Melburnian1
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2013
- Posts
- 25,486
Notwithstanding the proclivity of the UK tabloid media to exaggerate or at times suggest things that are completely false, could the alleged incident in the link where the pilot and co-pilot supposedly fell concurrently asleep in the coughpit occur to, from or within Australian airspace (or en route to or from on long Australia - US sectors, notwithstanding more than two air crew on board, or on shorter 'red eye' SE or N Asian to or from Australia sectors):
Both pilots asleep in the coughpit of a packed plane (but don't worry, it was on autopilot) | Mail Online
When planes are on autopilot, is there any equivalent of the railway vigilance control equipment or other mechanisms that (for trains) the driver must operate at a defined time interval such as 90 seconds with any failure on the part of the driver normally leading to the train's brakes being applied (although occasionally this has been subverted)? The aviation equivalent might be to sound some sort of alarm in the coughpit or even in the galley.
The chances of two air crew falling asleep, even momentarily, must be remote although if I correctly recall one of AFF's pilot contributors, jb747, recently commented that it was typical for pilots to continuously suffer from ongoing jetlag related issues (which may be manageable and cause for caution not alarm).
Would CASA or other Australian aviation regulatory authorities become aware of any such incidents only through voluntary reporting by the crew in the first instance and then the airline, or would the black box or other equipment 'know' of any such occurrence? If it was voluntary reporting, there would hardly be much incentive for a flight crew to dob themselves in.
Both pilots asleep in the coughpit of a packed plane (but don't worry, it was on autopilot) | Mail Online
When planes are on autopilot, is there any equivalent of the railway vigilance control equipment or other mechanisms that (for trains) the driver must operate at a defined time interval such as 90 seconds with any failure on the part of the driver normally leading to the train's brakes being applied (although occasionally this has been subverted)? The aviation equivalent might be to sound some sort of alarm in the coughpit or even in the galley.
The chances of two air crew falling asleep, even momentarily, must be remote although if I correctly recall one of AFF's pilot contributors, jb747, recently commented that it was typical for pilots to continuously suffer from ongoing jetlag related issues (which may be manageable and cause for caution not alarm).
Would CASA or other Australian aviation regulatory authorities become aware of any such incidents only through voluntary reporting by the crew in the first instance and then the airline, or would the black box or other equipment 'know' of any such occurrence? If it was voluntary reporting, there would hardly be much incentive for a flight crew to dob themselves in.
Last edited: