HOW was THIS Allowed to HAPPEN?!

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  • čas přidán 15. 07. 2022
  • Go to curiositystream.thld.co/mento... and use the code MENTOURPILOT to save 25% off today, that’s only $14.99 a year. Thanks to Curiosity Stream for sponsoring today’s video.
    On the 7th March 2020, two Air Canada #aircraft experienced a close call on 06L at #Toronto Pearson International airport. The two aircraft involved were a #Boeing 777 and a much smaller #Embraer ERJ-190. A Dash 8 also makes an appearance. The weather on the day was beautiful with high clouds and a temperature of -5°. What could have caused just an event to take place? Let’s #explore!
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    Below you will find the links to videos and sources used in this episode. Enjoy checking them out!
    Sources
    -----------------------------------------------------
    Final Report:
    www.tsb.gc.ca/eng/rapports-re...
    Wake Turbulence: Topfelya
    • Boeing 777 Vietnam Air...
    CHAPTERS
    -----------------------------------------------------
    00:00
    00:21 - Setting The Stage
    01:16 - The Control Tower
    02:57 - The RIMCAS System
    05:21 - When Is It airborne?
    06:41 - Separation Rules
    10:42 - The Aircraft Involved
    12:18 - 777 Takeoff Roll
    13:15 - Avian Traffic
    14:24 - A Masked Message
    16:09 - Closing The Gap
    17:54 - RIMCAS Comes Alive
    19:16 - Contributing Factors
    VDKJJSCTEINXNXWM

Komentáře • 3,5K

  • @RCassinello
    @RCassinello Před rokem +2446

    What I find most interesting about this story is that... No one did anything wrong. No one made any mistakes, made a poor decision, broke the rules... Everyone behaved properly at all times and it was the actual system that let everyone down.

    • @stevenbeach748
      @stevenbeach748 Před rokem +39

      I’d be interested to see if the Embraer’s company has SOPs on doing high speed aborts. I’ll bet they do and I’ll bet that they don’t want you aborting for a bird strike in the high speed regime.
      If that is the case then the pilot flying was in the wrong.

    • @TWEAKLET
      @TWEAKLET Před rokem +208

      @@stevenbeach748 bird strike is most dangerous on the runway if you take off and that engine fails when you are just starting to climb you might crash sully is an example of a double engine bird strike at low altitude one that turned out well most the time losing both engines right on take off leads to everyone dead because you don't have enough height to make it back to a runway

    • @neoroland952
      @neoroland952 Před rokem +88

      Sometimes you can do everything right and still lose

    • @danielnewby2255
      @danielnewby2255 Před rokem +174

      @@stevenbeach748 Pilot's decision on whether the aircraft is safe to fly is absolute. No person or company is going to question a pilot's decision to reject for safety before V1.

    • @stevenbeach748
      @stevenbeach748 Před rokem +18

      @@TWEAKLET Part 25 certified airplanes (this one) has to be able to take off on one engine after the engine fails on the runway. The plane must be able to continue to accelerate to rotation speed on the remaining engine and climb away from the ground at a 2.4% minimum climb gradient. Bird strikes, especially one bird, are no big deal and should not be a reason to abort at high speed.

  • @vandecayear10
    @vandecayear10 Před rokem +1577

    Damn dude, your ability to explain a situation to those of us who have zero aviation knowledge (like me) is really amazing. Very impressed!

    • @Angela-G
      @Angela-G Před rokem +26

      I just left a similar comment! I am extremely "novice" when it comes to aviation.
      But I watch many channels and I've watched this same story covered many times.
      Because of the way he showed it, explained it and all of the detailed graphics, I finally get it!

    • @snorttroll4379
      @snorttroll4379 Před 6 měsíci +2

      It is the only way to explain things

    • @ShortCircuit05445
      @ShortCircuit05445 Před 5 měsíci +5

      @vandecayear10 I totally agree with you 💯 and sometimes I feel like I can now pilot a plane just by the way he explains every single step throughlly.Going back to this video it reminds me of the Tenerife disaster of 1977,although in that case the weather played a huge part as the pilots of both planes and the air control tower guys could not visually see the planes as the airport was engulfed with a lot of fog reducing visibility significantly and although a lot of lives were lost that day,it also brought upon a lot of significant changes to help avoid such issues again 😊.

    • @Wongwanchungwongjumbo
      @Wongwanchungwongjumbo Před 5 měsíci +2

      Singapore 🇸🇬 ATC Changi International Airport will Never allow this Double Taking off Aircraft like this Incident.

    • @Logicalsane
      @Logicalsane Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@Angela-Gnow you should thank him by opening your legs for him ...😊

  • @The_ZeroLine
    @The_ZeroLine Před rokem +850

    I’ve always found the fact that they’re using comms on the runway that can block out another to seem like such an archaic system for such a high tech and safe industry.

    • @k1ng5urfer
      @k1ng5urfer Před 11 měsíci +49

      I suppose it's actually rather difficult when you need to ensure prompt live communication from potential massive numbers of pilots to ATC and so driect calling of course wouldnt be practical, and theres no real way technically as far as i know that could prevent transmissions overlapping on an open frequency that you need to handle that.
      But I wonder if something like whatsapps voice notes would probably work. levels of urgency could be hardcoded into the message - Mayday calls would always be trasmitted live and overide any other queued messages. Pan-Pan level 2 priority, then after that could just go to playing out in the order received.
      From the users perspective anytime the frequency is open they can talk live and would notice no difference from normal radio comms. When there is a transmission coming through if you transmit it will just queue in and play like you started your transmission as soon as theirs ended, minimal delay.
      I could see in very busy airspace that it could lead to radio communication being delayed by a matter of some seconds, but to be honest its the same now anyway but with the additional risk of an overlap

    • @k1ng5urfer
      @k1ng5urfer Před 11 měsíci +35

      The real downside is it would be internet and satellite connection dependent i imagine.

    • @bhilde55
      @bhilde55 Před 10 měsíci +29

      agreed! I feel like critical messages (rejected takeoffs, takeoff rolls, etc.) should be transmitted twice? or would that just congest the air? through all of my Mentour Pilot binges I have noticed this quite frequently.

    • @michaelm1573
      @michaelm1573 Před 10 měsíci +18

      ​@@k1ng5urferWhatsApp for ATC? What are you 12?

    • @The_ZeroLine
      @The_ZeroLine Před 10 měsíci +41

      @@michaelm1573It’s the clarity of a messaging app he is likely referring to. It’s a got a silly name. That doesn’t mean it’s not a useful technology.

  • @ExMachina70
    @ExMachina70 Před rokem +144

    The professionalism from all parties involved makes you realize just how tight these airports are run.

    • @echelonrank3927
      @echelonrank3927 Před 3 měsíci +1

      dangerously tight

    • @tarantellalarouge7632
      @tarantellalarouge7632 Před 22 dny

      when you dive into those air controls situations, it is almost a miracle that there are not more accidents in the airports on the runways !

  • @priyamohan
    @priyamohan Před rokem +1035

    I loved how the 'highly optimized ATC workflow ' was called out as a contributing factor to the near-accident. Taken out of context, that phrase may seem like a compliment ! Loved how you laid out the ATC operation context so that the rest of the story made sense ☺️

    • @SrssSteve
      @SrssSteve Před rokem +96

      Highly optimized usually leaves little to no room for even small errors. We have seen that in the global supply chain. You always need to be on the lookout. I believe there was a pilot waiting for takeoff in the Linate disaster that noticed on his TCAS that an aircraft ahead of his had not gotten/gained any altitude and questioned his own takeoff clearance. Maybe this 777 should have waited to see the smaller jet ahead off him get airborne.

    • @lairdcummings9092
      @lairdcummings9092 Před rokem +107

      When I hear "highly optimized," I think "cut corners" and "minimum redundancy."
      In short, very little error trapping, and not rubust.

    • @Stettafire
      @Stettafire Před rokem +11

      I think it was meant as "congested" or "overloaded"

    • @lairdcummings9092
      @lairdcummings9092 Před rokem +42

      @@Stettafire in practical terms, yes, but in strict definition, no.
      "To optimize" means to make something more optimum, or closer to perfect. "Highly optimized" means very efficient. But in reality, pushing busy, intricate actions closer to 'perfect' when human actions and interpretation is highly involved quickly reaches the point of work overload and conflicting, simultaneous, even out of sequence, actions.
      In short, if *everything* goes *exactly* right, then no problem. But *any* hiccup means the whole thing collapses.

    • @anneharrison1849
      @anneharrison1849 Před rokem +30

      @@lairdcummings9092 as the cargo ship getting stuck in the Suez Canal neatly demonstrated

  • @nutsbutdum
    @nutsbutdum Před rokem +3065

    The RIMCAS system having to wait for a 50 knots threshold from a decelerating airplane is pretty dangerous in my opinion. The simple fact that the airplane is decelerating should indicating a rejected takeoff and immediately trigger the RIMCAS system.

    • @Mountain-Man-3000
      @Mountain-Man-3000 Před rokem +517

      Why is 50 knots even used as the "airborne" threshold? What commercial aircraft takes off at 50 knots??

    • @TrevorSmithy
      @TrevorSmithy Před rokem +271

      Why isn't there just a button in the plane that they push if they reject a takeoff? Seems like that would solve a lot of problems.

    • @-TobsA-
      @-TobsA- Před rokem +296

      @@Mountain-Man-3000 Why even use the speed as an airborne indicator. The only indicator for airborne should be the WOW sensor, at least from my point of view.

    • @alex_zetsu
      @alex_zetsu Před rokem +40

      Maybe the program only has a data slot for "speed" and doesn't perform derivative operations to get an acceleration number?

    • @lairdcummings9092
      @lairdcummings9092 Před rokem +191

      @@TrevorSmithy there *is* a button. It's automated - their transponder. Which worked as intended. The problem lies in RIMCAS programming, and the decisions and assumptions made in programming it.

  • @markwybierala4936
    @markwybierala4936 Před rokem +235

    A simple suggestion for a solution would be a rule that a call-out for a rejected take off must be repeated until ground control acknowledges it. Along with that would be to establish an SOP to include a pre designated runway exit instruction (in case of rejection) to enable a safe exit from the runway at busy airports.

    • @Zombiesfromjupiter
      @Zombiesfromjupiter Před 10 měsíci +27

      that may block the frequency for even more important situations such as mayday or fire... no? however repeating a couple of times seems to me (who knows very little) could be advisable. they may implent such a directive in case of relying on visibility

    • @slifer0081
      @slifer0081 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Haha...

