• instagib 2 years ago

    The page Reuters links to is a good read also.

    “While the precise details of the incident are not fully known, there is ample historical precedent for unintentional in-flight upsets or electrical issues. In 2014, a digital SLR camera became jammed between the left arm rest and the base of the side stick of a Royal Air Force A330 tanker causing a 4,400 foot loss in altitude and a maximum recorded descent rate of 15,000 feet per minute. The left seat was being moved “at the onset of the event,” according to investigators.In separate 2019 and 2020 incidents, drinks spilled on an A350 radio panel caused the shutdown of one of its Trent XWB engines prompting a redesign of part of the center pedestal that sits between the pilots.“

    https://theaircurrent.com/feed/dispatches/pilot-seat-movemen...

    • 4878241143 2 years ago

      I find it interesting/worrying that we specifically rule out drinks/liquids etc. in DCs or around any critical or even non-critical infrastructure, but it's perfectly acceptable to take drinks into a flight deck?

      • nradov 2 years ago

        Yes, that is perfectly acceptable. Pilots can't be expected to go without anything to drink on long flights.

        • timw4mail 2 years ago

          Food and drink are allowed in the cockpit, especially for longer flights.

      • danielbarla 2 years ago

        Just a reminder / plea: please wait for the investigation and report before theorising about what happened, what is wrong, how that can be, allocating blame, etc. There will eventually be a full report with real facts and lots of details. At this point, it's too early to connect any dots.

        • Dylan16807 2 years ago

          If you don't want theorizing, is there anything meaningful to post? Is that a way of saying the story shouldn't have been submitted at all?

          • danielbarla 2 years ago

            Aside from what afiori said, I do tend to think that it's not really necessary to have a post at this point. However, not having a post is slightly different to having one where we (hopefully) agree that it's too early to really discuss. In this way, the post is somewhat useful as a "nothing to see here, move along" notice, but not really as a discussion.

            • afiori 2 years ago

              discussing the broad concept of safety is different from theorizing/speculating about the specific case.

              • Dylan16807 2 years ago

                This is a very particular article to discuss the broad concept of safety about piloting planes.

          • jfoster 2 years ago

            I'm no expert, but it seems quite concerning that something as simple as a seat movement might not be sufficiently isolated from flight systems to prevent an electrical short.

            • iapark 2 years ago

              I read this as being caused mechanical, aka the seat moves abruptly forward causing the pilot who wasn’t expecting it to push hard on the yoke which tells the plane to dive. The point of the investigation now then is why did the seat move?

              • jfoster 2 years ago

                From the article:

                > "The seat movement caused the nose down" angle of the aircraft, the publication said, citing another anonymous source who added the possibility of an electrical short was also under review.

                Sounds like it may or may not be a short, but the fact that it might be possible is what I find concerning.

            • opwieurposiu 2 years ago

              In small trainer planes, the seat gets moved back and forth frequently to accommodate students of different heights.

              At least one crash has been caused by the seat rails becoming so worn that the seat slid back during takeoff and the pilot could no longer reach the controls.

              The same thing can happen in old cars.

              • sinuhe69 2 years ago

                So what could it be this “seat movement” in layman term? The pilot was screwing a stewardess on the seat and inadvertently jerked the joystick causing the plane to nosediving??

                • engcoach 2 years ago

                  The seats are sitting on rails and can be adjusted.

                  • sinuhe69 2 years ago

                    Yes, but how could it relate to the nosediving by just adjusting the seat?

                    • t0mas88 2 years ago

                      In smaller planes with mechanical adjustable seats instead of electrical there have been several accidents due to the seat moving unexpectedly.

                      So much that the FAA has made regular inspection of the seat rails mandatory for a long list of Cessna models: https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2010/11/08/2010-28...

                      • sio8ohPi 2 years ago

                        Typically this happens during take-off when rotating. This particular failure mode doesn't make much sense for an airliner in cruise.

                      • iapark 2 years ago

                        Well if you’re holding a yoke and the seat moves forward you’re likely to push on the yoke

                        • matt-attack 2 years ago

                          Seems unlikely they’d be holding the yolk during cruise.

                          • timw4mail 2 years ago

                            It really is that simple.