Typo In the Cockpit

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MIflyer

1st Lieutenant
7,160
14,791
May 30, 2011
Cape Canaveral
It's scary to me that this kind of thing can happen. Makes me recall KAL 007.

Favorable geography and fortunate civic planning were cited in allowing a charter aircraft the chance to continue its flight from Belfast to Corfu on July 21, 2017, after a typo in the cockpit. The Sunwing Airlines Boeing 737 ran over a runway end light and continued 100 feet beyond before staggering into the air, according to a report from the U.K.'s Air Accidents Investigations Branch. The AAIB determined that one of the pilots incorrectly typed into the flight management system that the outside temperature was about 50 degrees below zero when it was actually a comfortable 63 degrees F. Anticipating the thick air of an Arctic winter, the computer set takeoff power at about 60 percent, woefully inadequate for the task ahead.
"The low acceleration of the aircraft was not recognized by the crew until the aircraft was rapidly approaching the end of the runway," the report said. Thankfully, the end of that runway at Belfast has no buildings, power lines or trees off the end and the 737 was able to claw to a safe altitude. The engines didn't reach full power until the aircraft was about two-and-a-half miles away and 800 feet AGL. The AAIB determined the aircraft didn't have a software update that would have warned the crew the temperature they set didn't jibe and the airline says it's been fixed. "The safety of our customers continues to be our top priority and we have confidence that these mitigating actions taken in co-operation with regulatory bodies and software providers reflect this commitment," the airline said in an email to Bloomberg.

Airplanes are great! I own one. Computers are great! I own several. Radios are great! I own a boatload of them (ham radio operator). Computers and radios and airplanes all together? NOOOOOO!
 
Just like it was inexplicable that VARIG crew flew into the setting sun when they were supposed to be headed North Northeast. And after some of the passengers asked them where they were going.

Or that Greek airliner crew who did not notice they had the cabin pressurization set on "Manual" as they puzzled over why the avionics were overheating. "The fans must have popped the circuit breaker! Where are the circuit breakers for the fans? Call company maintenance and find out!" as they climbed, on autopilot, to their doom.

Or that Learjet crew out of Orlando flying Payne Stewart did not notice that the bleed air valves were closed and they had no pressurization. In a Learjet they should have noticed that before they got to the end of the taxiway.

I guess it is a good thing to be mildly terrified while you are flying, as well as less automatic.
 

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