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Systems Knowledge?

Gemini Sparkle

Key Takeaways:

  • A training flight involving a private pilot and flight instructor in a Cessna 182Q ended in a fatal, uncontrolled descent and crash.
  • The NTSB concluded the probable cause was the flight instructor's failure to maintain control during training maneuvers.
  • The article questions this conclusion, highlighting the aircraft's sophisticated Garmin GFC500 autopilot with Electronic Stability and Protection (ESP) and the pilots' practice of pulling its circuit breaker for certain maneuvers, implying a potential role for system interaction beyond simple human error.
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As new aircraft and avionics become more sophisticated and capable, a pilot’s learning curve becomes more complicated. Understanding how and why things work the way they do is a critical part of our training and study. Brian Sagi’s article beginning on page 12, “Automation Misbehavior,” explores some of the ramifications and remedial actions pilots should know when their equipment malfunctions. But according to the NTSB, that’s not what happened in the accident we’re about to probe.

Of course, it’s rather easy and perhaps appropriate to blame human error when something goes tragically wrong with an airplane that seemingly was performing as designed. It’s not the first time and it won’t be the last that undiscovered or obliterated evidence resulted in defaulting to blaming the humans for a bad outcome. But this accident should serve as an attention-getter for those of us who might be a little behind in learning about the sophisticated equipment in our panels, even if it’s been there a while and is seemingly well-understood.

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