Army and the pilot are going to get sued for causing the crash and the name will come out.Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Name will leak. There's a whole unit of people out there that knows what the deal is.
Army and the pilot are going to get sued for causing the crash and the name will come out.Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Name will leak. There's a whole unit of people out there that knows what the deal is.
Kenneth_2003 said:Again, I don't think it's that clear...FatZilla said:Philip J Fry said:
Listened to the audio today. Based on how the media was reporting, it sounded like the ATC wasn't in constant communication. Could not be further from the truth. That controller was talking to other aircraft throughout the flight all the way up to the crash. Clear that after visual was confirmed by the Blackhawk that the controller moved on to other issues. Hard to blame ATC for this
There is that whole altitude thing ATC should have noticed, no? Helicopter was way above its max allowed altitude for flying the river corridor.
Radar scope showed 300ft. Reported as Flight Level 003. Just one significant figure.
Where does the rounding occur?
- Automatically round UP? -- All transponder altimeter data from 201ft -- 300ft reported to ATC as 300
- Round up at midpoint? -- Transponder altimeter data from 250ft -- 349ft reported to ATC as 300
Collision reportedly happened at 395'. If that is true, it doesn't matter what the scope said, the helo was 2x its max cleared altitude.Kenneth_2003 said:Again, I don't think it's that clear...FatZilla said:Philip J Fry said:
Listened to the audio today. Based on how the media was reporting, it sounded like the ATC wasn't in constant communication. Could not be further from the truth. That controller was talking to other aircraft throughout the flight all the way up to the crash. Clear that after visual was confirmed by the Blackhawk that the controller moved on to other issues. Hard to blame ATC for this
There is that whole altitude thing ATC should have noticed, no? Helicopter was way above its max allowed altitude for flying the river corridor.
Radar scope showed 300ft. Reported as Flight Level 003. Just one significant figure.
Where does the rounding occur?
- Automatically round UP? -- All transponder altimeter data from 201ft -- 300ft reported to ATC as 300
- Round up at midpoint? -- Transponder altimeter data from 250ft -- 349ft reported to ATC as 300
I mean, I grew up next to a military base. To my knowledge, every single time a helicopter crashed or a 113 sunk in a flooded creek, or ___________ name your training accident, the people involved were named whether they were at fault or not. Not a single instance I recall involved the death of 70 people.txags92 said:Army and the pilot are going to get sued for causing the crash and the name will come out.Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Name will leak. There's a whole unit of people out there that knows what the deal is.
Sheesh, you're really starting to sound like a character out of Atlas Shrugged with all this public servant talk!!Ellis Wyatt said:How people react isn't really the point. Maybe police protection at her home is necessary. She's a public servant and not entitled to any shielding from the public. That isn't how being a public employee works.Rapier108 said:
I'm sure everyone will treat the family with such great respect. /eyeroll
Harassing and threatening phone calls will be inevitable, even though they did nothing wrong. Might even result in an act of violence out of some misguided notion of "revenge."
If DOD rules/federal law allow the soldier's name to be kept private when they are killed while in active service, then it is the family's right to exercise that option and DOD is bound by it. From what I've found so far online, there are a tons of different rules governing releasing information on deceased service members. I don't have time right now to go through all of the weeds to figure out what rules apply in this case.
People should absolutely not bother her family. America should still know her name. She may or may not be at fault for anything, but that is irrelevant. Nearly 70 people died in an accident she was heavily involved in. It has to be public.
Just rumors. Nothing confirmed one way or the other.BBRex said:
Do we even know who was at the controls when the crash happened?
Charpie said:
The family of the female copilot has asked for her name not to be released
JFABNRGR said:Charpie said:
The family of the female copilot has asked for her name not to be released
Its also possible that the DOD highly suggested to the family to request this.
Pat Tillman's family knows a thing or two about misinformation from DOD.
Whaler said:
Apparently one helicopter pilot had 1,000 hours and the other had 500 hours. That's not a ton of time. But more importantly, I wonder how much time they had in that type of aircraft (Blackhawk Helo) and in those conditions (night). A good chunk of their total time was very likely in fixed wing aircraft and probably not at night... just curious.
It seems pretty clear the helicopter shouldn't have been at that altitude, and in the jet's flight path on final approach. So, pretty sure it was pilot error in the helicopter. Inexperience in those conditions may have played a part.
Catag94 said:
Can you make the case that a CRJ needs to land at DCA any more than the Army needs to operate helicopters there?
Wouldn't the Trainee be at the controls for the entire flight? However, CoPilot has controls, correct?BBRex said:
Do we even know who was at the controls when the crash happened?
Ag with kids said:One of my test pilots at Bell was a Marine Cobra pilot. He said in the Marines when he was there, they all learned fixed wing first and didn't move to rotors till later.CanyonAg77 said:
Why do you think a chopper pilot trained in fixed wing?
And a Blackhawk pilot starts training in Blackhawks while still in flight school
He now owns the system. Whether that comes with the bad management/incompetence. The FAA and air traffic control systems in particular have long been in need for updates...both in hiring and in infrastructure. Pilot error, air traffic control workload, etc led to this. Blaming DEI (even if I agree with getting rid of DEI) for this just looks stupid in the moment. A good leader gather all the information first before laying any blame. Trump is incapable of restraint and ability to do this. So yes...he needs to own the disaster, evaluate and fix. Ironically, part of what will improve the safety is more government spending on ATC infrastructure and hiring.Muy said:BluHorseShu said:Just continues to make it harder to support this guy after begrudgingly voting for him again. Immediately going to point fingers at the same time they're pulling bodies out of the water. You're the president now....everything is your responsibility now...have the cojones to either own it or just skip the blame and offer prayers and commit to making it better. Good grief.flown-the-coop said:
Per Fox, Reagan ATC was understaffed with only 19 certified ATC controllers out of a need for 30.
