft settle, and then it is possible to let go of the controls. For the overspeed protection, any exceedance of Vmo/Mmo produces reverse pressure in the controls by the AFDS. To overspeed the 777 you have to actively fight the controls and continuously push the controls. It most definitely isn’t a case of letting go of the controls, whilst looking away, and the aircraft self initiates a nose dive. The AFDS just doesn’t do this. In this incident, to get 10° nose down and continued overspeed, the Captain is actively flying the aircraft into this position. He was fighting against the aircraft itself.

      @EdOeuna@EdOeuna7 ай бұрын
  • Man if only everybody had such a rational logical approach to situations instead of just pointing the finger immediately. You sir are a gem.

    @nicholi2789@nicholi27897 ай бұрын
  • I’m a 777 FO under line training, first thing my sim instructor taught me is in these types of circumstances is to engage the AP sooner than later. This could’ve prevented all this from happening. Glad they all walked away safe.

    @mohammedibraheem3695@mohammedibraheem36957 ай бұрын
    • I don’t know anything about flying, but do you mean they could engage it when they were at 800’ and it could correct more quickly or efficiently than the Captain pulling up?

      @TheEmaile@TheEmaile7 ай бұрын
    • @@TheEmaile in the 777 you can actually engage the AP at 200 feet! In cases like this it will significantly reduce the work load and none of this would happen.

      @mohammedibraheem3695@mohammedibraheem36957 ай бұрын
  • Sometimes it just feels scary how quickly a situation can escalate making your position very bad. To be honest when I saw the 10 degree pitch-down at thirteen hundred feet I was expecting your saying "unfortunately it was too late". Other than that, great video and can't wait for next week's. It's always a great excitement when I get the notification! Love from a 14 yo Greek hoping to become a pilot some day.

    @rousalisthanasis9084@rousalisthanasis90847 ай бұрын
    • Your English is 👌🏽👍🇬🇷

      @martinmillar8447@martinmillar84477 ай бұрын
    • Thank you!!!@@martinmillar8447

      @rousalisthanasis9084@rousalisthanasis90847 ай бұрын
  • People become more educated by watching these videos, but maybe also more humble thanks to your excellent explanations and understanding in how the human mind and performance is affected by fatigue, distraction and stress.

    @VNAV_PTH@VNAV_PTH7 ай бұрын
    • I've gained understanding of the complex human and mechanical (and conditional) factors that can cause incidents like this, so I don't just jump to conclusions. That's value!

      @maryeckel9682@maryeckel96827 ай бұрын
  • I’m glad you mentioned Juan Browne’s video on this. He also did an excellent breakdown of this incident and he also recreated it in MFS. When you see just how freaking quick things go sideways it throws the whole thing into a new light. Kudos to you Petter for the continued excellence on this great channel!!

    @samsherratt1106@samsherratt11067 ай бұрын
    • I can’t find this video

      @daniellepatton2665@daniellepatton26657 ай бұрын
    • @@daniellepatton2665Search Blancolirio

      @thecomedypilot5894@thecomedypilot58947 ай бұрын
    • Usually, in fixed wing aircraft, an emergency is something one can first take time out to wind their watch. This was more like rotary wing, where split second correct responses are critical. Which typically only occur at low altitude in both cases. Makes sense, as one cannot crash into the air, but one can crash into the ground or water. Many years ago, I got fooled briefly by a false horizon. Instruments conflicted with my vision and common sense prevailed and I relied on instruments and halted a hard climb before there was a problem. To this day, I'll trust instruments over my senses, save if oh, the great wide world is about to smack me in the face and instruments say otherwise, then I'll go for getting the world out of my view and sky prominent in my view, then figure out whatinhell is wrong with my otherwise more reliable instruments.

      @spvillano@spvillano7 ай бұрын
    • At 5:46 @MentourPilot says winds were from a southerly direction but shows the direction as 340.

      @carlyellison8498@carlyellison84984 ай бұрын
  • In USN we trained to do call backs for every order to avoid mistakes like this. I thought it was common procedures for Pilots as well.

    @aj.j5833@aj.j58337 ай бұрын
  • I got a chuckle out of, "It definitely sounds like it was First Officer weather for a walkaround."

    @skyhawk_4526@skyhawk_45267 ай бұрын
  • When i first had about this story i was truely shocked on how quickly things could escalate...thank God no one lost their lives

    @theflightguy777@theflightguy7777 ай бұрын
  • Legend has it that flaps are still set to 15

    @jeremypeake@jeremypeake7 ай бұрын
  • Bad weather always stresses me out as a passenger, even though I've flown countless times now. I really appreciate how the crews performed during some very rough weather situations. These videos, and others like them, have given me considerable insight into what is going on in the cockpit. Thanks.

    @gregorylumpkin2128@gregorylumpkin21287 ай бұрын
  • @MentourPilot thanks for covering this one! I was in Maui at the time, and some of my friends were flying in. All said it was the most intense flying experience they had ever had.. I wanted to add as someone who flies into and out of this airport regularly, that runway 20 is often used in "Kona" or southerly winds, and that storm was one of the worst we had had in years.. Kona winds usually come more often during the winter time.. and as a student pilot who flies a 172, I love it because it takes off over the valley and they are far more options for an emergency landing than runway 02.. which is trees and ocean .. not as relevant to a 777 but thought you may find it interesting! Runway 20 is used maybe 4-8 times a year on average

    @LukasNelsonPOTR@LukasNelsonPOTR7 ай бұрын
  • Given the care you put into this and the constant improvement on what is already the best aviation channel on you tube. I would gladly fly with you any day. Once I get my commercial that is. lol

