![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Mxsmanic" wrote in message
... Some of the words on the cockpit recording are impossible to understand even today. Those are not transmitted AM or FM. They are hard wired. This seems to defeat your point. In fact, there are several instances of misunderstood radio communication involved. You keep mkaing vague references to these instances. Can you cite even one? |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Mxsmanic wrote:
Peter R. writes: My understanding of the accident at Tenerife is that it had more to do with a fateful heterodyne and a captain who was asserting his own way, rather than misunderstood communications. Some of the words on the cockpit recording are impossible to understand even today. That's pretty strong evidence that misunderstood communications had an important role in this accident. In fact, there are several instances of misunderstood radio communication involved. They were misunderstood a) because people were stepping on other people and b) because the KLM crew had heavy Dutch accents. Please do a little research before you assert such ridiculous accusations. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Mxsmanic,
From the NTSB and several books on the subject. Like which? -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Mxsmanic wrote:
Peter R. writes: A leading cause of accidents? Where did you get this statistic? From the NTSB and several books on the subject. Could you provide a source? I've never heard this and I know several NTSB employees. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Mxsmanic wrote:
Peter R. writes: A leading cause of accidents? Where did you get this statistic? From the NTSB and several books on the subject. Guess? If a pilot or controller is not able to comprehend the other side's transmission, there is no guess. "Say again?" is the phrase of choice and it is used all over the frequencies. It's routine in linguistics to unconsciously guess. A person listening to familiar sounds in a familiar context will "fill in the blanks" for any sounds that cannot be unambiguously distinguished, and he will do this without thinking. If he guesses wrong, trouble can result, and accidents have happened in aviation for this reason (the most famous probably being the one at Tenerife). Actually, in the Tenerife accident, the only radio problem was caused by simultaneous radio transmissions by aircraft, NOT a pilot hearing want he wanted to hear. The tower told the KLM aircraft to stand by at the same time the Pan Am aircraft transmitted, which resulted in a blocking of both transmissions. There were many other steps in the accident chain, but Tenerife was most certainly not caused by a pilot hearing what he wanted to hear. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Emily" wrote in message ... Mxsmanic wrote: Peter R. writes: A leading cause of accidents? Where did you get this statistic? From the NTSB and several books on the subject. Guess? If a pilot or controller is not able to comprehend the other side's transmission, there is no guess. "Say again?" is the phrase of choice and it is used all over the frequencies. It's routine in linguistics to unconsciously guess. A person listening to familiar sounds in a familiar context will "fill in the blanks" for any sounds that cannot be unambiguously distinguished, and he will do this without thinking. If he guesses wrong, trouble can result, and accidents have happened in aviation for this reason (the most famous probably being the one at Tenerife). Actually, in the Tenerife accident, the only radio problem was caused by simultaneous radio transmissions by aircraft, NOT a pilot hearing want he wanted to hear. The tower told the KLM aircraft to stand by at the same time the Pan Am aircraft transmitted, which resulted in a blocking of both transmissions. There were many other steps in the accident chain, but Tenerife was most certainly not caused by a pilot hearing what he wanted to hear. Correct, and FM would not have solved any of the problems. At least with AM the heterodyne lets people know there were multiple simultaneous transmissions. The capture characteristics of FM do away with this sometimes useful feature. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Dave Stadt wrote:
"Emily" wrote in message ... Mxsmanic wrote: Peter R. writes: A leading cause of accidents? Where did you get this statistic? From the NTSB and several books on the subject. Guess? If a pilot or controller is not able to comprehend the other side's transmission, there is no guess. "Say again?" is the phrase of choice and it is used all over the frequencies. It's routine in linguistics to unconsciously guess. A person listening to familiar sounds in a familiar context will "fill in the blanks" for any sounds that cannot be unambiguously distinguished, and he will do this without thinking. If he guesses wrong, trouble can result, and accidents have happened in aviation for this reason (the most famous probably being the one at Tenerife). Actually, in the Tenerife accident, the only radio problem was caused by simultaneous radio transmissions by aircraft, NOT a pilot hearing want he wanted to hear. The tower told the KLM aircraft to stand by at the same time the Pan Am aircraft transmitted, which resulted in a blocking of both transmissions. There were many other steps in the accident chain, but Tenerife was most certainly not caused by a pilot hearing what he wanted to hear. Correct, and FM would not have solved any of the problems. At least with AM the heterodyne lets people know there were multiple simultaneous transmissions. The capture characteristics of FM do away with this sometimes useful feature. I think it's very useful. As annoying as it is to have someone out there with a stuck mic, what would happen if messages were stepped on and we didn't know it? |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Emily wrote:
The tower told the KLM aircraft to stand by at the same time the Pan Am aircraft transmitted, which resulted in a blocking of both transmissions. There were many other steps in the accident chain, but Tenerife was most certainly not caused by a pilot hearing what he wanted to hear. Then why did the aircraft start its takeoff roll, if the pilot didn't hear what he wanted to? The tower only issued the ATC clearance, and the KLM captain seems to have taken that as permission to take off. What else is that but hearing what he wanted to? |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
James Robinson wrote:
Emily wrote: The tower told the KLM aircraft to stand by at the same time the Pan Am aircraft transmitted, which resulted in a blocking of both transmissions. There were many other steps in the accident chain, but Tenerife was most certainly not caused by a pilot hearing what he wanted to hear. Then why did the aircraft start its takeoff roll, if the pilot didn't hear what he wanted to? The tower only issued the ATC clearance, and the KLM captain seems to have taken that as permission to take off. What else is that but hearing what he wanted to? He didn't hear ANYTHING but a heterodyne. If you want to say he heard the heterodyne as clearance to take off, fine, but that's not what we're talking about. The OP stated that AM results in poor transmission quality and therefore pilots will hear what they want to hear. In this case, the pilots heard nothing, and a high ranking captain blatantly ignored both ATC and his own f/e. |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Emily writes:
Actually, in the Tenerife accident, the only radio problem was caused by simultaneous radio transmissions by aircraft, NOT a pilot hearing want he wanted to hear. There were several problems. The Pan Am crew was not sure of which exit to take from the runway. Neither was the KLM, IIRC. The KLM didn't understand the ATC clearance, and the tower didn't understand the KLM acknowledgement. Pam Am said it was on the runway several times but this was misunderstood as well. There were many misunderstandings, most of them related to radio communication. The tower told the KLM aircraft to stand by at the same time the Pan Am aircraft transmitted, which resulted in a blocking of both transmissions. Not entirely true. Part of it was audible. There were many other steps in the accident chain, but Tenerife was most certainly not caused by a pilot hearing what he wanted to hear. That has never been determined. The most likely cause is that a pilot heard what he wanted to hear, or he deliberately and negligently ignored instructions. Other pilots may also have heard what they wanted to hear. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
UAV's and TFR's along the Mexico boarder | John Doe | Piloting | 145 | March 31st 06 06:58 PM |
Air Force One Had to Intercept Some Inadvertent Flyers / How? | Rick Umali | Piloting | 29 | February 15th 06 04:40 AM |
terminology questions: turtledeck? cantilever wing? | Ric | Home Built | 2 | September 13th 05 09:39 PM |
I Hate Radios | Ron Wanttaja | Home Built | 9 | June 6th 05 05:39 PM |
AirCraft Radio Communications | [email protected] | Rotorcraft | 0 | November 13th 03 12:48 AM |