    • @polakatl
      @polakatl Před 6 měsíci +25

      acknowledging communications works both ways. ATC is required to acknowledge the pilots. In my opinion the pilots who rejected should have done a better job making sure their extraordinary intentions were heard. They knew the airport was running tight departure. They knew that there was a takeoff clearance given and acknowledged on their runway. Then again, we are talking about seconds so perhaps this happened too fast for a repeat call to come out.

    • @11pupona
      @11pupona Před 6 měsíci +3

      good point, call-out until acknowledment.

    • @BarracudaHawk
      @BarracudaHawk Před 6 měsíci +16

      The Canadian approved procedure should never have been approved for use. Until the first a/c has its wheels off the ground , there’s no clearance for the second a/c to take off. It’s really very simple .

  • @plektosgaming
    @plektosgaming Před 10 měsíci +220

    It is still amazing that the communication systems still are subject to interference if used at the same time. Especially when you consider larger airports with potentially dozens of planes using it at once.

    • @binisxoolgamingbrotherhehe9004
      @binisxoolgamingbrotherhehe9004 Před 10 měsíci +1

      What is this game it looks like Microsoft flight Simulator

    • @tlangdon12
      @tlangdon12 Před 9 měsíci +11

      It is one reason why there are multiple frequencies, e.g. one for Ground, one for Clearance Delivery and one for the Tower, so that the number of aircraft trying to share a frequency is reduced. Pilots learn what overlapping transmissions sound like and should reissue any communication that they think might have been overlapped.

    • @staticbuilds7613
      @staticbuilds7613 Před 9 měsíci +18

      It's how radio waves work. It's more of a science physics issue than a technology issue

    • @plektosgaming
      @plektosgaming Před 9 měsíci +7

      @@staticbuilds7613 We all get it, but using such old technology, especially in a large modern airport seems... like it needs an upgrade to the 21st century?

    • @staticbuilds7613
      @staticbuilds7613 Před 9 měsíci +17

      @@plektosgaming Most of the radios are 21st century. The reason this happens is because radios work on radio waves. You have one signal per frequency. You said "we all get it" but you clearly did not

  • @ipsfryt
    @ipsfryt Před rokem +788

    The graphics used in your videos to help explain what is going on are just outstanding. Fantastic job guys.

    • @MentourPilot
      @MentourPilot  Před rokem +89

      Thank you! Dom is a magician!

    • @badger6831
      @badger6831 Před rokem +22

      @@MentourPilot What software do you use for all these renders? I live 15 minutes from Toronto Pearson and this all looks very realistic! You can even see Mississauga downtown in the background. Truly outstanding!

    • @Rafay7001
      @Rafay7001 Před rokem +2

      @@MentourPilot please do flydubai flight 981

    • @angela1984a
      @angela1984a Před rokem +3

      @@MentourPilot So Petter... What do you think of your POS airline's treatment of the Spanish cabin crews?

    • @solomonarhin
      @solomonarhin Před rokem +2

      @@MentourPilot can you please do a video on the famous Air France flight 447 that crashed into the ocean ? The one that was out into a stall by one of the copilots. If you have already too kindly lead me to the link . Thank you

  • @KingdaToro
    @KingdaToro Před rokem +356

    It seems insane to me that an aircraft will report itself airborne before V1. There's no guarantee that it will actually become airborne up until that point.

    • @thewhitefalcon8539
      @thewhitefalcon8539 Před 8 měsíci +16

      Peter said that is for TCAS. TCAS is completely disabled for aircraft that are not airborne, I think. If the plane is about to be airborne, TCAS should be on.

    • @KaiHenningsen
      @KaiHenningsen Před 8 měsíci +18

      @@thewhitefalcon8539The problem is using one sensor for two different systems, each of which increases safety by moving the sensor's decision point in opposite directions. This can't possibly work right.

    • @thewhitefalcon8539
      @thewhitefalcon8539 Před 8 měsíci +4

      @@KaiHenningsen Yes, but they can't retrofit all the planes to update their TCAS to send out a "maybe" on the ground state. Do the best you can with what you've got. Nobody is supposed to RELY on the runway incursion system.

    • @knutaune724
      @knutaune724 Před 6 měsíci +3

      Quite Right,
      An Aircraft at 50 knots os not flying, nor is a Commercial jet at 100 knots

    • @nunyabidness3075
      @nunyabidness3075 Před 6 měsíci +2

      @@knutaune724Piper Cub: “Hold my Beer”
      The first time I watched a cub take off I was taxiing a 172 on the parallel taxiway and I thought at any minute it would stall, lose control, and perhaps crash into me.

  • @Kiwi2703
    @Kiwi2703 Před rokem +119

    For all the incredible safety systems involved in the aviation industry, marking something "airborne" when it's clearly not airborne is absolutely unfathomable to me

    • @PaulJakma
      @PaulJakma Před 6 měsíci +6

      This is the root cause. Presumably cause of commercial pressure (as Mentour alludes to). And there is no indication this root cause was addressed (least, from the conclusions Mentour gave?).

    • @VincentCheung92
      @VincentCheung92 Před 4 měsíci +6

      @@PaulJakma I would make an argument that the root cause was having one controller manage two opposing runways. But again, are you going to require two ATC controllers every day? Thats probably the difficult balance of human safety vs practicality.
      I think the bulletin was used because you can make an argument that pilot decision is the safety redundancy in a scenario like this.

    • @bertbergers9171
      @bertbergers9171 Před 4 měsíci +4

      First off all, this video shows how absolutely useless RIMCAS actually is, if TCAS is deemed so much more important that airborne is given of before (and long before) actually being airborne.
      Secondly after the radio incident on Tenerife, i find it unaccceptable that radio messages are still able to be blocked.
      Seems as if for take-off rejection should be a rule about read back and or sending on secondary frequency.
      Thirdly the ATC assumed the Embraer to go airborne soon. That does not equal being airborne.
      And since assumption is the mother of all f..k-ups we should reprimande him at least a little bit.
      The biggest blame however is on the system in place where a useless RIMCAS gives false trust and a FAA organization still has not managed to deal with radio blocking.

    • @niconico3907
      @niconico3907 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Yes, a plane should not begin the take off roll until the plane before has exited the airport perimeter.

    • @cessnadriver6813
      @cessnadriver6813 Před 3 měsíci

      @@VincentCheung92 I think 350+ human lives (or more) saved is justification enough for one controller per active runway...don't you?

  • @SirFloofy001
    @SirFloofy001 Před 5 měsíci +18

    17:10 trucking instructor once told me "if something happens you are not prepaired for or havnt been trained for, go with your first instinct. Its usually right". thats what this pilot did, nobody got hurt, nothing damaged. Win in my book.

    • @biscuit715
      @biscuit715 Před 3 měsíci

      I can't think of many situations where there is an option better than just stopping as hard as you can!

    • @SirFloofy001
      @SirFloofy001 Před 3 měsíci

      @@biscuit715 Been a while since ive seen the video, dont remember what it was about. BUT while a plane is taking off there are speed limits they have to reach by certain points. V1, Rotate, and V2. If something happens. before V1 the pilots hit the brakes. Something happens after V2 the pilots MUST continue takeoff as there is not enough runway to stop and at V2 the plane is already nose up and starting to fly. Anything happens between V1 and V2 is up to pilots discretion as above V1 they don't have enough room to stop but are still to slow to fly. Lose an engine after V1 but before you rotate, you dont have enough room to stop or enough power to take off properly so it is left up to the pilots descrition

  • @stt5v2002
    @stt5v2002 Před rokem +970

    Ah the “combined position.” This concept is probably familiar to many people in other professions. We certainly know of it in health care. This is where you keep cutting staff / costs until you achieve a really really good balance sheet. Ideally, some executive should get a promotion or a big bonus. I believe that the process can continue until a complete disaster happens. If you are really really lucky this will only cost a huge amount of money and prestige. But quite often it also costs lives.

    • @0x73V14
      @0x73V14 Před rokem +215

      then when someone dies you prosecute the poor bastard who was up for 36 hours with no relief covering 2 or 3 jobs and keep on doing the same thing

    • @giomar89
      @giomar89 Před rokem +54

      I was looking for this comment and slightly disappointed to not find it among the top 3. Indeed, I can confirm that the process CAN continue (provided some executive keeps getting a promotion/big bonus) until a complete disaster happens. But then, you just roll with what @Jonathan D has suggested

    • @gnarthdarkanen7464
      @gnarthdarkanen7464 Před rokem +52

      Well, how else are stockholders supposed to accumulate more "record profits"???
      There's only so much "planet earth" to go around and only so much of any market to fit on it. Investors don't like to invest without those magic words, "record profits" or they don't like buying the stock. AND of course, that favorite motto of them all, "If you're not growing, you're dying." ;o)

    • @watchman4todayreloaded192
      @watchman4todayreloaded192 Před rokem +23

      Very true. In this case it could certainly have led to disaster. In other cases it leads to early burn out and people not wanting to work under such ridiculous workloads and an even higher loss of, or failure to even find, experienced reliable staff. This kind of stupidity is seen in soooo many places these days. You know tick boxes to make sure that things are done right can be very useful, but if you don't give your staff enough time to actually check and do thinks right you make a right ****** of everything.

    • @BeingMe23
      @BeingMe23 Před rokem +10

      @@gnarthdarkanen7464 Shareholders don't respect themselves thus generally not respect others.

  • @AFloridaSon
    @AFloridaSon Před rokem +284

    You make a great teacher. As a non pilot, I still enjoy your videos very much, because you explain things in a way that even I can understand.

    • @MentourPilot
      @MentourPilot  Před rokem +82

      That’s great to hear, that’s what I am trying to achieve

    • @stefanlaskowski6660
      @stefanlaskowski6660 Před rokem +10

      @@MentourPilot Since my poor eyesight blocked my high school goal of becoming a pilot in our Air Force, your channels get me as close to being a pilot as I can get. 👍

    • @eetuthereindeer6671
      @eetuthereindeer6671 Před rokem +8

      @@stefanlaskowski6660 poor eyesight SUCKS. Its the most important sense and its so bad for too many people. Its awful. I also have poor eyesight and i like being in the nature outside of cities and having bad eyesight just sucks. Its so humiliating to know that i would have just died if i had poor eyesight in the stone age. I don't want to be dependant on some stupid glasses... my passion is about nature so imagine a tiny rain that would just refresh normal people but it basically blinds me. Or maybe have a surprise branch touch your face? Glasses either fall off or get scratches. Oh and don't even think about being able to see anything while swimming
      I HATE THEM SO MUCH
      Thanks for letting me tell you about it even thought you didn't let me and it was just my idea to comment this

    • @dee-xxx
      @dee-xxx Před rokem +1

      I completely agree

    • @oahuhawaii2141
      @oahuhawaii2141 Před rokem +1

      @Eetu The Reindeer: Any chance of getting contact lenses, or corrective eye surgery (LASIK, PRK)?

