[blockquote]
What Really Happened Aboard Air France 447Two years after the Airbus 330 plunged into the Atlantic Ocean, Air France 447's flight-data recorders finally turned up. The revelations from the pilot transcript paint a surprising picture of chaos in the cockpit, and confusion between the pilots that led to the crash.
...
As PM found in our cover story about the crash, published two years ago this month, the data implied that the plane had fallen afoul of a technical problem—the icing up of air-speed sensors—which in conjunction with severe weather led to a complex "error chain" that ended in a crash and the loss of 228 lives.
The matter might have rested there, were it not for the remarkable recovery of AF447's black boxes this past April. Upon the analysis of their contents, the French accident investigation authority, the BEA, released a report in July that to a large extent verified the initial suppositions. An even fuller picture emerged with the publication of a book in French entitled Erreurs de Pilotage (volume 5), by pilot and aviation writer Jean-Pierre Otelli, which includes the full transcript of the pilots' conversation.[/blockquote]
A transcript is in the
article.
This is a saddening and maddening read. If the men had known how to fly by the seat of their pants there quite probably would have been no crash. As the writer said ending the article, ... <well, it was edited out>, it was something like - they used to say
you have a scare when you fly Société Air, now days
it's you take a chance when you fly Air France. That's a rough translation but the gist is accurate.
When I flew a lot it was always comforting to know that there was a 99% probability my pilot was government issue.