|
|
|
|
|
by treis
2639 days ago
|
|
But high enough to re-enable a system you know is malfunctioning? I guess we will have to wait for the final report but the pilot's actions are perplexing here. Even if we accept that they can't trim with the wheel, why enable electric trim and then not use it? Why not enable it, trim to where you want, and then use the cut out switch again? |
|
They couldn't land with the stabilizers mis-trimmed. If the wheel wouldn't budge, re-enabling it and trimming electronically was the only option likely to occur to them, since the only other possible option (release the column, let the plane nose down so that the forces on the screw ease and they can trim manually) is completely counter-intuitive and was removed from Boeing's documentation and simulator training 30-40 years ago and was not covered in the FAA/Boeing MCAS directive.
> Even if we accept that they can't trim with the wheel, why enable electric trim and then not use it?
They did use it after re-enabling it. They just didn't re-disable it within 5 seconds of their last input manual electronic trim command, so the MCAS ran again a final time.
Whether that's because they just didn't get to the switches in time, weren't aware they had such a short window to do so (the FAA/Boeing bulletin does a piss poor job of communicating this), or were just so thoroughly overwhelemed by everything that was going on is hard to say at this point.