  • @katherynedarrah4245
    @katherynedarrah4245 Před rokem +55

    Also, I back the Boeing's decision to reject 100%. As you said, at this point, there's no time for complex decisions. There'd be 2 thoughts in my head "are we passed V1" and "can we safely reject"

    • @Darkermatter8
      @Darkermatter8 Před měsícem +1

      Rejecting after V1 is totally
      Okay if you are a nasa pilot like me, it’s only that when the continental air flying bus drivers don’t know what to do when bird strike cactus 335 la guardia teetsboro mayday mayday Pam Pam Pam

  • @cuchitp
    @cuchitp Před rokem +164

    I can’t wait for you analyse the recent LATAM airplane accident in Peru, where a firefighters drill, ended up with them entering the runway where a plane was just getting ready to take off, and crashing with the plane. It was a miracle that only two people sadly passed, but the Peruvian management of these events really make you wonder about their professionalism

    • @TomK32
      @TomK32 Před rokem +7

      One wonders why they didn't put barriers on all taxiways entering that runway...

    • @fredlin6303
      @fredlin6303 Před rokem +1

      Sounds like poor planning and lack of coordination. Both have human error involve but this double take off incident has a lot to do with over reliance on technology.

    • @BillFucker-cg5zt
      @BillFucker-cg5zt Před rokem

      reasons to not go to shithole countries

  • @hughmungus1767
    @hughmungus1767 Před rokem +677

    I have a suggestion for another video: how passengers can be inadvertently left aboard planes after they land. The same airport, Pearson International in Toronto, had an incident a few years back where a woman who was asleep in her seat was missed by the cabin crew when they disembarked the passengers. The other passengers left the plane and then the cabin crew and pilots left and none of them saw this woman still asleep in her seat. Eventually, she woke up and found herself in a dark, unheated plane; it was winter and after dark. The plane was no longer connected to the terminal - it had been towed away to a parking area - and the doors were all closed. The woman tried to phone the airport but her phone battery was almost dead and she wasn't able to clearly explain her situation before the phone died. If I remember correctly, she finally got noticed because she managed to figure out how to open one of the doors and then shouted for help through the open door and someone driving a baggage carrier heard her and came to the rescue. I don't know how frequently such things happen but I thought it might make a good topic for a video if it is not a one-in-a-billion fluke. After all, any of us might find ourselves in such a situation and might benefit from advice on what we should do if it happens.

    • @shospulecolupis9718
      @shospulecolupis9718 Před rokem +114

      I knew a guy who fell asleep on his flight, the plane landed, some people got off but others stayed who were continuing one. But he was supposed to get off at that airport. Well, he wakes up either enroute or at the next destination because someone didn't check if everyone was off who was supposed to get off had actually gotten off.

    • @jakobkosmo2718
      @jakobkosmo2718 Před rokem +54

      Or he could do a story about the time they forgot a suitcase in Rome, and it flew all the way back to Copenhagen before flying back to Rome again! Scary stuff, the suitcase didn't have any phone or other ways to communicate!

    • @roderickcampbell2105
      @roderickcampbell2105 Před rokem +14

      Hugh, stop picking on Canada. Yes, someone missed someone who was asleep. Who wants to wake someone sleeping? I, pearsonably, would want to sleep by Pearson airport all the time.

    • @andrew_koala2974
      @andrew_koala2974 Před rokem +14

      Hugh Mungus
      Explain what you mean by "The woman tried to phone the airport" ?
      The WoMan either phoned the airport or she didn't -
      There is no TRIED.
      Whether the call was successful or not is another matter.

    • @NetAndyCz
      @NetAndyCz Před rokem +93

      @@andrew_koala2974 Of course there is TRIED, it is really hard to phone the airport without trying, the chances of accidental call are abysmally low.

  • @lunayoshi
    @lunayoshi Před rokem +176

    I went into this video going "wow, I haven't heard of this incident before!" Probably because nobody was injured. Sometimes it's nice to hear of almost-incidents that had happy endings.

    • @arianebolt1575
      @arianebolt1575 Před rokem +9

      A lot of modern near-misses would have been disasters a few decades ago.

    • @thrillhouse-five
      @thrillhouse-five Před rokem

      I thought the same thing, and I even live in Ontario, but the incident happened in March 2020 so we all may have been a tad distracted news-wise

  • @MandoMonge
    @MandoMonge Před rokem +139

    Before I used to love watching NatGeo’s air crash investigations, but now I can’t stand them.
    I got spoiled by Peter’s incredible explanations, context of systems and how it all comes together in easy to understand pieces of information.
    The standards are quite high and I’m glad I’m constantly following this series in your channel

    • @karl-unoisaksson4000
      @karl-unoisaksson4000 Před 8 měsíci +11

      I agree... petter dont give us huge fireballs, burned bodies, teddybears sadly lying on the ground as a horrific witness to the disaster... He gives us the WHAT, WHY and the AFTERMATH, that hopefully ensure that this particular incident never happens again...
      Love from Sweden 💖
      Å Ebba Blitz är obeskrivligt het...

  • @benmac940
    @benmac940 Před rokem +164

    I can't believe that it was considered acceptable for them to have 2 aircraft taking off simultaneously on the same run way, that just sounds like a recipe for disaster. What happens if the following aircraft was more focused on the instruments and missed the aircraft in front stopping

    • @lukepevensie
      @lukepevensie Před rokem +13

      phew, that was a close call, ATC would have not notice it until another Tenerife disaster strikes with 3 planes involved

    • @TomK32
      @TomK32 Před rokem +6

      @@lukepevensie Tenerife was in cloud with visibility ranging von 100 to 900 meter because clouds move over the runway. The controller couldn't even see the runway.

    • @ariaalexandria3324
      @ariaalexandria3324 Před rokem +8

      I agree. My first thought was what about if a takeoff has to be aborted. I had an aborted takeoff last week (student pilot) when a plane that was entering the downwind instead cut across the crosswind, opposite the direction I’d have turned, and we’d have reached the same spot in the air at the same time. Dumbass made no calls whatsoever. The field I was on wasn’t long, and there are 100’ tall trees 33’ from the end of it. I was almost at Vr and had to abort. The thought of another plane starting behind me makes my heart race.

    • @alexandranur5530
      @alexandranur5530 Před rokem +1

      Canada...

    • @bobbyvalentino4488
      @bobbyvalentino4488 Před rokem +1

      Exactly, now its ok to understand how things happened but there’s a lesson to learn too, maybe time to change rules before it’s too late

  • @lastdance2099
    @lastdance2099 Před rokem +377

    That operations flow seems dangerous. It seems to me there's nothing spectacularly unlikely about that sequence of events, it could easily happen again.

    • @philhughes3882
      @philhughes3882 Před rokem +25

      It may be dangerous but it is “highly optimised”. Optimised for who though?

    • @c00l00k
      @c00l00k Před rokem +18

      It really isn't all that dangerous as long as the aircraft holds its T/O roll until the preceding aircraft is airborne (since you are responsible for visual separation from the preceding aircraft after all and you have no idea if they will reject the T/O or not like in this case). It only takes additional 30 seconds (or not even) to wait on the runway but still can get way more departures out this way over a long period as mentioned in the video on a clear VFR day.

    • @Delibro
      @Delibro Před rokem +8

      @@c00l00k That's right and that wasn't clearly mentioned in the video, the thread avoidance is guaranteed through the pilot applied visual separation.

    • @tghidsgn
      @tghidsgn Před rokem

      Kill hundreds in an avoidable accident < save a few dollars.

    • @demoniack81
      @demoniack81 Před rokem +24

      That seems to be a pattern with a lot of incidents and accidents in North America. Their standard practices of pre-clearing aircraft for landing (and canceling later if the runway ends up being occupied for whatever reason) is another one that comes to mind, which is another thing that isn't done in europe.
      It seems they put too much emphasis on "efficiency" over safety over there. I know some US airports have a ton of traffic, but I'd rather be late than burning to a crisp on the runway because another aircraft slammed into mine.

  • @SRFriso94
    @SRFriso94 Před rokem +144

    The pilots of the 777 definitely made the right call. Would they have had enough runway to take off? Maybe. Would they have had enough vertical clearance with the tail of the Embrear? Maybe. Would you want to gamble almost 500 lives on a maybe? Definitely not.

    • @richardgs271
      @richardgs271 Před rokem +5

      In 1971, there was a near disaster in Sydney when pilot of a 727 took off on a wet night over a DC-8 which had been taxing towards it because of a misheard communication and poor visibility from the tower. The 727 continued the takeoff because the its captain judged he could not stop in time. The 727 struck the tailfin of the DC-8, and while damaged, was able to keep flying and land safely.

    • @beauxr.benoit1374
      @beauxr.benoit1374 Před rokem +2

      This is why you shouldn't have a computer in control during anything but regular boring operations, because you can't program a computer to decide the outcome in drastic decision making conditions.

    • @polyvg
      @polyvg Před měsícem

      I 100% agree. The 777 would almost immediately have been in a position where they could not abort their own take-off - whatever happened - simply because they could not stop before hitting the Embraer.
      Given hindsight, imagine the 777 had also had a bird-strike (which might have knocked out an engine).

  • @davemieze9021
    @davemieze9021 Před rokem +55

    This content is EXACTLY what aviation fans want, and you provide said content perfectly

    • @natizey3825
      @natizey3825 Před 11 měsíci

      Same for me and I’ve never been in a plane before

    • @kay9549
      @kay9549 Před 5 měsíci

      In Canada at that airport, they do have an alternate runways, not sure why the rimcas system did not sound after a certain time, in refence to the closeness, of the three airplanes. They were on the same runway, actually three planes. Two of the airplanes did decide to abort there flight. It was perhaps due to the system that there was no incident involved.

  • @ollenorberg8727
    @ollenorberg8727 Před rokem +10

    To me, the biggest surprise is how the Pilot Applied Visual Separation Rules in North America can allow for the air traffic controller to give take-off clearance to an aircraft, before ATC can visually confirm that the preceding aircraft is actually airborne. We're talking about a couple of seconds here. And while I understand that there are economic incentives for shaving off a few seconds, from a safety perspective, those extra seconds seem quite well invested.

  • @mumiemonstret
    @mumiemonstret Před rokem +71

    Great that you pointed out at the end that it was the human factor that saved the day. It is often blamed, rarely credited.

    • @MentourPilot
      @MentourPilot  Před rokem +18

      That was my point actually. Glad you noticed it!

    • @frollard
      @frollard Před rokem +1

      Agreed very much. Our squsihy bits sometimes do the good work instead of the screwups. Excellent callout.

  • @lordcola-3324
    @lordcola-3324 Před rokem +56

    I find it incredible that die aviation industry is still primarily using a form of communication where sometimes messages just don't come through and nobody even realises that a message was just lost. Baffling!

    • @0x73V14
      @0x73V14 Před rokem +6

      aviation is in fucking shambles and it's cheaper to blame individual pilots and controllers than to actually make comms and management not a total shit show

    • @TianarTruegard
      @TianarTruegard Před rokem +8

      They could use separate frequencies for transmit and receive to allow full duplex communications, but nobody would want to pay to replace all the radios.

    • @jonathanma2741
      @jonathanma2741 Před rokem +3

      @@TianarTruegard ok but in situation like that one, the 777 will hear the Embraer is rejecting, but the tower can still only hear the 777

    • @demoniack81
      @demoniack81 Před rokem +6

      ​@@jonathanma2741 You know we've had group calls for ages right? I understand AM radio has _some_ advantages compared to more sophisticated digital communications, but it seems the disadvantages far outweight them.
      At the very least they should use a dual system, so if the digital communication gets disrupted for whatever reason you can still fallback to AM (and this should happen automatically), but the normal workflow should be handled by the superior system.

    • @jonathanma2741
      @jonathanma2741 Před rokem +2

      @@demoniack81 As I said, duplex communications radio couldn't help the tower to hear two communication at once

  • @deusvult6920
    @deusvult6920 Před rokem +25

    I'm not in aviation but I find your videos interesting. You explain enough without over explaining and you are presenting these in an objective manner. This is what happened, this is what's normal, this is what was a bit off

  • @barbaraperry5023
    @barbaraperry5023 Před rokem +12

    Yes, indeed - bingewatching here! I am absolutely fascinated. The visuals and explanations are phenomenal. Thank you so much. I would also like to comment that both your warnings to sensitive viewers and your respectful handling of fatality reports shows a great deal of kindness,& properly honors the departed individuals.
    The fact that you make a point of showing what was learned from a tragedy makes one feel that the lives lost were not in vain.❤

  • @euansmith3699
    @euansmith3699 Před rokem +110

    18:26 Strewth, that plane is practically invisible behind the airport building. The re-enactments in these videos do a great job of recreating the situations, and giving a clearer idea of what is going on. I like how the incident reports maintain such a neutral tone; the 747 pilot isn't commended for aborting his take-off, better than that, it simply isn't mention. It is amazing how much potential carnage a single bird can cause.

    • @jefflerner7526
      @jefflerner7526 Před rokem +4

      *777

    • @tvanced8583
      @tvanced8583 Před rokem

      I'm also like, if you control in this configuration why not use camera's on the terminal building at the other side?

    • @jonslg240
      @jonslg240 Před rokem +3

      *IMO it should be standard procedure if you reject a takeoff and ATC doesn't confirm, you should take the next available exit automatically.*

  • @Oscee613
    @Oscee613 Před rokem +67

    That 50/100 knots limit sounds like a pretty bad design choice.

    • @cupofjoen
      @cupofjoen Před rokem +5

      They should've use the nosewheel pressure sensor instead of speed limit.

    • @dvdraymond
      @dvdraymond Před rokem +4

      @@cupofjoen The speed activation thing is a backup in case of faulty weight on wheels switches that never detect the plane getting airborne, and thus don't activate the in-air TCAS system.

    • @j.biscuit9828
      @j.biscuit9828 Před rokem +4

      I agree, it's ridiculous. What does 'airborne' mean? In the air. So is it in the air? No. Wtf.

    • @sanjay_swain
      @sanjay_swain Před rokem +5

      The answer is already in the video: "Increasing the 50/100 knots limit significantly increases the false warning rate which in turn make the entire system much less reliable"

    • @tomriley5790
      @tomriley5790 Před rokem +2

      @@dvdraymond having a speed activation alone seems very poor for RIMCAS - I can understand it activating TCAS but having it turn off RIMCAS seems dangerous (especially without another confirmatiory system - like change in altitude).

  • @jonathansnead7736
    @jonathansnead7736 Před rokem +10

    I’m so glad I found this account. These videos and your in depth explanations are just incredible.

  • @joebarker4211
    @joebarker4211 Před 4 měsíci +2

    You have one of the best channels on CZcams. In depth explanation while keeping it simple for non airline people. Keep up the good work

  • @waterwalker1315
    @waterwalker1315 Před rokem +118

    Retired Air Traffic Controller, I can see this easily happening. You did an excellent job explaining all of the factors involved.

    • @matthewputzrealestate8501
      @matthewputzrealestate8501 Před rokem +16

      My step father was an Air Traffic Controller in Canada for a number of years. He's always the most tense one in the family when we travel by air because he says he knows better than any of us where things can go wrong.

    • @balaviswanathan006
      @balaviswanathan006 Před rokem +5

      God Bless you as you may have saved so many souls during your role @Waterwalker

    • @ihato8535
      @ihato8535 Před rokem +2

      If you, as a former ATC, can "easily see this happening" then that's a problem.

    • @CathyKitson
      @CathyKitson Před rokem +2

      But of course it wasn't the ATC's fault. They were following the rules. It was the rules themselves which sucked.

  • @tonyf.9806
    @tonyf.9806 Před rokem +116

    What always amazes is me is the stopping on the runway. When I went through training, the ATC sternly talked to me about not stopping on the runway after my first solo landing. In either case, unless I literally can't move my aircraft, my priority would be to slow the aircraft down to ground maneuvering speed quickly, then get the hell of the runway, not sit there and cause a hazard.

    • @paulw4310
      @paulw4310 Před rokem +34

      I agree completely. I realize that the 190 crew was unaware that their "reject" call wasn't heard by ATC. I'm sure they were anticipating an "exit runway when able" call from ATC. That being said, I wouldn't have sat there stopped on the runway, response from ATC or not, completely vulnerable with an A/C that's totally capable of taxiing clear. I'm not going to criticize the 190 flight crew; I'm just saying that I personally (been doing this gig for 3 decades) would've taxied clear and held on the proper side of the hold line and then attempted to communicate with ATC. Unlike on a runway, traffic on a taxiway is moving nice and slow...that's where I want to be sitting with the parking brake set.

    • @RicardoZambrana
      @RicardoZambrana Před rokem +15

      I totally agree, but it was in a matter of seconds, I'm pretty sure by the time the 777 decided not to take off, the 190 was still slowing down. All of this must have happened in 30 to 45 seconds, I guess. So it's difficult to slow down enough to a point where you still have time to turn 45 degrees and exit. It takes a while to do that while on a plane and without doing anything drastic like taxying outside the runway.

    • @barongerhardt
      @barongerhardt Před rokem +7

      @@paulw4310 100% I would reject, without knowing it was a reject the most dangerous situation would be trying to fly over them while they rotate and climb into your underside or lose control from your wake. Also agree that my training and experience is to keep the active as clear as possible. Never come to a complete stop and exit at the first opportunity once slow enough. I haven't flown anything as bigger than a seneca, so maybe the rules are different for 190s and 777s.
      I have flown in/out of some busy airports, but I cannot think of a time that I started to roll prior to seeing the prior aircraft land or take off and totally clear of the active. Even if I had been given clearance, I think I would hesitate and wait.

    • @wturn5354
      @wturn5354 Před rokem +5

      If you have a rejected takeoff sometimes you have to stop on the runway. When landing you are required to exit the runway as soon as possible unless you have a problem.

    • @marlinweekley51
      @marlinweekley51 Před rokem +3

      Absolutely! That’s nuts

  • @Huvada
    @Huvada Před rokem +12

    I wonder if it wouldn't be possible to just update the radios at this point. I understand it's a massive undertaking as all planes and airports need to be updated. But the fact that important transmissions can be blocking each other without any kind of warning that it happened, is quite dangerous.

    • @gwillen
      @gwillen Před 4 měsíci

      There are always tradeoffs. A digital radio system that can avoid this issue is much more complex than simple analog radio, which means there's a higher risk of failure. Analog radio is dead simple.

  • @billhartnett7471
    @billhartnett7471 Před rokem +3

    After viewing any of Peter’s videos the comments offer an equally valuable contribution to his presentations.
    Thank you all for your participation and insights into this experience. I encourage all to offer, in my point of view as I am someone who loves to fly but found it proper to discontinue my private pilot training when I experienced too many flaws existing at the time most of which have been addressed currently but the learning process is never finished.
    I apologize I did not mean to write a book here.
    Respect.

  • @barefootalien
    @barefootalien Před rokem +320

    I mean... sometimes things like this just absolutely baffle me. How, in an industry focused almost solely on safety, does it get decided that "airborne" should mean _anything at all_ except for *actually in the air???*
    It seems like _someone, sometime_ should have audited that procedure, and thought, "Actually, you know what? Let's make it only say "airborne" when it's, I dunno, airborne?"

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Před rokem +8

      Yes.

    • @brianorca
      @brianorca Před rokem +24

      It's because ADS-B is also used to avoid in air collisions, and the possibility that the "in the air" sensor could have a false negative. RIMCAS was added later, and utilized the same ADS-B data which is used for TCAS.
      Maybe a future version of ADS-B could have a data flag for "I might be airborne, or on the ground, I'm not sure yet." so it could activate both avoidance systems during the takeoff roll. But it would have to be backwards compatible with older aircraft.

    • @SeriousDiman
      @SeriousDiman Před rokem +14

      For plane it's the "turn on" of TCAS point, so for plane engineers it's safer to turn on TCAS earlier. Why RIMCAS engineers use "airborne" parameter as a single and true status of airborne airplane - this is the question.

