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Excerpts From Pilots' Recording [before crash]- Just Damn!
Yahoo news ^

Posted on 06/15/2005 4:48:00 PM PDT by Capt. Canuck

Excerpts from conversations between Pinnacle Airlines Capt. Jesse Rhodes and First Officer Peter Cesarz just before they died in the crash of a Bombardier regional jet on Oct. 14, 2004. Investigators say the crash occurred after the pilots took the plane to 41,000 feet, an altitude where engine problems can develop.

9:48:44 p.m.

Cesarz: "Man we can do it. Forty-one it."

9:48:46

Rhodes: "(Unintelligible) baby."

9:48:57

Cesarz: "Hundred and eighty knots, still cruising at Mach point six four."

9:51:51

Cesarz: "There's four-one-oh, my man."

9:51:53

Cesarz: "Made it, man."

9:54:19

Rhodes: "Yeah, that's funny, we got up here, it won't stay up here."

9:54:22

Cesarz: "Dude, it's (expletive) losing it." (Sound of laughing)

10:14:36

Cesarz: "We're not gonna make it, man, we're not gonna make it."

10:14:38

Rhodes: "Is there a road? Tell her we're not gonna make this runway."

10:14:46

Rhodes: "Let's keep the gear up. (Expletive) I don't want to go into houses here."

10:14:51

Cesarz: (Expletive) "road right there."

10:14:52

Rhodes: "Where?"

10:14:52

Cesarz: "Turn, turn..."

10:14:53

Rhodes: "Turn where?"

10:14:53

Cesarz: "Turn to your left, turn to your left."

10:14:56

Rhodes: Either: "I see it" or "I can't."

10:14:58

Warning signal in cockpit: "Too low, terrain, terrain."

10:14:59

Rhodes: "Can't make it."

10:15:03

Rhodes: "Aw (expletive). We're gonna hit houses, dude."

Source: National Transportation Safety Board


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Extended News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: damn
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To: wideminded

Everything above 18000 ft is controlled airspace all of the time. They'd be cleared for a certain altitude, but could then request another once enroute from ATC. They wouldn't be breaking any rules unless they deviated without requesting permission from ATC (at which point they'd hear from them).


21 posted on 06/15/2005 5:09:44 PM PDT by Textide
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To: Turbopilot
True, but he couldn't crash the small room into a neighborhood full of homes.

"Rhodes: "Aw (expletive). We're gonna hit houses, dude."


and they did, too .. The plane crashed into a residential neighborhood of Jefferson City, Mo. Through the Grace of God, in this instance, no one on the ground was injured but it doesn't take much to imagine how easily the result could have been devastatingly different.

I understand how tedious flying can be at times, but this sort of 'fooling around' over populated areas is beyond reckless ~ it is downright irresponsible.

22 posted on 06/15/2005 5:09:56 PM PDT by Zacs Mom (Proud wife of a Marine! ... and purveyor of "rampant, unedited dialogue")
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To: wideminded

They'd have been cleared to FL410 (41,000 feet) by ATC before they left their previously assigned altitude. Asking for, and receiving, a different altitude, is very routine; pilots do it on many if not most flights to find turbulence-free altitudes, favorable tailwinds, etc.


23 posted on 06/15/2005 5:10:01 PM PDT by Turbopilot (Viva la Reagan Revolucion!)
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To: Turbopilot

I totally agree with you, The pilots took it up to FL410 which is max altitude with passengers. No reason to fault the pilots who really did nothing wrong except fail to restart for whatever reason.
Thankfully there were no passengers.


24 posted on 06/15/2005 5:10:10 PM PDT by southland
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To: anton
"Is this NTSB investigation NTSB ID: DCA05MA003?"

Yes.

25 posted on 06/15/2005 5:12:03 PM PDT by Rokke
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To: Capt. Canuck

These two idiots decided to have a little fun since they were ferrying the jet to another location and had no passengers. Since they crashed in a residential area, it's just lucky these two JERKS didn't kill some innocent people.


26 posted on 06/15/2005 5:12:37 PM PDT by jimboster (Vitajex, whatcha doin' to me)
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To: Turbopilot
I bet if you were assigned to a work project where you were locked into a small room with little to do except talk to your lone coworker locked in with you for hours on end, and tape-recorded constantly, you might deliver something less than Ciceran oratory at some point too.

