| >Is there training for getting out of mistrim at low altitude without the benefit of electric trim? No. >Is there training even for MCAS upset as distinguished from runaway trim? No. Remember, MCAS was dropped from the manual, and not included in the end training pilot's would be exposed to prior to being handed a MAX. It was nowhere in that presentation. That was covered in the 60 minutes expose. https://youtu.be/QytfYyHmxtc >Exactly how was it demonstrated that MCAS upset looks like runaway trim? It wasn't. Take a look at the ET302 preliminary crash report. You'll see attached to it the documentation pages from Boeing even remotely related to MCAS. In fact... https://flightsafety.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/Prelimin... Check Page 30 for the memory item as written. The AD from Lion Air is in there too I think. Note the condition description explicitly mentions a condition where uncommanded trim is running continuously. Before the AD issued after the Lion Air crash, no one even knew MCAS was a thing. |
The trim system repeatedly coming on and driving the nose down is runaway trim. The pilot already knows he's in trouble because the trim is running, and he's looking at the checklist on how to stop it. And there is the information on how to stop it. Getting hung up on the definition of "continuous" while the plane augers in is something a computer would do, not a human pilot.
Which is why airliners still have human pilots, not computers, in command.