    • @barefootalien
      @barefootalien Před rokem +11

      @@brianorca That does make _some_ more sense... but it's still objectively the wrong call. Ground collisions are _vastly_ more likely than airborne collisions, and most of the worst collision disasters have been on the ground.

    • @james_shepherd254
      @james_shepherd254 Před rokem +5

      @@barefootalien Maybe they should find another term to replace 'airborne' when the aircraft is still on the ground but is in a critical phase of its take-off roll.

  • @NetAndyCz
    @NetAndyCz Před rokem +190

    I think the second plane rejecting the take-off was a good decision, they had no idea why the first plane was not taking-off and in different scenario they might easily get into more troubles by taking off. Also if they got in any sort of troubles after committing to take off ,there would have been still plane in front of them severely limiting their options.

    • @SianaGearz
      @SianaGearz Před rokem +3

      It's a potentially slow plane up front as well. Good call with an unclear hazard to reject as early as possible.

    • @gnnascarfan2410
      @gnnascarfan2410 Před rokem +2

      Yep we know what happened in Tenerife when the KLM crew did not abort the takeoff despite some concern.

    • @hewhohasnoidentity4377
      @hewhohasnoidentity4377 Před rokem

      ​@@gnnascarfan2410 in that case KLM should never have started the takeoff roll.

    • @gnnascarfan2410
      @gnnascarfan2410 Před rokem

      @@hewhohasnoidentity4377 Well the copilot and engineer were too afraid to speak up because the Captain was basically a god.

    • @naveensarawagi7442
      @naveensarawagi7442 Před rokem +1

      Thank god a tenerife 77 situation was averted

  • @lrobinson4422
    @lrobinson4422 Před rokem +2

    Thank God. It was a miracle. I think everybody involved did a great job to avoid a disaster. Hats off to them. Thanks for the video, well explained.

  • @Arctica88
    @Arctica88 Před rokem +40

    I don't know how many of your videos I have watched where something goes wrong because the air traffic controller can't hear an important message because it came in at the same time as another one from a different aircraft. There should be a warning system in place, to alert the traffic controller that another message came in from 'X' aircraft, so that they can contact them right away after they're done with the first message that came in. Or better yet, the system should record what is transmitted and alert the traffic controller that they have a message that came in while they were handling another communication, so that they can just press a button and listen to it.
    I don't know what the difficulty of doing this would be, but I think it would prevent a lot of problems.

    • @catwiesel_81
      @catwiesel_81 Před rokem +9

      thats not how it works,. the messages are not heared because they are not received. in essence, the more powerful signal destroys the weaker signal. there is no technical way for the sender, the overpowering sender and the receiver to know about what happened. there is no message to record, there is no warning to alert of a missed message.
      surely there are ways to transmit information in a way where you can notice, record and replay messages. thats how the phone system works. however, that system is way more complex, and expensive, and error prone, which is why the old radio waves system is still in use and while not perfect has many advantages. you can more or less literally build a receiver out of the lint in your pocket and a ripped of button (not really, but its really basic and not sophisticated technology), and as long as you have power, it works, no other or moving parts needed...
      and you are right, this has certain drawbacks that need to be taken in account. one of them is you can not know if your message has been received. this is where "over" and "over and out" comes from (making sure the whole message is heard and signaling others they can now talk) and why its important to acknowledge receipt of a message like "heard" or reading it back. its also why radio chatter needs to be kept at a minimum. you only can hear one sender, and when someone else is sending, nobody else can be talking. or they could, but only the strongest sender is being heard.
      while the video did not make mention of this, and i dont know the rules, that the air traffic controller did not acknowledge the firsts plane abort message might have been where you could have saved the day here. the pilots could have repeated the message because it was not acknowledged.

    • @elkeospert9188
      @elkeospert9188 Před rokem +4

      Still ridiculous why aircrafts are still using analog radio for communication where only one person can speak at the same time while everybody has a smartphone which can handle easily two or three persons speaking at the same time.
      Digital radio would also allow to identify each aircraft which is sending by adding its call sign to the digital data

    • @elkeospert9188
      @elkeospert9188 Před rokem +2

      @@catwiesel_81 "there is no technical way for the sender, the overpowering sender and the receiver to know about what happened"
      There is an easy way to detect this. If somebody is sending something his receiver must verify that he receives (nearly) the same signal which the sender is sending and if not create a warning that somebody else used the frequency for sending at the same time.
      "surely there are ways to transmit information in a way where you can notice, record and replay messages. thats how the phone system works. however, that system is way more complex, and expensive, and error prone, which is why the old radio waves system is still in use and while not perfect has many advantages. you can more or less literally build a receiver out of the lint in your pocket and a ripped of button (not really, but its really basic and not sophisticated technology), and as long as you have power, it works, no other or moving parts needed..."
      I never heared that an aircrew build an analog radio using "lint in the pocket" or "ripped of buttons" while in the air....
      That may work on a ship there you have plenty of time but not in the cockpit of an aircraft.
      And our digital phone systems like 2G,3G,4G and LTE are working very good with hundred millions of users even the used hardware comes from many different companies - the only scenarios where it comes to problems is either power outtage or overload by to many users in the same cell.

    • @OverPenAdventures
      @OverPenAdventures Před rokem

      There are a few ways to mitigate stepped on transmissions. The foremost being a response including the aircraft callsign and "roger" or "acknowledged" etc...this should alert a station that broadcast at a similar time that their transmission was either missed or stepped and and prompt another call. (Happens a lot). When things are moving quickly things get missed and stuff like this happens but there are procedures in place to prevent this so its not a constant safety issue under normal conditions (former pilot, current ATS)

    • @josephmitchell8935
      @josephmitchell8935 Před rokem

      @@elkeospert9188 works great until you surpass the incredibly limited range of cellular. Be it vertical distance or otherwise, you just simply don't have options for utilizing a cellular signal at 20+ thousand feet as I understand it.
      Ever get out in the ocean on a boat? You lose cell signal pretty quick. Plus what airline wants to pay a mobile carrier to handle their mission critical safety communications.
      Radios have very few failure points. You need a working transmitter and receiver. No towers, no fiber runs, no data centers, and importantly, much less latency.

  • @kelly2631
    @kelly2631 Před rokem +38

    One easy fix would be to revoke the "AIRBOUNE" status if an aircraft starts decelerating...
    ...or to stop cost cutting in the ATC tower, that could also work.

  • @buttersPbutters
    @buttersPbutters Před rokem +80

    There have been other incidents where the radio transmission to inform ATC of a rejected takeoff was stepped on by another transmission on frequency. It's relatively likely to happen, because it's an unexpected call at a time when ATC is likely to talking to other aircraft in sequence. The F/O doesn't want to wait for another aircraft to read back a takeoff clearance before making their call, because it's important that the tower is alerted to a rejected takeoff as soon as possible, before that other aircraft begins their takeoff roll. The radio is not a very reliable way to convey this information in a timely manner. It seems like the RIMCAS should also raise an alert if the aircraft's ADS-B ground speed drops by more than (let's say) 20 knots after accelerating above 50 knots. If the aircraft is slowing down significantly after initiating the takoff roll, it's not taking off, regardless of the air/ground state logic, and the controller should be alerted immediately. It also wouldn't be a bad idea to hit the transponder IDENT button on a rejected takeoff to help draw the controller's immediate attention, at least at airports with radar-equipped towers.

    • @VosperCDN
      @VosperCDN Před rokem +8

      I would have thought a rejected takeoff transmission would be repeated if the tower hasn't acknowledged it - I did comms for a while, and important messages were always ack'd or readback to avoid them being missed. (edit: a word)

    • @jamoecw
      @jamoecw Před rokem +2

      @@VosperCDN yeah, but non-comms people don't like that and don't want to take that extra step. comms people tend not to make it into leadership positions, so leadership tends to sympathize with the non-comms side of things and you get situations like this which then leads to an emphasis on instruction (treated as a new instruction) until it is forgotten and things repeat. same things go with backup frequencies. having a second frequency that the tower monitors in case your messages aren't going through due to high traffic volume allows one to get important messages through even when there is too much chatter going on. this means an extra radio for the tower, and another thing to remember and keep track of. if you are streamlining workflow this seems like an easy win to cut, but it always leads to problems at some point.

    • @WilliamHostman
      @WilliamHostman Před rokem +5

      There was a suggestion to FAA from a collection of bush pilots asking for Full Duplex ATC & Unicom... Everyone transmits on freq. A, listens on Freq. B, except tower. Tower hears A directly and transmits on B directly. When tower not transmitting, the repeater puts out what it gets from A onto B. Everyone hears what ATC does... Which is only ATC when ATC is talking. FAA said it was too expensive for the majority of Aircraft to be refit. that was late 1980s.

    • @tipakA
      @tipakA Před rokem +2

      @@WilliamHostman Wouldn't that have exactly same issue though? Per your explanation, everyone would still transmit on the same frequency, and for that case it genuinely doesn't matter if you listen on the freq A, freq B or you get a transcript via email - both sources still transmit on A. The only difference for your explanation between current and suggested, would be that if ATC would be transmitting, it would not retransmit planes to other planes. Which would technically be the same situation, assuming that tower is able to overpower the planes anyway.

    • @WilliamHostman
      @WilliamHostman Před rokem +1

      @@tipakA you'd know you were "stepped on" in FDx, whe in simplex, you don't. The 1O of the smaller would have heard the heavy and known he didn't get heard, and be aware he needed to repeat.

  • @siloganchinappa9364
    @siloganchinappa9364 Před rokem +3

    I'm hooked to these videos and appreciate the clarity of the technical explanations to the point that I have a greater understanding of what takes place in the cockpit. Thanks Peter

  • @spoppy3060
    @spoppy3060 Před rokem +2

    Dang, this guyshould be a aviation lecture, he can explain every critical system smoothly and clear

  • @tomhutchins7495
    @tomhutchins7495 Před rokem +108

    This incident genuinely scares me because it shows that all the safety measures put in place to prevent another Tenerife can fail in what sounds like the exact same way with a masked radio transmission. While the training, safety, professionalism and culture in the industry is clearly very good and constantly improving, this story suggests that the necessity of automated systems gives a sense of security that can turn out to be false

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Před rokem +8

      Yes. A masked radio transmission played indeed a major role in the Tenerife disaster, too.