Indicated that helicopters and plane take offs and arrivals were handled by two folks not one.
I suspect Trump was aware of this before today's presser.
Its like he does good with the ICE raids one minute and the minute tragedy strikes its all 'not my fault'
Own what exactly? If he knows that 1 person was doing the work for 2, how exactly is that on him? It meets what he said which is more than likely bad management and incompetence led to this.
WolfCall said:Wouldn't the Trainee be at the controls for the entire flight? However, CoPilot has controls, correct?BBRex said:
Do we even know who was at the controls when the crash happened?
Horrible. I feel for her family.Quote:
It's pretty sad
Olag00 said:
I believe when they mentioned the females body had been recovered, they stated co-pilot so it isn't all on her, yet they released the other names. And the males voice was heard over the comms if I remember correctly.
That is incorrect.GAC06 said:Olag00 said:
I believe when they mentioned the females body had been recovered, they stated co-pilot so it isn't all on her, yet they released the other names. And the males voice was heard over the comms if I remember correctly.
As has been stated repeatedly on this thread, the Army hasn't released any names yet of the crew. The families of the warrant and crew chief identified them through social media.
Quote:
The UH-60 helicopter from the 12th Aviation Battalion, Davison Army Airfield, Fort Belvoir, Va., collided in midair with an American Airlines Bombardier CRJ700 regional jet Flight 5342 at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport. The FAA, NTSB and the United States Army are investigating. The NTSB will lead the investigation. We are working with local officials and will provide any additional information once it becomes available.
Staff Sgt. Ryan Austin O'Hara, 28, of Lilburn, Georgia, is believed to be deceased pending positive identification.
The remains of Chief Warrant Officer 2 Andrew Loyd Eaves, 39, of Great Mills, Maryland, have not yet been recovered, therefore is duty status-whereabouts unknown (DUSTWUN).
At the request of the family, the name of the third Soldier will not be released at this time. That pilot is also DUSTWUN.
FatZilla said:Kenneth_2003 said:Again, I don't think it's that clear...FatZilla said:Philip J Fry said:
Listened to the audio today. Based on how the media was reporting, it sounded like the ATC wasn't in constant communication. Could not be further from the truth. That controller was talking to other aircraft throughout the flight all the way up to the crash. Clear that after visual was confirmed by the Blackhawk that the controller moved on to other issues. Hard to blame ATC for this
There is that whole altitude thing ATC should have noticed, no? Helicopter was way above its max allowed altitude for flying the river corridor.
Radar scope showed 300ft. Reported as Flight Level 003. Just one significant figure.
Where does the rounding occur?
- Automatically round UP? -- All transponder altimeter data from 201ft -- 300ft reported to ATC as 300
- Round up at midpoint? -- Transponder altimeter data from 250ft -- 349ft reported to ATC as 300
Wasn't it reporting 400 at time of impact (flightradar public data) and 200 is the max altitude they are supposed to be at? The jet was at an estimated 375-400 when hit. Thats not a rounding error.
Fair enough. Just giving a reason why someone might think that.ArmyAg2002 said:Ag with kids said:One of my test pilots at Bell was a Marine Cobra pilot. He said in the Marines when he was there, they all learned fixed wing first and didn't move to rotors till later.CanyonAg77 said:
Why do you think a chopper pilot trained in fixed wing?
And a Blackhawk pilot starts training in Blackhawks while still in flight school
That's the Marines. The Army has a different method of flight training.
MAYBE this will finally get the gov't/FAA to REALLY do an upgrade to the ATC system. I know NextGen is working on it but it needs to be MASSIVELY accelerated.BluHorseShu said:He now owns the system. Whether that comes with the bad management/incompetence. The FAA and air traffic control systems in particular have long been in need for updates...both in hiring and in infrastructure. Pilot error, air traffic control workload, etc led to this. Blaming DEI (even if I agree with getting rid of DEI) for this just looks stupid in the moment. A good leader gather all the information first before laying any blame. Trump is incapable of restraint and ability to do this. So yes...he needs to own the disaster, evaluate and fix. Ironically, part of what will improve the safety is more government spending on ATC infrastructure and hiring.Muy said:BluHorseShu said:Just continues to make it harder to support this guy after begrudgingly voting for him again. Immediately going to point fingers at the same time they're pulling bodies out of the water. You're the president now....everything is your responsibility now...have the cojones to either own it or just skip the blame and offer prayers and commit to making it better. Good grief.flown-the-coop said:
Per Fox, Reagan ATC was understaffed with only 19 certified ATC controllers out of a need for 30.
Indicated that helicopters and plane take offs and arrivals were handled by two folks not one.
I suspect Trump was aware of this before today's presser.
Its like he does good with the ICE raids one minute and the minute tragedy strikes its all 'not my fault'
Own what exactly? If he knows that 1 person was doing the work for 2, how exactly is that on him? It meets what he said which is more than likely bad management and incompetence led to this.
Its easy to blame someone else for everything. The hard work is actually fixing it. Hopefully he will do that.
I'd argue that underneath short final, even 200 ft is too high. Even if the Helo was on route and on altitude, separation would have been 200 ft or less...not acceptable.Kenneth_2003 said:
375 would absolutely be high. Heck 250 is too high!
Imagery and map overlays on YouTube also suggest that were west of the Route 4 track. Also bad.
How is this possible!?!
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Rapier108 said:
NTSB press briefing going on right now. I'm busy at the moment so I can't watch and summarize it.