    @Kitt_the_Katt@Kitt_the_Katt7 ай бұрын
    • You never know 😉

      @MentourPilot@MentourPilot7 ай бұрын
    • Same

      @quep1@quep17 ай бұрын
    • @@MentourPilot This is the second time I've heard you mention Juan Browne. I bet a lot of people know who he is without knowing the name. If anyone watched any footage of the Oroville Dam Spillway failure in 2017, they probably saw Juan's updates (including personal flyovers) on his "Blancolirio" KZhead channel. Considering I live 30 minutes downstream and Juan is just up the hill in Grass Valley, I've become a huge fan of his. He was even doing the announcing at the STOL races at the Reno Air Races this week. Very cool that my two favorite pilot channels are friends. You are going to have to visit NorCal someday. Just beware of our seasons: Summer and Fire. (yep, there are only two)

      @ronjones-6977@ronjones-69777 ай бұрын
    • ​@ronjones-6977 kinda reminds me of Minnesota in a way. We only have two seasons as well, only ours are Winter and Road Construction.

      @dantreadwell7421@dantreadwell74217 ай бұрын
    • @@ronjones-6977summer and Fire? You didn’t see Juan keeping track of how many feet of snow he had last year? I hear ya though. Am in the same area and too many days of over 100 makes it seem like summer and fire. 😂

      @MetsterAnn@MetsterAnn7 ай бұрын
  • I once had a similar aircraft related incident looking away momentarily, to observe the path of a BA 777. When i looked forward again i realised i could not avoid a collusion. Fortunately the impact was slight and there was no major damage. I should add that i was in my car in stationary traffic on the M25 near Heathrow Airport. 😂

    @N330AA@N330AA7 ай бұрын
  • I'd just like to mention (relevant to what you say at 3:20) that the 777 *does* actually compensate for thrust and configuration changes when the Flight Control System is in normal mode. From the FCOM: "Airplane pitch responses to thrust changes, gear configuration changes, and turbulence are automatically minimized by PFC control surface commands. The PFCs also provide compensation for flap and speedbrake configuration changes, and turns up to 30° of bank. The PFCs automatically control pitch to maintain a relatively constant flight path. This eliminates the need for the pilot to make control column inputs to compensate for these factors." (I suppose the key word there is 'minimised', but from practical experience, configuration and thrust changes are indeed considerably reduced, if not downright gone, compared to the 737 for example) The major difference to Airbus is the change from flight path stability to speed stability. So the 777 is trimmed in pitch for a specific airspeed, and deviations from the system 'trimmed' airspeed result in a typical natural pitch up or down (ie. slower than trimmed speed, nose drops, faster than trimmed speed, nose rises).

    @Shrike200@Shrike2007 ай бұрын
    • So an airbus compensates for all, an old plane compensates for none of that, Boeing decided to go half some half not.... Also how do you compensate for thrust but not for speed? Increase in thrust means increase in speed unless you're climbing that steep

      @tomstravels520@tomstravels5207 ай бұрын
    • @@tomstravels520 - there is a different philosophy between Boeing and Airbus. I’ve never flown Airbus but the 777 is exceptionally easy to fly if you know what you’re doing. If you don’t then it’s Asiana 214 or AF11 for you. I’m sure Airbus is easy to fly as well, considering it’s technological differences to Boeing. From my companies safety reports it’s clear that people make the mistakes, for the most part, and bugger up approaches or decisions, etc.

      @EdOeuna@EdOeuna7 ай бұрын
  • I think I have a lot more respect for pilots knowing all the things that are going on on the flight deck even before weather/miscommunication/chaos adds to the mix. It's nice to know that we can have good endings when things go pear-shaped instead of being caught up in the doom scrolling. Lessons were learned, thankfully in this case without fatalities. While I can be glad there are extraordinary pilots that can save a plane from extreme problems (engine flame out/gliders) I am far more comforted by the integrity of the pilots who reported the event voluntarily even after recovery. That gives me hope.

    @corvusdraconis5873@corvusdraconis58737 ай бұрын
    • A good pilot never gets in a position where he has to prove what a good pilot he is....

      @daftvader4218@daftvader42187 ай бұрын
    • Well yeah

      @Patricia-pq4jq@Patricia-pq4jq2 ай бұрын
  • You know when you're with your friends and something terrible nearly happens - you all look at each other - imagine how these pilots reacted after they'd stabilised... wow 😮

    @AndreasInLondon@AndreasInLondon7 ай бұрын
    • I remember a 360 degree spin on an icy road over 35 years ago. I was in the back seat of a Honda Civic with three other college friends. We all just sat there catching our breath before congratulating our very shaken, but skilled, driver.

      @maryeckel9682@maryeckel96827 ай бұрын
  • I flew the 777 for 5 years. The trim system is automatic and will trim out all configuration changes automatically regardless of you being on AP or not. In the air it is called “trim reference speed.” In regards to the flap configuration setting from 20 to 5, when I first did my training, I quickly learned that you call the next flap setting for the flap bug as your airspeed trend penetrates the next bug. The first officer botched it by not slapping 5 in the setting and the captain should have looked first to see the bug switch from 5 to 1 and when it didn’t looked at the lower display to see what was commanded and then at the lever. When it was apparent the correct setting wasn’t utilized called it again and if no answer just thrown it himself. I know this is “Monday morning quarter backing it” but you “trust but verify” in aviation.