    • @gerbsvizsla
      @gerbsvizsla Před rokem +6

      and fog NOT a factor

    • @frollard
      @frollard Před rokem +8

      (Haven't read the full report, probably mentioned) - Granted this was all a matter of seconds, but transmitting in the blind about a reject takeoff and not getting an acknowledgment from the tower should have been some high alert first officer making sure it was heard. I work in a semi-related field with critical radio transmissions all the time...and the number of times we get "I told you I was x status" - never came through. No ack = didn't happen.

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Před rokem

      @@gerbsvizsla Fog played a major role, too - and the lack of a Ground Radar in Los Rodeos at that time - also the overcrowding of this small airport due to the closure of Gran Canaria. It´s a complex story. @Mentour Pilot made a very good video about it in last December, please watch it here on this channel.

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Před rokem +1

      @@frollard Yes, better safe than sorry.

  • @MrHav1k
    @MrHav1k Před rokem +131

    I love that you broke this down Petter because it opens up so many opportunities to make aviation safer. How a system can show you as "airborne" before you're even at your V1 decision speed is ridiculous to me

    • @arihantjain2432
      @arihantjain2432 Před rokem +6

      I thought the same. Those who developed the system haven't yet heard about 'rejected takeoff'.

    • @zachfield5336
      @zachfield5336 Před rokem +4

      I think its a matter of the system being generalized as possible. In short, its designed to work for every aircraft. From an a380. All the way down to a c152. So 50 kts makes sense. WOW could also work, but not all planes have that sensor. This is just my 2 cents as an air traffic controller. Ultimately since speed is really the only route to use it should be plane specific. still wouldnt be perfect but a lot better.

    • @DryBones111
      @DryBones111 Před rokem +8

      @@zachfield5336 The 50kts threshold is specific to the Embraer and it's the transponder which emits the airborne signal, the RIMCAS only interprets it. So it's perfectly feasible to have the transponders fallback to emitting airborne signal at V1 instead of a static value, especially curious that the Embraer system was programmed at 50kts.
      Apparently the threshold used is to activate TCAS, so when RIMCAS was developed, they just inverted the TCAS activation signal. So by increasing the threshold for "Airbourne", you increase the danger of incorrect warning suppression on TCAS.

    • @zachfield5336
      @zachfield5336 Před rokem +3

      @@DryBones111 Makes sense I guess. I just talk to the planes, im not an aerospace engineer. But i dont really see why TCAS and RIMCAS couldnt be operational at the same time.

    • @apveening
      @apveening Před rokem

      @@zachfield5336 "Ultimately since speed is really the only route to use it should be plane specific. " How about height above ground?

  • @KChristopherCarvalho
    @KChristopherCarvalho Před 4 měsíci +2

    I'm an air traffic controller. It's possible that there is an aviation channel out there where the host has a better grasp of ATC equipment, procedures and environment, and the ability to clearly explain it, but I haven't come across it yet. The amount of research Mentour puts into his subjects is clearly evident.
    As to the comments about the radio issues of multiple aircraft and/or ATC stepping on each others transmissions, this is a real problem in our ATC environment during busy periods. However, usually, transmissions don't overlap precisely in length so there is some indication to the controller that he/she missed a call and they can solicit that missed call. It was bad luck in this scenario that they apparently fully overlapped. Also, full duplex communications in ATC have the potential to wreak havoc on communications as it would allow multiple transmissions at the same time (imagine a party line phone call or zoom meeting) with no ability to distinguish any of them. Additionally, the current system, in the event of a stuck mic (stuck PTT) on an a/c, because ATC radios are more powerful than a/c radios, allows ATC to override the stuck mic transmission and still transmit to other a/c under its control, important from a safety perspective. And, in the event ATC needs to make an emergency/urgent transmission while another a/c is transmitting, we can "drown" out that transmission and make our urgent transmission by "stepping on" the currently occurring transmission.
    Finally, airlines' financial need to optimize efficiency does increase the risk of something going wrong, but that can be found in many aspects of the operation (for example, the decision to fly with less than full fuel on every flight (see Mentour's Singapore airline video). We can absolutely make the system safer by applying greater separation and increasing delay in the system (one in, one out?), flying with full fuel, etc., but that would come at increased cost to the consumer, which has not proven to be popular. In this case, the multiple layers of aviation security, which included the 777 pilots awareness of the situation ahead of them and recognizing that the preceding departure they were to follow had not gotten airborne and that they were closing on them instead of having increasing separation, and taking the appropriate action. worked.
    Apologies if this was too long or previously addressed.

  • @marianorivera3272
    @marianorivera3272 Před 20 dny

    I'm always amazed at quality of the recommendations that come from those reports.
    The industry is held to extremely high standards while also understanding that humans have limitations that have to be realistically managed.

  • @soccerguy2433
    @soccerguy2433 Před rokem +20

    I'm a military heavy pilot. I'm surprised we don't have an automated way of detecting radio heterodyne (blocked radio transmissions) and alerting the callers.

    • @casualgamerguy2638
      @casualgamerguy2638 Před rokem +1

      The tech we use in civil aviation is truly ancient. The HF stuff cracks me up. So glad CPDLC is getting widely adopted now

    • @colinjacobs176
      @colinjacobs176 Před rokem +1

      I still marvel at how dangerously bad VHF can be but also at how difficult it is technically to come up with an alternative - to find a part of the spectrum we could use globally and get everyone to switch over at once. Impossible!

    • @ninedaysjane2466
      @ninedaysjane2466 Před rokem

      The technology is out there. The airlines are too cheap to implement it.

  • @jdbreaux8080
    @jdbreaux8080 Před rokem +29

    Brings true tears to my eyes for the 777 Captain. Placing the safety of human life above and beyond what the dollar allows. Indeed, no time for complex decisions. The Captain of Embraer, ditto, same. Outstanding decisions by both. Definitely needs the same attention to safety as Sully on the Hudson.
    A wonderful presentation by our Mentour. Beautiful illustrations. Brilliantly thought out and presented. Pilot, thoughtful, illustrator and producer, to say the very least.

    • @sharoncassell9358
      @sharoncassell9358 Před rokem

      The bird probably was hit &?died and could have gotten ingested in the next plane engine had the embrea taken off & not abandoned takeoff.

  • @LakesideGazer
    @LakesideGazer Před 2 měsíci +1

    Okay, serious props to you for your youtube channel allowing you to be able to write off the top tier beautiful airport and scenery addons for flight sim, and maybe even the gaming computer to run it.

  • @davidhignett4108
    @davidhignett4108 Před rokem +2

    Beautifully assembled and communicated post. Thank you so much from a long-term admirer in the UK

  • @RubyS.1
    @RubyS.1 Před rokem +12

    The animation just gets better and better.

    • @MentourPilot
      @MentourPilot  Před rokem +3

      Thanks! That’s what we are aiming for! 💕

    • @willykang1293
      @willykang1293 Před rokem

      @@MentourPilot Same feeling, excellent animation 👍

    • @b.a.erlebacher1139
      @b.a.erlebacher1139 Před rokem

      The animation is excellent, but I was a little startled to see trees in full green leaf in Toronto in February. I guess this shows how well I was taken in by the realism! ;-)

  • @ratheonhudson3311
    @ratheonhudson3311 Před rokem +61

    With respect, I'm glad that situations are analysed even without a bad ending for those involved. This situation where a workflow causes the chance of an incident to rise is something that happens in many situations but these are very professional pilots who are trained to react appropriately in any case. Glad no one got hurt too

    • @KnugLidi
      @KnugLidi Před rokem +4

      In most modern industries "near misses" and "accidents" are both investigated in the same manner (although with perhaps less urgency for the former) Happily, there are relatively few full blown accidents and investigators keep their skills sharp investigating near misses. You learn just as much from a near miss as you do with an 'accident'.

    • @fredlin6303
      @fredlin6303 Před rokem +1

      @@KnugLidi Systems are made to be reliable but only if they were implemented properly and within tolerance. The TCAST and RIMCAST system are working as designed but how they work don't scale up properly with the increase traffic flow of North America airports. Also, implementation of the systems miss out other assumptions, such as aborted take off and increase in traffic flow.

  • @slimquinn
    @slimquinn Před 6 měsíci +1

    It amazes me that ATC and the world in general doesn't have a better way to communicate to avoid dual transmissions and communication being missed.

  • @VegasBull
    @VegasBull Před rokem +3

    I have been binge watching your entire catalog of videos for the past few days! Loving all the factual and unbiased breakdowns of these events. With that said, nothing has made me laugh like the way the graphic of that bird went up and across the screen after it hit the side of the plane 😆 HUGE thumbs up to whoever put that together 👍

  • @Ninetieschannel
    @Ninetieschannel Před rokem +27

    As a teacher I have to appreciate your way of explaining everything so well around aviation that even an amateur could understand! It definitely is an inspiration! :)

  • @ACCPhil
    @ACCPhil Před rokem +34

    I notice a theme in some incidents - that two or more people transmitting simultaneously on a frequency can result in information being lost. Wondering if anyone has looked at a digital packet switching system with, say, time division multiplexing could allow all the signals to get through. The tower would then have heard both transmissions.

    • @petereverett1455
      @petereverett1455 Před rokem +3

      I think there's just a reluctance to change.
      Consumer handheld radios have a 'busy lockout' function for a long time which stops you transmitting if a carrier from another transmission is detected on the same frequency, that would at least let you know that your transmission didn't get through so you can resend it.

    • @tuunaes
      @tuunaes Před rokem +2

      For backwards compatibility aviation radio/airband is still based on original analog AM modulation.

    • @tedwalford7615
      @tedwalford7615 Před rokem +4

      Yes! This risk must be addressed. That could be done just at the receiving end, with upgraded tower equipment. Multiple incoming analog voices could be computer-separated using voice recognition or other clues, and then each stepped-on call automatically and immediately replayed (of course not conflicting with newer incoming calls).

    • @jamescobban857
      @jamescobban857 Před rokem +2

      The different messages are not arriving from the same azimuth so an array antenna could separate them. This is somewhat complicated by the very low frequencies, and therefore long wavelengths assigned to this fonction. Fundamentally it does not seem appropriate in the 2020s to restrict aircraft safety operations to using 1950s technology. This issue also arises in the conflict between 5G telecommunications, which uses 21st century electronics, conflicting with the radar altimeter which is likewise stuck using 1950s technology. There is no reason that the aircraft could not transmit the information using BOTH 1950s AM analogue transmission and 21st century digital transmission. It could even send a text message through the 5G network.

