Atlas Air crash should spark an overdue debate about piloting

Recent releases from the US National Transportation Safety Board’s investigation of the Atlas Air Boeing 767-300F fatal crash in February 2019 contain a vital message to the industry about loss of control in flight (LOC-I).

Unfortunately, the message could be overlooked, or not taken seriously, as it has been many times before.

The Atlas Air crash, however, finally negates a common reason for unconsciously dismissing the seriousness of a LOC-I accident.  This unconscious dismissal, among “Western” observers at least, is caused by the mindset that says: ‘It happened to a non-Western carrier’; the implication being ‘What would you expect?’.

Such pilot reactions to the Lion Air and Ethiopian 737 Max accidents flooded the web, particularly in the USA, and are still out there. The latter two accidents, however, involved an aggravated version of LOC-I, precipitated by a confusing technical distraction.

Right now, in the Atlas Air investigation, the NTSB is testing evidence that suggests pilot disorientation by somatogravic illusion might be pivotal in what happened. During descent toward its destination airport the aircraft finally dived steeply and at high speed into the surface .

A synopsis of the basic accident details can be found on the Aviation Safety Network.

A common example of somatogravic illusion – which is an acceleration-induced illusion – is the feeling that airline passengers get when their aircraft begins to accelerate along the runway; they perceive the cabin to be tilted upward, but a glance out the side window shows the aircraft is level, the nosewheel still on the ground.

Visual input, if available, is the dominant human sensory input, and it will correct the illusions caused by the reaction of the body’s balance organs to a linear acceleration.

The Atlas Air 767 freighter was inbound to Houston Intercontinental airport from Miami, and the flight phase in which things began to go wrong was a routine descent, the crew receiving vectors to avoid weather. As the aircraft was descending, in cloud, through about 10,000ft, cleared to 3,000ft, the crew were flying a vector heading of 270deg, and were told to expect a turn north on a base leg to final approach for runway 26L. All pretty normal.

There was a pilot call for “flaps 1”, the aircraft leveled briefly at 6,200ft, climbed very slightly, and its airspeed stabilised at 230kt. But shortly after that the engine power increased to maximum, and the aircraft pitched about 4deg nose up.

It is at this point that somatogravic illusion appears to have kicked in powerfully with the pilots. They had no external visual horizon because the aircraft was in cloud.

According to the NTSB, almost immediately the aircraft began a dramatic pitch down to -49deg, driven by elevator deflection. The airspeed ultimately increased to 430kt, and although the pitch-down angle was eventually reduced to -20deg, impact was inevitable.

The factor the NTSB is examining now is what triggered the sudden – apparently unwarranted – massive power increase. The cockpit voice recorder has captured a sound that may indicate the activation of the go-around button on the power levers. But neither of the pilots mentioned a need for go-around power.

About ten seconds after the power increase, caution alarms began to sound. The inquiry says the control column remained forward for ten seconds. According to FlightGlobal.com: “The aircraft transitioned from a shallow climb to a steep descent. Five seconds after the alarm commenced, one of the pilots exclaimed, ‘Whoa’, and shortly afterwards, in an elevated voice: ‘Where’s my speed, my speed’. Three seconds later, a voice loudly declares: ‘We’re stalling.’”

The flight data recorder gives the lie to the pilot’s stalling perception, because the angle of attack at that moment was safely below the stalling level.

During these remarks the thrust levers were brought to idle for about 2s, then were advanced again to their high power setting. During the transition from nose slightly up to nose steeply down, there were negative g-forces for nearly 11s.

Puzzling unknowns still lurk: like why a pilot exclaimed “where’s my speed?” when the indicated airspeed was rapidly increasing. Was it a fault of instrumentation, or of pilot instrument scan or perception at a moment of confusion?

The simple fact is that, every time a big engine-power increase takes place in flight, forward acceleration combined with a pitch-up moment caused by the underslung engines, is inevitable.

Just as inevitable – if this happens at night or in cloud – is somatogravic illusion in the pilots. “For this reason,” says the NTSB, “it is important that pilots develop an effective instrument scan.”