    @AutopilotAndChill@AutopilotAndChill7 ай бұрын
    • I really don’t get the point of this trim reference speed. Airbus will trim for everything, an old plane doesn’t autotrim for anything. Boeing will trim for everything except speed changes? Why? Why not just make it trim for everything, this seem like they just wanted to be different to Airbus. Either trim for everything or trim for nothing, why make it only trim for half the stuff

      @tomstravels520@tomstravels5207 ай бұрын
    • @@tomstravels520- I have been thinking about this situation a lot because Green Dot has just released a video about it, and Blancorillo did a month ago. Boeing and Airbus have their philosophy. I believe that Boeing developed the FBW system to mimic older aircraft so that transitioning from an older Boeing to the 777 was easier. I haven’t flown Airbus so I don’t know the Airbus philosophy. However, the 777 is an absolute jog to fly and is so easy and light. On departure the pitch is trimmed for V2+15. When you rotate you slowly rotate towards 15° and can then, generally let go because the aircraft stabilises. For thrust and configuration changes the aircraft also adapts so you don’t get pitch changes. The thing that I find most worrying about this incident, and it hasn’t been picked up by any of the YT content creators, is that the autopilot /flight director system has flight envelope protection. For overspeed it works in 2 ways. Firstly manual trim stops. You can’t “trim for speed” when that speed is an over speed. Secondly, and more importantly, the flight controls become heavier and feel like they’re pushing back against you for over speeds. As you enter a dive and overspeed the aircraft the forward force on the control column has to be maintained. To get 15° nose down, the Captain has to be physically pushing / fighting against the controls. It is quite an effort and a lot of force involved. This Captain didn’t just let go of the controls. He was physically fighting the aircraft and actively forcing it into an overspeed. Letting go of the control column will have allowed this opposing force to push back on the controls and pitch the aircraft back towards a no overspeed condition. People have reported that the nose droppped, as if the aircraft was a badly trimmed Cessna 152. That’s impossible in the 777.

      @EdOeuna@EdOeuna7 ай бұрын
  • As a materials and mechanical engineer who has had a only "few" aerospace projects, I am overly impressed with goosebumps the level of detail you go to. To a level that I can promise you actual aerospace engineers that designed the airplane would probably have to re-read and re-study the fundamentals to even come to know all the kinetic dynamics going on, and for you to explain it in the way you do......my *wannabe captain's* hats off to you Captain Mentour :D impressive. thorough. insightful. technically proficient. wow

    @ONLYFACT_X@ONLYFACT_X7 ай бұрын
    • As an aerospace engineer (propulsion systems), I agree with you 100% on the level of simplicity with enough details in his explanations. Love this channel.

      @tigerrx7@tigerrx77 ай бұрын
    • @@tigerrx7 exactly. My father has a PhD in MechE Engineering with concentration in Combustion and a master in Aerospace and undergrad in france's ElectroMechanical Engineering (EE mixed with ME) and his PhD is CONCENTRATED on scramjet propulsion and his dissertation was confidential in the 1990s and I sent him this video and have yet his take on this video yet and trust me when he has a chance to flex his knowledge, he will lol haha I remember the countless hours as a child on campus with him watch at the time I thought was just a big fireball for hours lol. Lo and behold, that's what got his American citizenship because it was a.. I hope I can share this... DoD Confidential project. Lol

      @ONLYFACT_X@ONLYFACT_X7 ай бұрын
    • @@ONLYFACT_X lemme guess, it involved a Skunky work and a lake that was groomed. ;) Ran into some of their works over the decades, well, I would've ran into them, had they existed.

      @spvillano@spvillano7 ай бұрын
  • Great job covering this, Petter. IMO, they’re both good pilots that just had a mishap. They recovered the plane, and properly reported it. It obviously could have ended up bad, but instead highlighted a flaw and led to good changes in training.

    @thetowndrunk988@thetowndrunk9887 ай бұрын
    • Well I do not know about good changes in training but it was good to report it and recheck the flaps. A lot of these videos show a very large amount of over complicating common flight practices which causes mistakes from the pilots. Unfortunately that is how those gov agencies expand. More rules, regulations, laws = bigger funding, bigger buildings, more employees and so on. You bet your butt ever single time they check something they are adding more red tape even if its not needed or is not even helpful. In my day we had next to none of this. I do not know how pilots in these commercial planes handle all this garbage. They are truly something else.

      @bobshanery5152@bobshanery51527 ай бұрын
    • @@bobshanery5152 Sure, the government never helps anything, and I can certainly agree with most of what you’re saying. The 1,500 hour rule came about from a crash where both pilots had well over 1,500 hours, so nobody knows where the government even came up with that nonsense. But this incident did lead to better training at the airline, as stated in this and other sources on this incident

      @thetowndrunk988@thetowndrunk9887 ай бұрын
    • @thetowndrunk ; if the government never helped anything, we'd have pilots without licences, car drivers with no licences, no speed limits, no stop signs, and people carrying automatic weapons in Walmart...

      @lohikarhu734@lohikarhu7347 ай бұрын
    • @@lohikarhu734 think you’re taking my statement a bit too literally….. And FYI, I carry my semi auto pistol into Walmart every single time I shop…..

      @thetowndrunk988@thetowndrunk9887 ай бұрын
    • ​@thetowndrunk988 would you feel naked going to a supermarket in other countries? I mean there are no guns around to carry around.

      @charismahornum-fries691@charismahornum-fries6917 ай бұрын
  • I like how you speak with authority and from being an active pilot yourself. Keep it up!

    @mendel5106@mendel51067 ай бұрын
    • I do what i can. Glad to hear that you liked it!

      @MentourPilot@MentourPilot7 ай бұрын
    • @@K1OIKno IS at Ryanair I believe

      @grantmaxwell7656@grantmaxwell76567 ай бұрын
    • Except that he has missed the obvious stuff about the flight control automation in the 777 and how this situation was created solely by the Captain who was fighting against the aircraft and it’s flight envelope protections.