    • @ianm408
      @ianm408 Před rokem +2

      @@jamescobban857 you're right in one aspect, that technology could help both messages get through. This problem happens whilst aircraft are in the air too with the potential for similar dangerous issues.
      However if both transmissions get through the controller may not be able to tell who called or what they said due to the garbliing of the voices coming through at the same time. There would be no certainty that it would help much.
      In the air a controller may have up to 30 aircraft on frequency at any one time so this problem can be much bigger in en route sectors.
      CPDLC, (electronic messaging) does help reduce transmissions and is probably the way to go regarding this "call blocking" issue, even on the ground.
      The only minor error here was by the Embraer crew that reported rejecting the take off. They should have expected a reply from the controller. I realise they were busy in the cockpit, but when no response was heard, they should have repeated the message.

  • @ChristopherT1
    @ChristopherT1 Před rokem +1

    Learning has occurred. While I’m always diligent during these “optimized“ departures this video has given me even more awareness of the potential hazards. I hate being cleared for take off before the preceding aircraft is off so I always drag my feet till I see their nose rotate. Great video!

  • @RH4DZK1LL4H
    @RH4DZK1LL4H Před měsícem

    Its really amazing to hear stories like this from an actual pilot

  • @MaxVliet
    @MaxVliet Před rokem +26

    I see what you did there, subtly showing a KLM 747 taking off when explaining that you cant start your take off roll unless the preceeding aircraft is already airborn in Europe... 😎

    • @Teverell
      @Teverell Před rokem +9

      I noticed that too!! Carefully setting everyone up to think 'Tenerife' even before they were fully aware of the situation as it unfolded. Masterfully done.

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Před rokem

      @@Teverell Yes.

    • @gordonflygare4055
      @gordonflygare4055 Před rokem +1

      If you let the brakes go with another aircraft on the active you should believe an ICBM is seconds away.

  • @mnlight3756
    @mnlight3756 Před rokem +79

    Hello! I’m actually having my solo flight next week! I’m nervous, but this is an amazing video! I’ve truly forgotten all my fears after watching this!😊

  • @ScottESchmidt
    @ScottESchmidt Před 7 měsíci +4

    Such excellent videos. You and Blancolirio are just the best.

  • @PCJ52
    @PCJ52 Před rokem +3

    Great information, as usual!

  • @JosieJOK
    @JosieJOK Před rokem +50

    I always feel more informed after watching your content, Petter! Much appreciated!

    • @MentourPilot
      @MentourPilot  Před rokem +6

      That’s great to hear! Feel free to share it with your friends. It really helps the channel. 💕

    • @ZombieSazza
      @ZombieSazza Před rokem +1

      @@MentourPilot shared the channel with some friends and they’ve subscribed!

  • @schnolle2772
    @schnolle2772 Před rokem +74

    RIMCAS seems to prioritize capacity instead of safety. In my experience, when modelling complex systems (which is part of what RIMCAS is doing) it is always best to keep everything as closely to reality as possible, so considering an aircraft "airborne" when it in fact isn't, just to decrease the number of "false alarms", is asking for an accident to happen.
    In other words, it should IMHO not be up to the ADS-B in the aircraft to fake the signal that it has become airborne in order to allow for its "customer" (RIMCAS) to squeeze the time between takeoffs - that consideration should be a concern of the receiving system. Any optimization should be done there. Also, when determining whether the rules are safe or not, one has to take into account that mistakes will happen, like the 737 stepping on the Embraer's transmission in this case. Here, there was one more slice of Swiss cheese that saved the day. I just wonder how many lives will be lost before this way of doing things is deemed unsafe and revised.

    • @andrewsprojectsinnovations6352
      @andrewsprojectsinnovations6352 Před rokem +16

      Not a pilot but that seems like a pretty smart fix; If "airborne" was just based on sensors that directly measure that factor like the weight-on wheels switch and radio/standard altimeters, which seems like the original design, and it was up to the receiving systems to apply their own additional checks to suit their individual use cases, that seems like the safer scenario. If RIMCAS didn't disable until the aircraft was 100% positively airborne, and TCAS activated if there was any reasonable chance that it could be airborne, their overlap would seem to offer an additional redundancy covering what seems like a fairly critical edge-case

    • @SVnerd
      @SVnerd Před rokem +6

      I know I'm oversimplifying in saying this but wouldn't it be better if the RIMCAS/ADS-B airborne status were tied to the V speed settings instead of some arbitrary number such what was saw in this video? For example, pilots calculate their VR speeds and feed it into the FMC, that VR speed data is then somehow given to the ADS-B/RIMCAS as a better estimate on when the aircraft is airborne.

    • @kalle5548
      @kalle5548 Před rokem +5

      @@SVnerd or at least if a set number needs to be used it should accurately reflect the stall speed of the aircraft, there is no way in the world the embrair would be able to stay airborne at 50kn, but that should be a last resort

    • @JayVal90
      @JayVal90 Před rokem +9

      Better yet, have pilots set a beacon when they reject a takeoff rather than simply report it over an unreliable communication system.

    • @stevek917
      @stevek917 Před rokem +6

      Seems like the best thing would be to no takeoff clearance until the entire runway is clear. Waiting until the plane ahead has cleared the end of the runway seems like it would only cost a few seconds. Starting a takeoff on an occupied runway just seems like asking for trouble.

  • @Hamid-ee6fx
    @Hamid-ee6fx Před rokem +2

    These videos are so good, I grew up watching air crash investigation and I feel these are better, it's organised structure and the way the story is told is captivating. Plus insight from an actual pilot is so interesting. The diagrams and visuals are also easy to follow and understand (these must take a long time so props to you👍)

  • @thegorn9904
    @thegorn9904 Před rokem +1

    Always impressed by your excellent content -- both your own research and expert commentary and the quality of the graphics illustrating these events. I have learnt so much about aviation in such a short time. Bravi.

  • @jimgraham6722
    @jimgraham6722 Před rokem +21

    In my aviating days I witnessed a number of incidents like this were a takeoff clearance was provided while runway occupied. In one case a KC135 aborted while an F4 was rolling behind it. The F4 in full ad just clearwd the tankers tail.
    My personal pre take off checklist was, heads up, runway clear ahead, left and right, then roll.

  • @nameunknown007
    @nameunknown007 Před rokem +47

    What! I’d praise the 777 pilot, his decision was not “understandable”, it’s praiseworthy! There could be many reasons why the front aircraft aborted, like something on the runway caused damage to its tires etc. there’s no reason to brute force that takeoff.

    • @SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648
      @SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648 Před rokem +2

      or something from the runway surface got sucked into its engine, etc.

    • @Phvpark
      @Phvpark Před rokem +7

      on the 777 imagine if the T/O calculations were wrong or they lost one engine power after V1 and needed more runway space for the rotation, they made the better choice

    • @SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648
      @SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648 Před rokem +1

      @@Phvpark It seemed the Boeing didn't know by number where the Embraer was either. (The systems thought it was airborne and the Boeing wouldn't have had a number.) Was there time for the math even if the number was known? I don't think so. "It looks like we can stop -- let's do it" seems to be it. A new safety regulation was written in brown pants -- not blood, thank God!
      Do jet pilots practice takeoff roll panic stops? If not, should they? Is there some rough mnemonic for the normal panic stop distance vs. speed? Would a pilot remember it as such a rare thing to need?
      All we can say is whew, and don't crowd takeoffs like that when you don't have a near bulletproof collision avoidance system.

  • @matthewritchie4042
    @matthewritchie4042 Před 8 měsíci +1

    The tower shown at 1:25 is an old tower that I don’t believe is in use anymore

  • @bellaolum9768
    @bellaolum9768 Před 8 měsíci

    This was so well explained!

  • @avgeek3
    @avgeek3 Před rokem +50

    We should really apreciate his work. I feel like this video (research, graphics and editing) took soo much time. Great work Peter, loved it!

  • @panagea2007
    @panagea2007 Před rokem +30

    When I was a programmer I would explore every possible combination of parameters to insure that there would never be conflicts. "It's unlikely that would ever occur" was not good enough. It could not occur, period. We avoided the kind of engineering that would risk building a seawall too low to prevent a tsunami from flooding a nuclear power plant. "Unlikely" means "possible".

  • @IzzyOnTheMove
    @IzzyOnTheMove Před rokem +3

    Wow, the graphics are so precise! You can even see the train connecting Pearson to Downtown. 👍

  • @platoplatinum2581
    @platoplatinum2581 Před rokem +1

    I’m not no expert but I think they should change or add to the RIMCAS system to where it detects when a airplane has a large decrease in speed and let’s out a warning for when a airplane has reached 50 knots & below if the airplane has already passed 50 knots. They should also add a system that alarms the people at the control tower for when 2 or more pilots are trying to contact them.

  • @aaronlopez492
    @aaronlopez492 Před rokem +7

    I guess for the air controllers, this situation confirms what the old folks use to say when you "assume" anything you make an "ass" of yourself. 🤔

    • @cupofjoen
      @cupofjoen Před rokem +2

      Hahaha. Petter also said about that in the past video.

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Před rokem

      @@cupofjoen Yes, indeed.

  • @dougfraser77
    @dougfraser77 Před rokem +57

    Hi Petter, I really appreciate that you talk about the lessons of near-misses as well as accidents.
    It would be great if you could cover the serious near-miss of Air New Zealand Flight NZ60 at Samoa on 29 July 2000. This was an issue with a erroneous ILS glideslope, flying over water at night. When this "failure" happened, the instruments indicated they were perfectly on glideslope no matter what their altitude was! The flight descended as low as 340 feet, about 9 kilometres from the destination runway. This event has been discussed in Air NZ training but I don't think any other aviation commentator has covered it.
    There were a lot of holes in the swiss cheese, but fortunately they didn't all line up this time. Factors include the water "black hole" effect at night; over-reliance on technology; missing a checklist item while busy; an unusual "failure" mode of the ILS; the fact that GPWS is suppressed when landing; challenges of flying into remote island airports.
    The NTSB in the USA seemed to hold the opinion that this incident was primarily an issue of pilot error but others placed more emphasis on the erroneous and misleading ILS indications. Your opinion on all that would be absolutely fantastic. Cheers from New Zealand!

  • @samithaheenkenda1870
    @samithaheenkenda1870 Před rokem +1

    Amazing explanation of the incident, very educational to listen to you.

  • @billymacmakes
    @billymacmakes Před rokem +1

    I'm taking off tomorrow from Pearson airport - why do I keep watching all these videos!! I guess Petter is just such a great story teller that I can't stop! I really love the little teasers - "and you will see that this will be important later!"

  • @danielrose1392
    @danielrose1392 Před rokem +34

    I find it quite strange that at the same time the ATC feels the need to push throughput while at the same time the tower was not fully staffed because of moderate to light traffic. If such techniques are required, the tower should be fully staffed.

    • @jcardboard
      @jcardboard Před rokem +4

      Somebody got a big bonus that year for doing just that.

    • @RobinsVoyage
      @RobinsVoyage Před rokem +2

      Sometimes they're busy. Usually they aren't..

    • @wturn5354
      @wturn5354 Před rokem +1

      If you open all the positions in the US often the controllers aren’t happy because it cuts into their break time. In the US the average controller works on position about 4.5 hours a day maximum. Some facilities more, some less.

    • @wturn5354
      @wturn5354 Před rokem

      @bart solari they do whatever they want. At my facility watch tv, eat, go to the workout room or complain to the supervisor they are overworked!😂

  • @JxH
    @JxH Před rokem +6

    Re: 'Masked' Radio Transmissions. One of the peculiar advantages of the legacy, very old fashioned, Amplitude Modulation (AM) mode still used in the VHF ATC radio band is that simultaneous transmissions are audible as beat notes (caused by the slightly different frequencies) and garbled noises. This is quite different than Frequency Modulation (FM) which can have a 'Capture Effect' in that the weaker transmission can be 100% totally inaudible. Those involved with ATC communications should be aware of this radio communications detail and listen-out for such situations.

  • @RJSAMCRO
    @RJSAMCRO Před rokem +1

    I am just amazed at the tech we have to protect aircraft today. I often wonder how back before we had such innovations there weren't more accidents on runways.

  • @davidp2888
    @davidp2888 Před rokem +7

    In situations like this I usually ask myself "How could this happen?" Your clear, thorough explanations answer that question very well.

  • @nerdwwii8081
    @nerdwwii8081 Před rokem +18

    I can't believe there isn't a technology that alerts you when two comms overlap on the same frequency. Would be of great help.

    • @terrygaryet1856
      @terrygaryet1856 Před rokem +2

      This overlapping radio keying seems to be a common factor in these reviews. I think it’s a difficult problem though.
      If two mics are keyed at once the third receiving radio thinks the weaker one is “noise” and it’s signal is rejected. It’s not clear how one would control which one would be prioritized as “weakness” is a function of distance.
      Once model for shared channels is the cell phone. In this case the cell tower dynamically controls the power of the cell phone, as well as gives it a time to transmit.
      However cell calls are private and point to point so this time-shared system works.
      There is only one human controller, likely they wouldn’t be able to understand two simultaneous messages and make any sense out of it.

    • @Underestimated37
      @Underestimated37 Před rokem +1

      @@terrygaryet1856 packet radio and other timesplitting systems exist but are either so old or so new that the tech just hasn’t been mainstreamed. These allow multiple communications on the same frequency, but require special tech to use, and would need an international overhaul to implement

    • @0x73V14
      @0x73V14 Před rokem +2

      @@terrygaryet1856 put three receivers on the ground that triangulate all transmissions, if two transmissions happen at the same time on the same frequency you can not only know it happened but plot on the controllers screen where the two colliding transmissions came from.

    • @Delibro
      @Delibro Před rokem +7

      That is true. But there is also another possible resolutions to this without having such a system. Safety critical transmissions must be read back, in this case the Embrearor failed to repeat their rejected takeoff message.

    • @nerdwwii8081
      @nerdwwii8081 Před rokem +2

      @@Delibro that's also true.

  • @SirJeremy6020
    @SirJeremy6020 Před rokem +14

    Wow! I've been up the control tower, and this is so accurate. Even the layout of the tower is correct, down to the staircase location.
    Super impressive video, I subscribed!

  • @markaczupsr8082
    @markaczupsr8082 Před rokem +1

    another amazing story, thank you.

  • @Dovietail
    @Dovietail Před rokem +3

    "Combined position" sounds a lot like "fudging it because we are low staffed." ☹️

  • @PappaMike-vc1qv
    @PappaMike-vc1qv Před rokem +4

    Excellent and thorough explanation. One issue that wasn’t mentioned is that the tower was designed for two Local Controllers when traffic requires and management did not staff it in accordance with that workload. We spend millions on design and sight lines and place highly trained professionals with excellent eyesight in towers in the sky just so they can use visual separation to safely move traffic. The second aircraft should never be cleared for takeoff until the tower controller visually observes the first one rotate or can ensure separation will occur. Giving the flight crew the responsibility to maintain this separation from another aircraft that can be as much as two miles away just because you want to staff one local controller is not ensuring safe operations.

  • @scottsmith2483
    @scottsmith2483 Před rokem

    Excellent video. I really like your incident / accident analysis format, your clear language, and visual aids. Well done! Fantastic production value too - reminds me of the show Mayday on the Discovery Channel.

  • @hoosiercrypto9955
    @hoosiercrypto9955 Před rokem +1

    Very valuable information you give.

  • @TheOmega13a
    @TheOmega13a Před rokem +16

    Reminds me of an incident I remember in the news somewhere in Japan years ago where the controller cleared an plane for take off but the pilot of a hellicopter thought it was clearance for him to take off and he flew over the runway causing the plane to reject their takeoff. Meanwhile, the controller had cleared another plane to land on the same runway and didn't realize what was going on until the landing plane was too low in it's pilots opinion to safely abort the landing...

  • @otisjacksonjunior9795
    @otisjacksonjunior9795 Před rokem +18

    This is such a good channel. I live in Toronto but didn't know about this incident. I love the way you break down the events that combined to cause these kinds of incidents and make it easy to understand for people who aren't involved in aviation. Great visuals as well!

  • @heinzklinckwort2958
    @heinzklinckwort2958 Před 7 měsíci

    Great, as each and every time !! A big Thank you !! 🙏🏼🙏🏻

  • @DJXcalibur
    @DJXcalibur Před 4 měsíci +1

    I was in a situation like this when I was on a flight trying to fly out of Norfolk and into NYC ahead of hurricane Sandy. They let two of the last planes headed into NYC take off at the same time because there was a short window for us to land before the airports were to be closed. That flight was very interesting because we took off as the first strong bands of the hurricane moved in. We had to fly way up above the storm so we got to see the curve of the earth. We were on smaller regional jets and not big planes. I think this was why they allowed us to take off at the same time. Also the storm situation.

  • @irizar8003
    @irizar8003 Před rokem +17

    This situation shows me yet another time, that rules here in EU, even tho they sometimes seem to be crazy, are completely logic. It's not that other are worse, it's just us being extra cautious, which could avoid this particular situation.

  • @MWGrossmann
    @MWGrossmann Před rokem +66

    We in aviation are so good at learning from our mistakes and making sure that any future mistake hasn't already been made,… except for this. There's NEVER a good reason to make or allow for assumptions. An Embraer pushing 50kt is automatically airborne? A 777 at 100kt?? Hell, I can keep a 172 on the ground at 90kt if I push hard enough!
    This is a perfect example of why systems MUST only give ACTUAL instrument data, not projections or assumptions.
    Another fahn-TAHSS-tick video, Mentour. Keep your blue up and your brown down.

  • @DM-qp7do
    @DM-qp7do Před rokem

    I have a job where I listen to radio traffic all day. If 2 stations key their mic at the same time sometimes 1 station will be transmitted clearly, sometimes neither will be clear but most of the time you won't know when your transmission was "stepped on" and that can cause confusion.

  • @Bikram11822
    @Bikram11822 Před 7 měsíci

    This pilot saved many many lives and should be awarded .

  • @AbWischBar
    @AbWischBar Před rokem +9

    It really suprised me that this takeoff clearance situation was allowed in 2020. In the video, when you said "gave clearance and 777 was accelerating" I was immediately thinking "but if the Embraer needs to abort and stop" ... and then they had to abort and stop. But there is so much more puzzeling:
    1) To me, in context with takeoff clearance, airborne should be defined as the plane being a couple of feet above ground and in a clear lifting situation.
    2) A controller should not be allowed to look away and turn his/her attention until the planes are safely in the air and no longer related to traffic on the runway.
    3) Having to watch and control traffic on opposite sides just feels like a stressful situation, prone to cause such situations.
    4) And considering that all this is done to safe money ... I guess it is history that will repeat again and again. No amount safed can repay the potentially catastrophic outcome of such conflicts.
    So, I am happy that this was no longer permitted in Europe. And I fully understand the 777 pilot's decision to perform a hard stop. I wondered if they could have taken off in good time anyway. But there would have been the risk that they misread the situation and the other plane would have attempted a lift off anyway, in which case they might have collided in mid-air.
    Anyway, happy it did end well and always good that aviation looks into every incidence, even the ones that did not cause damage or loss of life.

    • @asthene
      @asthene Před rokem +5

      Actually, it's just north america region that's built different. Not only in EU, but in pretty much every other part of the world (asia, africa, australia, etc), dual takeoff clearance is not allowed. ATCs are not supposed to give another TO clearance before the 1st aircraft reported airborne or identified on app radar. Heck even virtual skies such as VATSIM/IVAO which implements standard ICAO rules does not allow that.
      Regarding your #2, sometimes it's a bit dilemma when you have runway on both sides. As mentioned, the controller went to check arrival traffic on 05. If he keeps his eye on 06L, then he would have no idea whether the landing traffic landed successfully, vacated runway, or going around, etc. This is even more important when there's 2+ tightly separated traffic inbound ("highly optimized", quoting the report). The other points... yeah, money takes priority over people's life (and sadly that's how the world works)

    • @0x73V14
      @0x73V14 Před rokem +6

      #2 is wrong, there should be enough controllers to cover all runways in use, if there aren't, the excess runways need to be shut down until enough controllers are available to cover them all.
      the fact that someone is being expected to stand up and look behind them to make sure nothing crashes over there as well as in front of them means some manager or executive or administrator belongs in prison

    • @AbWischBar
      @AbWischBar Před rokem +3

      @@0x73V14 I 100% agree to that. And I probably phrased #2 improperly. Often when I listen to Peter's analysis I get the feeling that the controll towers are understaffed. But to me this one has beaten most others. There should be one controller for each side. And yes - management responsibility.

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Před rokem

      @@AbWischBar Indeed.