Develop? It’s a bit too late to develop a scan!

Recognising that acceleration brings with it the risk of disorientation, pilot conditioning should be to ignore all other sensory inputs except the visual, and with no external horizon that means concentrating totally on flight instruments, believing them, and controlling aircraft attitude and power accordingly.

Recurrent training must keep pilots alive to this risk, and to its remedy, but it clearly does not do this at present. Not for Asian, African nor for American pilots.

LOC-I has, since the late 1990s, been the biggest killer accident category for airlines. LOC-I linked to somatogravic illusion has frequently occurred, two of the most dramatic recent examples being the March 2016 FlyDubai Boeing 737-800 crash at Rostov-on-Don, and the August 2000 Gulf Air Airbus A320 crash at Bahrain International airport. Both occurred at night; both involved a go-around.

The FlyDubai pilot reaction to somatogravic illusion was a dramatic push-forward into a steep dive, like Atlas Air, and the aircraft smashed steeply into the runway.

The Gulf Air manoeuvre was an abandoned night visual approach from which the captain elected to climb and turn into a 3,000ft downwind leg to make a second approach. In the latter case, the changes in attitude and power were less dramatic, but as the captain advanced the power and began the climbing turn to the left over the night sea, he would have lost the airfield and town lights and should have transitioned fully to flight instruments. He didn’t. The aircraft described a shallow spiral into the dark water.

Somatogravic illusion makes instrument flying essential, but more difficult because of the need to reject the balance organs’ misleading input. A clear natural horizon in daylight completely overcomes those misleading feelings, and although the flight instrument panel – especially in modern flight-decks – provides an intuitive visual display, it is artificial and still not as compelling as the real thing.

But there is a long list of LOC-I accidents in the last two decades that involved more subtle sensory inputs resulting in pilot disorientation, and everybody died just the same.

Think of the old expressions associated with instrument flying skills.

First, there is its antithesis: “Flying by the seat of your pants.” Anybody who believes that is possible in IMC or on a moonless night is fated to die.

Then there is the original name for the skill: “Blind flying”; that was in the days before the artificial horizon was invented, when the airspeed indicator, altimeter and turn-and-slip indicator sufficed for accurate flying, possibly assisted by a vertical speed indicator.

Further clues as to the fascination – even mystery – surrounding early blind flying skills are the descriptions of what it feels like when things are going wrong: “The Leans” described the situation in which your perception of what the aircraft is doing is not what the instruments tell you. Finally there is the extreme example of “The Leans”: Americans used to call it “vertigo”, Europeans “disorientation”. That is when your senses are screaming at you that the situation is not what your flight instruments say – you don’t even know which way up you are.

Nothing has changed just because aircraft now have LCD displays.

It is time to go back to basics, to re-discover pride in precision manual instrument flying, and regain that skill which no pilot truly believes s/he has lost, but which automated flying has stolen away silently, like a thief in the night.

PS: Good blind flying is not a stick-and-rudder skill, it’s a cognitive skill.

 

 

 

 

 

16 thoughts on “Atlas Air crash should spark an overdue debate about piloting

  1. What a great message you have provided here, Captain Learmont. All can really be summed up in your penultimate paragraph …

    … It is time to go back to basics, to re-discover pride in precision manual instrument flying, and regain that skill which no pilot truly believes s/he has lost, but which automated flying has stolen away silently, like a thief in the night. …

    The writing is certainly on the wall, but who will choose to read it?

    Liked by 1 person

    • Thank you Dave Starr. Just FYI I’m not a captain, I’m an aviation journalist specialising in ops and safety, but I do have a flying background (RAF QFI).

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  2. To blame the crash on somatogravic is just ridiculous. The guy belonged no where near an airplane. Plain and simple.

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    • Pffffggg, thanks for the comment, but could you be a little more helpful in terms of suggesting what the industry should do about this? This mistake was made not by one pilot, but by two of them. They were both professional American pilots, licensed by the FAA.