      @EdOeuna@EdOeuna7 ай бұрын
  • FIrst off, I am thankful for ALL the safe plane journeys I've ever made (including one very bumpy landing in Bangalore when a tire burst upon hitting the runway). I am immensely thankful for all the pilots and crews' hard and careful work. They deserve our appreciation!!! Everyone is so quick to criticise when something goes wrong --- but do you ever think about the incredible responsibility pilots have? When you think about all the things that could possibly go wrong (any combination of technical issues, human error, weather conditions), then we should all be thankful for each safe landing, and NEVER take it for granted. I do not mind uncomfortable seats, smelly lavatories, screaming babies (or adults!!) .... ALL I want is to land safely at destination. THANK YOU TO ALL THE PILOTS AND CREW OUT THERE!!

    @1sola1verita@1sola1verita26 күн бұрын
  • On the 777 you only have to trim for speed changes and not configuration changes. A slight point, but nevertheless an important one in this discussion.

    @Neal_Schier@Neal_Schier7 ай бұрын
  • Loving those new airport style shots in the first part!

    @james_s60@james_s607 ай бұрын
    • Glad you noticed them!

      @MentourPilot@MentourPilot7 ай бұрын
  • It's just WORTHY OF NOTE here to remember, in the case of ANY kind of "overspeed", pitching UP will at least mitigate, and at best eliminate the problem for the time being. The obvious second-phase/step would be throttle adjustment... It's only a temporary thing, but during take-off/climb out, while you're sorting out flap condition between what it's "supposed to be" and what it "really is", there's an easy few seconds to a minute you can just trade speed for altitude and recover relatively well... Might exceed what ATC asked you to get, but it beats the hell out of CFIT any day of the year, and in my opinion (humble or not so much) it's a fine and tongue lashing from a chief pilot that I'll be happy to live long enough to see... especially if I manage to do so without breaking the plane. ;o)

    @gnarthdarkanen7464@gnarthdarkanen74647 ай бұрын
    • Are you a pilot? You sound very knowledgeable.

      @desertstar223@desertstar2237 ай бұрын
    • ​@@desertstar223 "Experimentals" (aka "Ultralights")... They require the least certification (both the aircraft and pilot) and as long as you're strict about sticking to the free airspaces, you CAN get hours off the ground without a license at all... BUT one really SHOULD go ahead and get into a program and follow the courses as with any such hobby and/or sport. It's not too ridiculously expensive, and a decent aircraft CAN haul you and a little cargo (think go-kart or motorcycle cargo capacity equivalent-ish) for about the cost of a decent car... Before even that, I grew up on two wheels, and I still practically live to ride motorcycles. It might seem exciting and action-packed from the side, but once the skills are developed, it's actually more like a slow-dance with a world-class professional dancer. She always knows the steps better than you, and all you really NEED is to let her know what you want, and then LET HER do it. It's probably the most difficult thing for students to "get", but it's amazing when you finally relax and quit making your own life harder on yourself... haha... BUT there's a lot of overlap to piloting. I couldn't get my ass off the ground alone if I tried... SO it's kind of all up to the plane. They are designed to fly, after all... just like bikes are actually designed to be ridden. In any case, it just doesn't really do anything helpful to bash what others did, or take the figurative piss out of their already sh*tty day... In the moment, when we're going to struggle to function at all, it's just more helpful to look at how very basic we can cut to the core of our skillset and do the least to accomplish the best resolve possible... even step-by-step... maybe especially step-by-step. It's part of how I continue to study up on riding motorcycles, too, and I've been doing that legal on the road for over 30 years. ;o)

      @gnarthdarkanen7464@gnarthdarkanen74647 ай бұрын
  • This has happened to me (recently). Had it not been for the GPWS I might not have noticed the change in attitude. I became fixated during a nighttime IFR departure on an engine power change and within seconds I lost situational awareness, Seconds. Thank you for the insight and analysis.

    @alscustomerservice187@alscustomerservice1877 ай бұрын
  • A+ to the pilots, they figured it out and we can't ask more. Thirty seconds is the time I go to the bathroom, come back and find we've fallen 1-0 behind. Great stuff Mentour.

    @bernardgodfrey3499@bernardgodfrey349921 күн бұрын
  • It is scary when you reach over to change stations on the car radio. You think it will only take a fraction of second, but then the station you change to is playing something you don't like and you try to find another. You forget that you're driving while focused on the radio for 3, 4, 5,.. 10 seconds...

    @alunwebber9750@alunwebber97507 ай бұрын
  • The NTSB final report states the PIC had 500 hours total on the type (which would have been a big difference), but the link to the incident report shows 5,000 hours. Even the NTSB can make a mistake!

    @TucsonDancer@TucsonDancer7 ай бұрын
    • Oops

      @xxxxxxxx3476@xxxxxxxx34767 ай бұрын
  • This series is very well made. Even a lay person can get thorough and fascinating look into what a commercial airline pilot faces on the job. These people really deserve high compensation.

    @christian53050@christian530506 ай бұрын
  • I was so relieved to hear that nobody got hurt. Everybody was briefed in advance and expecting some kind of trouble from the weather... I think the passengers expected a rough ride in these conditions anyway. A miscommunication under pressure - can happen to anyone. Thanks for the video!

    @artemijivanovich@artemijivanovich7 ай бұрын
    • "A miscommunication under pressure..?" See a comment above referring to the procedure that submariners use, and is SOP for the best airlines, where orders are repeated back and confirmed verbally, ie "Captain: “Flaps 5”; FO: “Flaps 5." If, especially during challenging situations, this procedure is used, then incidents like this could happen a lot less.

