The elevation was the primary issue. |
Pretty sure all three are identified at places in this thread. All identities this far were released by families, not by govt entities. |
Fascinating article on the huge spike in accidents the last 12 months from ARMY aviators. Also note how the army aviator head, now in DC to help “investigate,” states how easy this nighttime exercise is. “All you have to do is go down the center of the river.” Not by the busy airport and kill a whole flight of people! |
No. Not amphibious to anyone who drives, flies, or plays a team ball sport. Pass behind is fall back/slow and go behind them (left). Not ahead of them (right). They are going from your left to your right to land. So fall behind means bank left in this situation. |
| Ambiguous! |
Lovely. At night when DCA is still operating?!? |
Reminds me of my husband. Yeah yeah I’ll do it Yeah yeah I saw that Yeah yeah I turned it in Yeah yeah I did that. And he did not. |
I think if you look at the radar matched up with the ATC recording, it's not true that by the time ATC instructs the helicopter to "pass behind" the plane, the helicopter and plane were head on. This instruction comes at the last minute as both the helicopter and and plane have banked to the west (NW for the plane, SW for the helicopter) toward collision. At that point the best chance of avoiding collision was the helicopter (which has far more ability to stop and steer) to hold up and pass behind the plane making its approach to National. We don't know if the helicopter had enough time to respond to this and didn't, or if the instruction simply came too late. Ideally the black box from the helicopter will provide the info necessary to judge that. ATC was not technically in charge of the helicopter avoiding the plane in any case. I mean in a bigger sense, ATC is responsible for ensuring all collisions are avoided. But in this instance, the tower asked the helicopter twice if they saw the oncoming plane and both times the helicopter said they did and asked for "visual separation." This is them asking for permission to steer around the plane and is common in that situation because, again, the helicopter has a high degree of maneuverability and it makes more sense for the helicopter pilot to navigate around a plane than for ATC to try and direct the helicopter around the plane. The problem is likely that the helicopter thought ATC was talking about the plane further south at that point. They could not maintain visually separation from a plane they were unable to see at all. But it appears ATC and the helicopter didn't realize they were talking about different planes until it was too late. |
That’s literally his job. |
It's not ambiguous at all. They know exactly what that means and they expect that language. That directive is routinely given. |
| I live in a different state these days. I know none of the people and I’m not involved in the sport. But these photos of the sweet figure skater kids are killing me. I don’t know why this has affected me so much when there is sad news every day. It’s just so so so sad. |
Ok but my point exactly is that there's 2 aircraft that collided. The heli may or may not be at fault but the plane was relying on a visual approach landing. Maybe if you used instrumentation, the plan could avoid the helicopter. The point is there's too much traffic for anyone to only use line of sight! Esp landing into a not often used runway closest to helicopter flight paths. So you take even some risk away and you could have a different outcome. Maybe it would not have helped, maybe it would. |
| They were so young, and many were traveling with their moms. It’s unimaginable. |
| Regardless of who was flying the helicopter, there were THREE of them. Not one of them could have taken control if the lead pilot wasn't being safe? Or were paying attention on the visual separation? It seems like there's a failure in protocol, for all 3 of them. They had failed to no notice the right passenger regional jet despite several calls and confirmations. |
I cannot follow this at all. |