News1 min ago
Germanwings Plane Crash: Pilot 'locked Out Of Cockpit'
//One of the two pilots of the Germanwings plane that crashed in the French Alps was locked out of the cockpit, according to reports.
Early findings from the cockpit voice recorder suggest the pilot made desperate efforts to get back in, sources close to the investigation say.//
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/wo rld-eur ope-320 62278
Is there no way at all that the crew can access the cockpit in an emergency? I wonder if the pilot left in control suffered a heart attack?
Early findings from the cockpit voice recorder suggest the pilot made desperate efforts to get back in, sources close to the investigation say.//
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Is there no way at all that the crew can access the cockpit in an emergency? I wonder if the pilot left in control suffered a heart attack?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Awaiting Clanad's opinion but from the Los Angeles Times...
"American experts say the typical procedure is for a flight attendant to use a food cart to block access to the cockpit when the pilot opens the door to leave. A flight attendant is supposed to remain in the cockpit and open the door for the pilot upon his or her return.
"It's a standard procedure" that Germanwings should have followed, Winn said. “That’s nothing secret. Everybody knows.”
If a member of the flight crew doesn't open the locked cockpit door from the inside, according to a manual for the Airbus A320 available online, the door can also be unlocked by the cabin crew outside the cockpit by entering a two- to seven-digit code, pre-programmed by the airline, on a keypad."
http:// www.lat imes.co m/world /la-fg- german- jet-cra sh-door -201503 25-stor y.html
"American experts say the typical procedure is for a flight attendant to use a food cart to block access to the cockpit when the pilot opens the door to leave. A flight attendant is supposed to remain in the cockpit and open the door for the pilot upon his or her return.
"It's a standard procedure" that Germanwings should have followed, Winn said. “That’s nothing secret. Everybody knows.”
If a member of the flight crew doesn't open the locked cockpit door from the inside, according to a manual for the Airbus A320 available online, the door can also be unlocked by the cabin crew outside the cockpit by entering a two- to seven-digit code, pre-programmed by the airline, on a keypad."
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That`s in the US slapshot. Doesn`t happen here because the CAA doesn`t have a rule that two people have to be on the flight deck at all times. FAA and CAA (and now a centralised system called EASA) have different rules. I know how it works with "us", I know what has probably happened because I know what flight deck access procedures are but nobody`s giving specifics for obvious reasons.
My heart also goes out to all those on the plane - bar 1. It's an inconceivably diabolical thing to do, those poor people must have been terrified at the end. I always look out the window when flying, some of them must have realised they were descending when they shouldn't be. Dreadful dreadful event.
This won't be the last such announcement I imagine - Norwegian Air Shuttle have just announced that it will require two people to be in the cockpit at all times....
https:/ /uk.new s.yahoo .com/no rwegian -air-sh uttle-r equire- two-peo ple-coc kpit-14 4926794 .html#o x1n0T1
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Each airline has procedures for leaving the cockpit for physiological reasons. Many have an electronic key pad that can be accessed fro outside of the door, but in most cases that keypad can be disabeled from the cokpit. Other airlines have a key stashed somewhere in the cabib, bu that has ostly gone the way of high heels on the stews....
Latest reports indicate the recovered voice recorder clearly showed the pilot (co-pilot) was "breathing normally" throughout the 8 minute descent. We're still awaiting the finding of the Flight Data Recorder, which, from the pictures of the crash site may be a wile, if ever.
We can recall the same sort of event involvng Egypt Air back in 1999 (Flight 990) as well as the less publicized Mozambique Airlines Flight TM470 in 2013. The Egypt Air crash is still unresolved, due in most part (my opinion) to the fact the co-pilot was Muslim which may have had bearing on the event, but no
one wishes to be politically incorrect and say it. Not to mention the Maylasia flight...
Lotsa strange things going on in aviation that I would have never dreamed of when I started flying...
Latest reports indicate the recovered voice recorder clearly showed the pilot (co-pilot) was "breathing normally" throughout the 8 minute descent. We're still awaiting the finding of the Flight Data Recorder, which, from the pictures of the crash site may be a wile, if ever.
We can recall the same sort of event involvng Egypt Air back in 1999 (Flight 990) as well as the less publicized Mozambique Airlines Flight TM470 in 2013. The Egypt Air crash is still unresolved, due in most part (my opinion) to the fact the co-pilot was Muslim which may have had bearing on the event, but no
one wishes to be politically incorrect and say it. Not to mention the Maylasia flight...
Lotsa strange things going on in aviation that I would have never dreamed of when I started flying...