      @user-yl7on1fp9w@user-yl7on1fp9w2 ай бұрын
    • Tbh, as long as they weren’t scared I think the lift feeling from the G’s would have been awesome. Hopefully they couldn’t see the water and grasp what was happening

      @damedusa5107@damedusa51072 ай бұрын
  • I seriously wish there were more content creators out there like you! The production quality is truly amazing

    @LevenZ69@LevenZ697 ай бұрын
    • Green dot aviation is another great channel!

      @Nick51100@Nick511007 ай бұрын
    • @@Nick51100 Yeah I watch that channel ;)

      @LevenZ69@LevenZ697 ай бұрын
    • @@LevenZ69 curious pilot ? Check him out aswell

      @Nick51100@Nick511007 ай бұрын
  • Great video Petter and crew ! Take your eyes off the road for a second and you could take a bike rider out. Very easy to do. Thank you for your detailed analysis. Everyone ( pilots and non pilots )should learn from this one

    @harryruzgerian4855@harryruzgerian48557 ай бұрын
    • A lack of bike lanes in your area. There should be made some. It's a safe solution.

      @charismahornum-fries691@charismahornum-fries6917 ай бұрын
    • ​@@charismahornum-fries691Yeah they probably drive somewhere like residental streets or country roads in the Netherlands.

      @Allan_son@Allan_son7 ай бұрын
    • A bike rider? So a bicyclist?

      @mediocreman2@mediocreman23 ай бұрын
  • Wow the animation in your videos keeps getting better and better. Down to the first person view of the pilots walking through the airport. You and your team truly deserve all your success!

    @ntsmullen3096@ntsmullen30967 ай бұрын
  • It's wild how close we can come to total disaster in such a short moment in time. 10 seconds is nothing! Just glad everyone was okay. Great video, Petter and team!

    @littletrebleclef@littletrebleclef7 ай бұрын
  • "Definitely the weather for First Officer walk-around." I wonder how Kelsey feels about that?!! 😂

    @susiejones3634@susiejones36347 ай бұрын
  • Your point on what can happen in 10 seconds of looking away while driving is so important to remember. In 10 seconds a toddler can get loose from his mother and run in front of your car, in 10 seconds someone can run a red light into an intersection you are turning on to and end up in front of you, in 10 seconds a person coming the other way can have their replaced left tie rod come off and you would miss seeing them start to lose control and come in your lane. (The tie rod came off on my car and luckily there was no oncoming traffic when my car turned hard to the left into the other lane towards the embankment.)

    @AnikaBren@AnikaBren7 ай бұрын
    • A whole bunch of 10 second events that have nothing to do with this. I’m not sure what point you’re trying to make. There’s been several crashes caused by pilots, not waiting 10 seconds to see what the planes going to do. The only issue here was the low altitude that they started at if they said happened to 30,000 feet then it wouldn’t have been an issue.

      @neilkurzman4907@neilkurzman49077 ай бұрын
  • Great video as always. As you've mentioned, a "similar" thing happened to me while driving on the highway. I've turned my eyes away from the road to adjust the climate control and when I laid my eyes back on the road again, half of car the was into the other lane. And this was only for like 5-10 seconds. Luckily there were no other cars near mine and good thing this was not on a two lane road with incoming traffic. Took my lesson there to keep my eyes on the road.

    @nikolcegocevski7161@nikolcegocevski71617 ай бұрын
  • I flew the metro liner and never had an autopilot. What joy. We did always verify each other on the inputs. Vertigo can happen easily too and must be overcome and trust your instruments. I learn so much from your videos. Thanks. glad they got it under control.

    @lrparrish227@lrparrish227Ай бұрын
  • I love "disaster" shows, but not because I take joy in watching catastrophe. I want to understand how and why the event unfolded, and the analysis of what we did/n't do that affected the outcome. I deeply appreciate that when choosing incidents to cover, the Mentour team give as much consideration to _educational potential_ as they do for how "exciting" the story might be. Those "exciting" (read: macabre) stories and lessons are so important, but they are not the whole picture. Near misses like this video are lessons, too--with none of the tragedy and all of the learning opportunity. Besides, I find near misses every bit as interesting to watch and learn about as the catastrophes. I love my mainstream disaster documentaries, but they just don't cover events like the one in this video (as much as I wish they would!). Mentour Pilot channel is always a breath of fresh air.

    @jlgood89@jlgood897 ай бұрын
  • Thanks again for talking about serious incidents that aren't just crashes. It sets you apart from many other channels that just end up being disaster porn.

    @FreedomIII@FreedomIII7 ай бұрын
  • I started fying the 777 from our inaugural flight in 2000, flap retraction can be tricky for those newly-rated on the aircraft. Normally, it gets hairy at weights far in excess of the 777-200 this flight. Neophytes often blanch at the Flaps 5 callout, which seems too much even though it is standard procedure. The cardinal rule: fly the airplane. Instructors on the 777 say over and over again that 10 degrees is the magic attitude for retraction after the programmed reduction to Climb thrust. It's odd that an experienced 777 would toss that out the window. The is all taking place in an airplane with tons of surplus power. Normally, this kind of thrashing around is confined to fourth or fifth day simulator training, not line flying. All of that said, I don't think any of this would've happened, if the autopilot was engaged. Amazing scenario, so glad it did not result in tragedy.

    @andyshane4167@andyshane41677 ай бұрын
  • Your usual exellence. You and Juan are my most viewed aviation experts on YT. I got a big kick out of your endorsement. I'm of marginal expertise being a low time PP, but a flyboy geek since falling in love with books about Orville and Wilbur when I was a boy. I was on a dual rated rotorcraft/fixed wing CFI track and have kept my head in the biz off and on over the years. Airshow geek too. Anyway, fwiw, you and Juan are capital T trusted experts and I admire the work you do. Its so valuable to the industry....just for starters. And theres that huge saving lives thing! Thanks again and make sure you get your R&R in. Your work ethic is insane dude. Both you guys! Lol. Safe flyin'!

    @stefanmarraccini8646@stefanmarraccini86467 ай бұрын
    • I live just down the hill from Juan and he is my go-to source for anything to do with aircraft, wildfires, and floods in our area. The man is a resource of the highest value.

      @ronjones-6977@ronjones-69777 ай бұрын
  • I love MP videos. So informative and thorough. I have two takeaways from this one, and it’s based on a very correct observation that takeoffs/landings are an extremely chaotic and increasingly complex sequence and “things happen fast”. Truer statements were never made. That’s why I love love Mentour. 1). Why do Tower ATC hand off the radios so quickly and force pilots to divert their attention and change freqs right in the middle of the most critical/complex time? Technology should certainly be able to help this by now. We’ve had radios for 100 years and we’ve not done a thing to reduce the distraction factor on the pilots so they can keep their focus on the plane and instruments where they belong. Both procedurally and with technology they can preprogram two frequencies into a radio and do a quick-change and a simplified read back and save very valuable seconds and distractions. The buttons in a 1965 Chevy had presets and we could punch a button in less than 1/4 second without having to look down. A 2023 Boing needs to do it manually? Doesn’t make any sense to me. 2) No cockpit voice recording was available to investigators because the memory was overwritten by the time they landed? For what possible reason can we have for not having memory chips inside the CVR to carry a full long distance flight on any aircraft? These planes cost tens if not hundred millions of dollars and they can’t afford to buy and ruggedize a big enough memory chip to record the full flight? That’s just silly in my opinion and as an engineer myself, it makes me shake my head.

    @pchris6662@pchris66627 ай бұрын
    • 1) Pilots can preselect the next frequency and will typically have the departure frequency ready to switch once the tower says so. But you have to be told when to switch and acknowledge before doing so 2) You can’t just stick any data recording device in a plane. These are specialises ones designed to withstand thousands of G’s, over 30 mins at 1000 degrees and 30 days underwater

      @tomstravels520@tomstravels5207 ай бұрын
    • ​@@tomstravels520- re: 2 True, the actual "black box" is a specialized and expensive piece of equipment, but except for privacy there is nothing that prevent a plane from having a simpler and cheaper auxiliary recording device that could store communication for weeks.

      @JanBruunAndersen@JanBruunAndersen7 ай бұрын
    • @@JanBruunAndersen that is the reason. Privacy, it’s the main reason the pilot unions are against cameras in the cockpit. Nobody wants to be on film all day and have their managers listen in and watch their every move

      @tomstravels520@tomstravels5207 ай бұрын
    • @@tomstravels520 I would certainly appreciate the privacy concerns. However there have to be safeguards already in place that dictate exactly who and for what purpose CVR recordings are allowed to be reviewed. And of course, memory devices in CVRs are specialized, but trust me, they make them much bigger in exactly the same form factor and specs. I work with similar technology each day.

      @pchris6662@pchris66627 ай бұрын
  • Been a fan a long time now and even though this has been covered extensively on other aviation channels I still always get excited when a new videos of yours comes out. Really great stuff 👍🏻.

    @nate7803@nate78037 ай бұрын
  • I think it's funny how you and Green dot uploaded a video on the same incident. I've been watching both channels for a while and knew this had to happen eventually 😂

    @spxncxraviation@spxncxraviation7 ай бұрын
  • Good to see that the Captain and First Officer each filed separate reports - more likely to catch everything that way. Good job, Mentour ...

    @friendlyfff2155@friendlyfff2155Ай бұрын
  • Been having a terrible week, but this is a definite silver lining.

    @The_ZeroLine@The_ZeroLine7 ай бұрын
  • These videos are getting sick. The animations, the level of details, how the info is structured and even the sounds, make these videos very pleasant to watch.

    @bass_code@bass_code7 ай бұрын
    • Possibly / probably meant 'slick' ? @@K1OIK

      @emmapelham2847@emmapelham28477 ай бұрын
    • On the contrary, I can feel a continuous process of healing.

      @leisti@leisti7 ай бұрын
    • @@K1OIK what Squirrel2000 said. "Sick" used in that context means really good. Not sure what words that generation uses to express illness though 😁

      @paulgrey8028@paulgrey80287 ай бұрын
    • @@paulgrey8028 In Australia I believe it's "crook" for sick, so think of the confusion that could cause! 😆

      @heckelphon@heckelphon7 ай бұрын
    • Sick? Please don't use slang known primarily in your own country. It confuses the heck out of the rest of us.I rushed to my pharmacy to buy some medication to cure the videos.

      @desertstar223@desertstar2237 ай бұрын
  • You and Blancolirio are the best air incident content creators out there. Please keep doing your amazing work

    @misguidance__@misguidance__7 ай бұрын
  • I would had had a heart attack. I want to thank all pilots all over the world for getting us to our destinations safely. I am beyond terrified to fly but still do. Thank you pilots and flight crews

    @angieh1950@angieh19502 ай бұрын
  • Distraction for 10 seconds is not uncommon. However 30 seconds can take you to disaster🙏🏻

    @navadeepdorai2918@navadeepdorai29187 ай бұрын
    • Not 10 continuous seconds. You make quick glances back to confirm you're on course. When you reach into the back seat of your car, you rummage for about 2 seconds, then turn and glance for lane drift, speed drift, and change in proximity of nearly vehicles obstacles. You would never turn to the back seat for 10 consecutive seconds. Not even at 10 MPH. And besides, in a critical state, on a curve, with a car 6 feet to your left, etc., you _especially_ would not look off for several seconds - continuous seconds.

