Meanwhile at CNN.com, in size 300 font:
![[Image: 2z8qc5k.jpg]](http://oi57.tinypic.com/2z8qc5k.jpg)
Quote: (03-26-2015 01:55 PM)Fast Eddie Wrote:
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Robin said he was sure Lubitz was conscious, since the audio on the cockpit voice recorder has him breathing normally throughout the 10-minute descent into the mountains, until the moment of impact. But pilots are not convinced that the breathing sounds meant he was able to open the door to Sonderheimer. “Was he conscious? Could he open the door?” Phillips asked. “The prosecutor did not provide answers to that.”
Not sure what to make of that statement. If the guy was conscious and hurtling towards the ground at 500mph, knowing he was about to die and murder 160 innocent people in the process, I'd imagine his breathing wouldn't be "normal." He'd probably be hyperventilating like a motherfucker.
On the other hand, if he was unconscious and blissfully unaware of the impending fireball, then he may well have been breathing normally. But this is all speculation, we have no idea what kind of breathing patterns they heard in the black box, or even if the French civil servant used the correct semantics when he labeled the breathing as "normal."
Quote: (03-26-2015 10:22 AM)Engineer Wrote:
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This is very very strange. When a pilot goes to the bathroom a flight attendant goes into the cockpit. The flight attendant is there to open the door in case the other pilot has a medical emergency.
In the US yes, but apparently not in Europe.
People are looking at single pilot ops and even zero pilot ops to reduce operating costs. It's a political issue not a technical one. I know for a fact that people are working on future pilot ops that include the possibility of taking control away REMOTELY from a malicious or incapacitated single pilot.
I was surprised to learn there is an emergency approximately every month that incapacitates a pilot to the degree that a second person in the cockpit is required to assist. I was told this verbally in passing 2 years ago so experts please correct me if I'm wrong on this.
Quote: (03-26-2015 03:13 PM)speakeasy Wrote:
As tragic as this is, commercial airline pilot suicides are exceedingly rare incidents. We should be careful about going overboard with "what's wrong with our society" commentary when you're dealing with a 1 in 10 million incident.
Quote: (03-26-2015 05:00 PM)michelin Wrote:
The "security system" whereby a pilot can be locked out by pressing a simple button inside the cockpit is as absurd as it can be. Any kid can recognize the danger: a pilot with criminal plans can just go ahead and do what he wants.
That lock button is a technical absurdity that was introduced after 9-11. Either replace this system or remove the cockpit door altogether to increase the passengers' safety.
Quote: (03-26-2015 05:04 PM)speakeasy Wrote:
Quote: (03-26-2015 05:00 PM)michelin Wrote:
The "security system" whereby a pilot can be locked out by pressing a simple button inside the cockpit is as absurd as it can be. Any kid can recognize the danger: a pilot with criminal plans can just go ahead and do what he wants.
That lock button is a technical absurdity that was introduced after 9-11. Either replace this system or remove the cockpit door altogether to increase the passengers' safety.
Or simply doing what the US does and requiring a flight attendant to go into the cockpit while one of the pilots is in the bathroom. If they had this rule, this never would've happened. I suspect this policy will now be implemented worldwide.
Quote: (03-26-2015 05:24 PM)MidWest Wrote:
What a coward this co-pilot. Stories like these really piss me off. Just imagine all these innocent passengers trusting this asshole to fly them safe only for this to happen. Sometimes you don't even know who is behind that wheel.
This is pretty much a terrorist act to me. Calling it a suicide is letting this guy off easily. Suicide is when a person provokes his own death. But when you take away your life and the lives of 150 people along with you and create a state of tension in society, its pretty much terrorism.
Quote: (03-26-2015 05:35 PM)speakeasy Wrote:
I'm not sure what to call this type of act.
Quote: (03-26-2015 11:48 AM)TheWastelander Wrote:
Is it possible he had an epileptic fit or something while the pilot was going to the bathroom and the pilot ended up locking himself out of the cockpit?
Does the cockpit door auto-lock when it closes or do you have to deliberately lock it?
Quote: (03-26-2015 05:35 PM)speakeasy Wrote:
Quote: (03-26-2015 05:24 PM)MidWest Wrote:
What a coward this co-pilot. Stories like these really piss me off. Just imagine all these innocent passengers trusting this asshole to fly them safe only for this to happen. Sometimes you don't even know who is behind that wheel.
This is pretty much a terrorist act to me. Calling it a suicide is letting this guy off easily. Suicide is when a person provokes his own death. But when you take away your life and the lives of 150 people along with you and create a state of tension in society, its pretty much terrorism.
I wouldn't call it terrorism. The point of terrorism is to persuade people by fear of violence for religious or political reasons. Terrorism has ideological purpose behind it. They have demands they want met.
It wasn't merely a suicide because he took so many with him. But calling it a murder doesn't quite fit either because I don't think he even thought about the people in the back of the plane. It's as if they were just cargo that happened to be there. Whereas murder or even murder-suicide usually involves feelings of aggression toward your victim. I'm willing to bet that if that was an empty plane and he was the only one flying it, he'd have done the same thing. Of course we'll never really know since all the witnesses to the deed are dead.
I'm not sure what to call this type of act.
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.... there’s a theory that Lubitz was a “jilted lover.” Locals say he lived with a woman, but she hasn’t been located.
Quote: (03-26-2015 08:08 AM)sixsix Wrote:He just looks like a turd and coward, it is in his face and mostly eyes. I have gotten a good eye over the yerars for spotting who would run when something happens and who would stand there with you..Does he look like some one who would help you out in a fight?! Negative..
Quote: (03-26-2015 11:58 PM)iknowexactly Wrote:
The poster said airlines succeeded in pressuring airplane manufacturers to reduce cockpit design from having 3 people, 2 pilots and a flight engineer-- to two, so they could SAVE ON COSTS.
Quote: (03-27-2015 12:10 AM)Gringuito Wrote:
Quote: (03-26-2015 11:58 PM)iknowexactly Wrote:
The poster said airlines succeeded in pressuring airplane manufacturers to reduce cockpit design from having 3 people, 2 pilots and a flight engineer-- to two, so they could SAVE ON COSTS.
The introduction of modern avionics has reduced pilot workload enormously over the last 30 years. I'm not sure what a flight engineer would be needed to do now.