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  3. We need to redefine the pairing requirements and regulations associated with them…

    The High Mins/Low time pilot regulations need to also encompass anyone who has had a training failure with time limits put on them as well. The thought that two experienced pilots WITH TRAINING failures could be paired up together is the perfect storm that is the Pink Elephant in the room.

    Automation Kills-brain cells…

    Liked by 1 person

      • Thanks Capt Obvious

        Question: at a guess, would you say most pilots are aware of somatogravic illusion, understand it, and would recognise that there is a risk of it any time they carried out an IMC go-around from minimums?

        How seriously do you think pilots and airlines take manual instrument flying skills these days, when most IF involves monitoring the autopilot?

        These are serious questions, and they need answering. This is what this blog piece is all about.

        If every time an accident happens we just say the pilots were bad at their job, we are solving nothing. If that were so, we are duty bound to ask: why were they bad at their job? How many other fully licensed pilots would be similarly bad? What is the industry going to do about it?

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  4. Captain obvious hit the nail on the head. I have friends who knew these guys personally. Both were weak and when put together fell “behind the aircraft”. The only way to combat this would be better oversight on crew pairings which is already done…..perhaps needs tweaking. I have flown this aircraft and the TOGA button is on the thrust levers if memory serves me. TOGA was certainly not asked for….lol…..it was inadvertently hit! When the aircraft is in autopilot, it will command max power and nose up pitch (which is what is described in the findings). What the crew did to recover was the issue. FYI the correct response is to click off all automation and hand fly….

    In an IMC go around (to mins), the PF has his (her) head in the cockpit….so I doubt your illusion theory bears much weight. I would think most are performed manually (however I am not 100% on foreign training regiments) ….then put on the AP. Simulator checks require both to be performed, however in my experience they are usually manually flown.

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      • You would be surprised……..I agree that those numbers look good on paper. However, their respective training records show otherwise when we dig further. As captain obvious pointed out….it was a perfect storm. Strong Captain + Strong FO=no problem
        Strong Captain + weak FO=no problem.
        Weak Captain + strong FO=no problem.

        Weak Captain + weak FO=problem (if and only if there is an irregularity…….like inadvertently hitting TOGA switch)

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  5. “why a pilot exclaimed “where’s my speed?” when the indicated airspeed was rapidly increasing”

    This sounds like an example of why vertical tape airspeed indicators were not an improvement.

    A professional, current pilot _should_ be able to correctly interpret the airspeed and airspeed trend all of the time. However, studies show that during rapid airspeed changes tapes can be more easily misinterpreted than a round dial. So why did we change to tapes?

    Liked by 1 person

  6. David,

    I too thought of the illusion right away… The disconnect that I have with your argument is why if the the copilot got this illusion did he not do what every single IFR rated pilot is trained to do, which is look at his attitude indicator, and scan the rest of his flight instruments. Your argument echoes the industry trend to add more automation or to train more…

    Right now, Pilots are being required to do unusual attitude training, even under instrument conditions, so anyone who has done this would very easily be able to take care of an inadvertent TOGA.

    If you and I accidentally hit TOGA in the cockpit flying together, we would turn the AP off, reach up and pull the thrust back, looked at each other and laughed…

    The reality and the other pink elephant in the room is why people with multiple training failures are possibly paired together and in our world of Political Correctness no one can talk about why in particular the FO was still a pilot. Being a professional pilot, a good one, is not something everyone can do. We need to not be afraid of discrimination, but learn to discriminate based on ability, and not be lead around by political correctness.

    I think the farther you dig into this incident the more you will uncover a corporate fear of being sued and a massive amount of political correctness that ultimately will be the red hearing around the neck of this crash. Bottom line, a weak pilot shouldn’t be paired up with another weak pilot. Illusions are the exact reason we invented instruments many many years ago. People do IMC go arounds every day. An industry that says it is so safety related but yet so hamstrung by PC is criminal. Our industry should be blind to it but that is not the reality of it and we need to get back to you either meet the standard or you don’t. PC and touchy feely culture have no business in the cockpit.

    CO

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