      @Bill_Woo@Bill_Woo7 ай бұрын
  • Can you do a video on the US Bangla airlines flight 211 it's a mind boggling accident between the captain being fired and being made to do this flight , smoking on the flight deck and some erratic movements. Viewer's might find this one interesting maybe.👍

    @stephenpowell8750@stephenpowell87507 ай бұрын
  • One thing I love about your series is that you focus as much on what went right (after something went wrong) as what went wrong in the first place. Yes mistakes happen in every line of work and most often are dealt with, without major consequences. The same is true in the airline industry as well. It is just that most “air crash” series focus on the failures than the far more prevalent successes. Thank you.

    @deanseher2594@deanseher25944 ай бұрын
  • The production quality of these videos is incredible. Way better than anything out there and anything that ever was produced. Thank you!

    @mta59066@mta590667 ай бұрын
  • I was wondering what happened with that flight. I can totally see that happening, fighting what your inner ear says in turbulence and flying the instruments can be challenging. I fly single pilot, and in situations like that I wait on the ground for better weather. It was great to see the pilots report the incident responsibly. Another lesson learned. If I expect to be IMC shortly after takeoff…I’ll brief myself to use caution for disorientation and to concentrate on flying the aircraft. I’m gong to add it to my check list too. Never stop learning, never stop improving.

    @caiolinnertel8777@caiolinnertel87777 ай бұрын
  • This is absolutely terrifying. The stress and workload in the cockpit in such a short space of time, wow!

    @steve-marsh@steve-marsh7 ай бұрын
    • I had only 2 seconds to push nose down in an engine failuer during start. There was no more secound left, becouse stall and death. There was no time for fear.

      @QuaxC42@QuaxC427 ай бұрын
    • @@QuaxC42 yeah, out of altitude, speed and ideas, there is no time. Afterward, it's code brown time, but not during. The most heartbreaking words I've heard from a CVR were, "Tell my wife that I love her very much", followed immediately by the sound of the aircraft breaking apart.

      @spvillano@spvillano7 ай бұрын
  • Mentour, I am almost sure that, in normal law, the 777 flight-by-wire autotrims too. The difference is that it autotrims for speed, not for climb speed / load factor like the Airbus philosophy, so the 777 behaves similarly to a non-FBW plane where the airplane seeks to go back to the speed for which the plane is trimmed, except that, unlike a non-FBW plane, the 777 automatically compensates for configuration changes (like flaps, salts, speedbrakes and gear) and changes in thrust so the speed for which the plane is trimmed doesn't change when you make these conf and thrust changes. Although unrelated, I think that the 777 FBW logic also damps the long-period mode of longitudinal oscillation (phugoid) so if you make a change in config or thrust it will stabilize in the new flight vertical profile in 1 single cycle In the 737 if you are flying straight and level at constant speed and close the throttles, the plane will start to lose speed and the nose will go down but it will "overshoot" the equilibrium pitch so it will gain more speed that it originally had and then will pitch up and so on during several oscillations until it stabilizes in a descent with an airspeed a bit higher than the original one due to the loss of the thrust in the underslung engines (effect equivalent to trimming nose down). If you do the same in the 777, the plane will start to pitch down immediately, it will still lose some speed in the beginning but the nose will go a bit more down than equilibrium pitch so the plane will speed up again and when the plane approaches the selected speed again it will pitch up that bit back up to the equilibrium pitch.

    @adb012@adb0127 ай бұрын
  • Really glad this was over water and not some slightly hilly terrain! Fantastic breakdown of the incident, thank you!

    @imonkee6053@imonkee60537 ай бұрын
  • As always, your examinations of incidents really add to an understanding of the situation. Well done, once again.

    @zenlizard1850@zenlizard18507 ай бұрын
  • Judging from the title of the video, I thought the plane went down and you were emphasizing the last recorded words seconds before impact which would be investigated and focused on in this overview. As someone who just came back from a trip to Maui, you have no idea how relieved I was to finally hear that this had a good ending 😅

    @Kurayamiblack@Kurayamiblack7 ай бұрын
    • I actually thought the flight was to down too until I reread the title of the video and noticed it says "Seconds from Impact."

      @ericmarquardt6614@ericmarquardt66147 ай бұрын
  • Petter, your work has always been top-notch but the improvement and expansion of ground models has not gone unnoticed! Loved the look inside the airport.

    @shanestachwick4784@shanestachwick47847 ай бұрын
  • I'm not a pilot but have gained a fascination for commercial flying since becoming hooked on your series. Thanks so much. Always look forward to them (not sure if I'll ever want to fly again though - will have to enjoy holidaying locally from now on😅)

    @kateford8649@kateford86497 ай бұрын
  • Seems like the artificial horizon doesn't ever get looked at by pilots.

    @logan4215@logan42157 ай бұрын
    • Yeah, it seems that in all of these stories, the pilots always think the artificial horizon is malfunctioning. They never seem to believe what the artificial horizon is showing them, which is odd. Idk if it’s because the artificial horizon regularly malfunctions or what.

