zugmann rdamon Talking to Airbus drivers they have the equivilent of Trip Optimizer. Climb, Cruise and Decent is all managed by the FMS (Flight Management System) computer. Do it yourself and get out line, expect a call from your union rep as the system will phone home. But when those systems crap out, or something huge and out of the ordinary pops up, then the company expects the pilots (or engineers) to have the skills of a 30-yr man that has been running every day. Can't. Have. It. Both. Ways.
rdamon Talking to Airbus drivers they have the equivilent of Trip Optimizer. Climb, Cruise and Decent is all managed by the FMS (Flight Management System) computer. Do it yourself and get out line, expect a call from your union rep as the system will phone home.
But when those systems crap out, or something huge and out of the ordinary pops up, then the company expects the pilots (or engineers) to have the skills of a 30-yr man that has been running every day.
Can't. Have. It. Both. Ways.
Agreed, but it will probably take a major incident to change behavior. Look at the 737-MAX
Cotton Belt MP104 As I went through this thread there were remarks that seemed to indicate some unkind remarks had been made. I was subject to that at one time and refused to post anything. As I have said before if a participant is seemingly pretending to be an expert and is not, the method of dealing with the bulk of those comments can be ignored (I mentioned "extinction"). While it is true that the "dull and ignorant, they too have their story and should be heard to an extent. This is only civil behavior. But when the story and details are of extraordinary length one seems to not gain that much, even a flaw in information can be present (intentional or not) and that draws a reaction from those who know better....and the verbal fight is on. Example: Posted by Euclid on Thursday, June 1, 2023 10:02 AM : In the comment there is a statement: ““If you use air brakes, then all 840 car wheels of the train will have brake shoes pressing into them.” Is that a not true statement?” Cotton Belt MP104: Even with the FRED which sends the “signal to brake” from rear as front is sending backward the signal to brake. This is a cascading operation and not immediate “all 840 wheels…have brake shoes pressing” ? He Did Ask The Question is that not a true statement? And I was wondering if I was right that the statement is not right. Endmrw0621231426
As I went through this thread there were remarks that seemed to indicate some unkind remarks had been made. I was subject to that at one time and refused to post anything.
As I have said before if a participant is seemingly pretending to be an expert and is not, the method of dealing with the bulk of those comments can be ignored (I mentioned "extinction"). While it is true that the "dull and ignorant, they too have their story and should be heard to an extent. This is only civil behavior. But when the story and details are of extraordinary length one seems to not gain that much, even a flaw in information can be present (intentional or not) and that draws a reaction from those who know better....and the verbal fight is on.
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Reply was meant to go to a different thread.
Instead of blaming longer trains let us measure derailments by car miles. What is the derailment numbes by say million car miles? Each derailment can go into a data base for its length. Switching moves are probably the easiest types to define.
blue streak 1Instead of blaming longer trains let us measure derailments by car miles. What is the derailment numbes by say million car miles? Each derailment can go into a data base for its length. Switching moves are probably the easiest types to define.
Somewhere along the line the FRA keeps such statistics.
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
zugmannBut when those systems crap out, or something huge and out of the ordinary pops up, then the company expects the pilots (or engineers) to have the skills of a 30-yr man that has been running every day. Can't. Have. It. Both. Ways.
They don't expect or demand that level of experience. Day one experience should do it, but even that failed. Air France 447 was lost because the pilot didn't know it was possible to stall an A330. And the guy in the cockpit with the most experience never bothered to cross-check the physical controls until it was well past the point of no return.
NittanyLionThey don't expect or demand that level of experience. Day one experience should do it, but even that failed. Air France 447 was lost because the pilot didn't know it was possible to stall an A330. And the guy in the cockpit with the most experience never bothered to cross-check the physical controls until it was well past the point of no return.
And there's something well-established in cognitive science that's worse: when you have to constantly watch and second-guess an automatic control system, which may not be explaining its 'decisions', waiting hours and hours against the chance there might suddenly be 30 seconds of screaming terror. (To say nothing about doing it on little sleep, outside circadian rhythm, after a night of sleep apnea with CPAP...)
That goes a long way toward establishing he's right when 'you can't have it both ways' -- just has been the case with automated highway design since the late Forties.
To answer this: first define a longer train - 2000-4000-8000- 12000 feet. It becomes subjective and subject to biases which make it Imposible to satisfy all.
blue streak 1 Instead of blaming longer trains let us measure derailments by car miles. What is the derailment numbes by say million car miles? Each derailment can go into a data base for its length. Switching moves are probably the easiest types to define.
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