rudder
Lifer
- Nov 9, 2000
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Originally posted by: ProfJohn
Ok let me explain the fuel thing for those of you who haven't read up on this case.
There are two planes made by the same company that have very similar looking fuel gauges. Some mechanic screwed up and placed the wrong fuel gauge in this plane.
So the pilot gets in the plane and looks at the fuel gauge and it looks to have the correct amount of fuel for the trip. And then some time during the trip the engines shut off.
The idea that the pilot is going to get out of the plane and manually check the fuel in the plane is idiotic.
Fuel gauges are only required to be accurate when they are empty. Do you want to know how pilots make sure they have enough fuel?
When then get in an airplane they look at the what the previous flight landed with. They look at the flight plan to see how much fuel they will need. They may or may not be already fueled. Usually not since you don't want too much fuel (weight restrictions). You then get a paper from the fuelers showing how much they pumped in the plane. You factor temperature and convert the number of gallons they gave you to pounds. You then verify that the fuel gauges read what they are supposed to read. In my case we had to be within 1,500 pounds (Boeing 727) or we had to figure out why there was a discrepancy. And in a 727 1,500 pounds is not a lot.... maybe about 12 minutes of fuel at low altitude.
Of course this is a different country under different regulations. But we were required to do this before every flight. As a flight instructor that is one of the first things I teach... never trust the fuel gauge.
And you missed my point. There should have been some maintenance notification that the fuel gauge was swapped out (different country who knows). That would have warranted a closer look at the gauges.
I am not saying the mechanics are without fault, but accidents are never caused by just one thing.. it is usually multiple things piling up that make a catastrophe.
Now going back to the original topic... yes 10 years for praying is too harsh. LIke I said in an earlier reply. If these pilots were in the U.S. the airline would be paying millions to the families... maybe they have different laws and the only satisfactory outcome to the families and survivors is that the pilots go to jail. Even with cases of clear pilot error this is not the case in the U.S.