      @CoverBrazilian@CoverBrazilian3 ай бұрын
  • thanks for the video, Petter! Your comment at the end of the video is on point, something like this happened to me this very afternoon, I was driving in a city, at speed limit (50km/h) and the front car was a good 100m ahead, I let go my concentration a mere 2 sec to check a direction panel, I didn't see the front car braking hard, by the time I had the eyes on the road again, I was past the limit of a safe emergency braking, still applied the brakes of course and while decelerating, I had to swerve into a parking slot (thankfully empty) along the road, when I was stopped, the front of my car was at the level of the other car passenger's door. No collision, no damages and no injuries, thankfully. so yeah, be careful of your environment when using any vehicle, be a rolling or a flying one :)

    @Eytaris@Eytaris7 ай бұрын
  • Great video as always. One thing I would say about this is that the crew's quick response was critical to avoiding catastrophe here. BTW I see two other human factors related aspects here closely related to what you covered but going a little further. The first is about the somatogravic illusion. One important aspect here is that during instrument flight training, pilots are (as you know) trained heavily on this and taught to ignore spacial sensations because these can be unreliable. I dont know if the captain pushed forward on the control column (as you point out that is not necessary to recreate this here), but the sense that would alert us to a change in pitch is something he would have had extensive training and experience in ignoring and for good reason. This means that visual cues are the only reliable measures and in the clouds, the only visual cues come from the instruments. The second point is about stress-related fixation. When we face stress our concentration narrows This means that we tend to fixate on the perceived problem at hand at the expense of the greater situation. In my view when the captain noticed the barber poles not acting as he expected the stress in this case would have made it harder to maintain proper situational awareness of the overall vertical flight path and attitude of the aircraft. As you point out this happened very rapidly. and our cognitive biases work against us in rapidly changing situations. These are all things all of us can learn from regardless of whether we are flying a plane or just operating anything else.

    @WorldTravelerCooking@WorldTravelerCooking7 ай бұрын
  • The only thing that really jumps out to me here was the fact that it took a media article to get the FAA and NTSB to look into this.... that's a problem.

    @MrHav1k@MrHav1k7 ай бұрын
  • Mentour pilot You are getting sharp day by day, I can feel your continus improvement process and you are killing any kind of competition far behind you. I have a great connect what ever you say Have an absolutely fantastic morning thank you for your hard work ❤❤❤

    @aleefahmad5386@aleefahmad53867 ай бұрын
    • Thank you my friend!

      @MentourPilot@MentourPilot7 ай бұрын
  • Thank you very much for your balanced approach to reporting on incidents like this. Well done again!

    @WetterFlug@WetterFlug7 ай бұрын
  • The terrain pull up automation definitely got their attention and probably saved them especially at those speeds/descent.

    @Firestorm637@Firestorm6377 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for the video @MentourPilot I always find these videos to be very informative and interesting to watch. I remember when I was on my probationary driver's license looking away from the road for about 1-2 seconds to adjust the radio and nearly totalled my car up the back of another one. Luckily I didnt make contact, but ever since then I dont have the radio on at all when driving. The pilots done well to rescue themselves and everyone onboard, and I bet they will remember these events for the rest of thier career and learn from it.

    @MrGeneralScar@MrGeneralScar2 ай бұрын
  • I'm just thankful that there were no injuries and it's now simply a learning experience for all. I'm always remembering Delta 191 when the words wind shear are used. Also...8000 fpm climb rate for the 777? That's a lot of power.

    @davidcole333@davidcole3337 ай бұрын
    • Some of it was transient, trading airspeed for altitude, rather than steady-state and sustainable. Just like how your car can climb a hill with the transmission in neutral and no power at all going to the wheels, if you start at the bottom of the hill already coasting at highway speed.

      @EfficientRVer@EfficientRVer4 ай бұрын
  • Whenever @MentourPilot has his new documentary I say to myself: sit down mf you are about to have a great show

    @arbiasshehu9025@arbiasshehu90257 ай бұрын
    • Oh, that’s so nice! I hope you liked it!

      @MentourPilot@MentourPilot7 ай бұрын
  • One thing I don't recall happening is the FO repeating the command flaps 5, for if he had responded with flaps 15, the PIC would surely have heard that and corrected him. And if he didn't respond then he should have repeated the command, or at least asked if the FO had heard the command.

    @utha2665@utha26657 ай бұрын
  • Takeoff and landing are always a critical phase of the flight, so the concentration and cooperation of both pilots must be particularly intense, especially in difficult weather conditions.

    @kazmakopyrda7236@kazmakopyrda72367 ай бұрын
  • Hey, could you talk about the TAM 3054 accident? It really impacted brazilian aviation at the time. Great videos by the way.

    @braian_krapp8644@braian_krapp86447 ай бұрын
  • Wow. The start of this episode in the best series on the internet already start so badass-y, one knows this will be a good one.

    @Suburp212@Suburp2127 ай бұрын
  • Great video and especially great animations and awesome quality. Huge respect to your team making all animations and effect’s. The overall quality of your videos is really climbing fast.

    @maxw5229@maxw52297 ай бұрын
  • I wish medicine & law enforcement as well as transportation drivers had the same interest in analysis of almost fatal (and fatal) mistakes!

    @casparcoaster1936@casparcoaster19367 ай бұрын
  • You and your team have been outshining yourselves with these animations lately! Great coverage.

    @cinnamoshua@cinnamoshua7 ай бұрын
  • I truly enjoy your content. I learn things and I'm entertained.

    @davidp2888@davidp28887 ай бұрын
    • Awesome, that’s what I’m trying to do.

      @MentourPilot@MentourPilot7 ай бұрын
    • @@MentourPilotHello. I would like to know which simulator you use to illustrate all your videos. Thank you

      @thomasmorel1447@thomasmorel14477 ай бұрын
  • Hello Captain, I truly hope " you are doing absolutely fantastic!" and I want to thank you not only as a viewer but as a future cabin crew member, for the outstanding videos. You truly are an amazing person, and I am sure an amazing Captain as well! Words aren't enough to describe my gratitude for your work, I wish you all the best!

    @pissarozzz7498@pissarozzz74987 ай бұрын
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