Get off your high horse.

No one locked them into a room. They were flying because that was their chosen profession. If they didn't like the conditions they could've walked away at any time.

27 posted on 06/15/2005 5:13:38 PM PDT by Ol' Dan Tucker ("There ought to be limits to freedom" --George W. Bush, May 26, 1999)
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To: Zacs Mom
I have yet to hear how they "fooled around." I can understand that, to a non-pilot, maybe going to the "maximum" altitude sounds risky, but that maximum is not the physical limit of the aircraft, it's the lower of either the certified limit of the aircraft or the company's limit (which carries the force of law). It's designed to be a safe limit. Exceeding it is physically possible, just not considered safe. And a pilot would have no reason not to go to the maximum safe altitude limit.
28 posted on 06/15/2005 5:14:09 PM PDT by Turbopilot (Viva la Reagan Revolucion!)
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To: Rokke

If you have any sort of evidence for that, I'd like to see it - that's not sarcastic; I just haven't heard that anywhere and it seems like something that'd be heavily reported. Likewise for any other violations. Also, I'm not even sure that swapping seats violates regs. I've got my FAR/AIM right here, perhaps you could quote me chapter and verse?


29 posted on 06/15/2005 5:15:51 PM PDT by Turbopilot (Viva la Reagan Revolucion!)
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To: Turbopilot

According to FAA transcripts of air-to-ground conversations, an air traffic controller in Kansas City told the two pilots it was rare to see the plane flying that high.

"Yeah, we're actually ... we don't have any passengers on board, so we decided to have a little fun and come up here," one of the pilots said. The transcripts don't identify whether Jesse Rhodes or Cesarz made the statement.


30 posted on 06/15/2005 5:17:27 PM PDT by anton
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Comment #31 Removed by Moderator

To: Ol' Dan Tucker
Get off your high horse.

Read for comprehension.

Now that the insults are out of the way, my point was that even people who are highly trained professionals can joke around on the job without compromising their work. If a surgeon puts on some rock music or tells a nurse a joke, and his patient later dies because the life support machine fails, is the surgeon an "idiot" or unprofessional?
32 posted on 06/15/2005 5:18:10 PM PDT by Turbopilot (Viva la Reagan Revolucion!)
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To: anton

It's rare because the aircraft usually doesn't fly that high; in fact, it may require a light load (like they had, with no passengers) to get that high while maintaining safety. They still had to get permission to get up there, probably from a different controller; when they got handed off to the controller in Kansas City he commented on the fact that he rarely saw commercial jets at FL410. Trust me, if he didn't have permission to be at that altitude, the controller's comments would have been far sterner.


33 posted on 06/15/2005 5:21:00 PM PDT by Turbopilot (Viva la Reagan Revolucion!)
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Comment #34 Removed by Moderator

To: Turbopilot
My comments are based on this account of the incident NTSB to Study What Led to Mo. Plane Crash


Here is an excerpt:

"... There were no passengers on the jet and no one on the ground was injured by the Oct. 14 crash in a residential neighborhood of Jefferson City, Mo.

According to FAA transcripts of air-to-ground conversations, an air traffic controller in Kansas City told the pilots it was rare to see the plane flying that high.

"Yeah, we're actually ... we don't have any passengers on board, so we decided to have a little fun and come up here," one of the pilots said. The transcripts don't identify whether Capt. Jesse Rhodes or First Officer Richard Peter Cesarz made the statement.

~snip~

David Stempler, president of the Air Travelers Association, said the issue may be reckless pilots rather than inadequate training or improper recovery procedures.

"This is more a story of pilots having time on their hands and playing with things in the cockpit that they shouldn't," he said.

Flying, he said, is as boring as truck driving most of the time.

"This was boredom and experimentation, these guys experimenting with things they had no business doing," Stempler said.

35 posted on 06/15/2005 5:22:54 PM PDT by Zacs Mom (Proud wife of a Marine! ... and purveyor of "rampant, unedited dialogue")
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To: Turbopilot

I don't know. It sure looked like they were on their own until questioned by KC controllers.


36 posted on 06/15/2005 5:23:29 PM PDT by anton
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To: Turbopilot
"If you have any sort of evidence for that, I'd like to see it - that's not sarcastic; "

You need to read the NTSB report. It includes the full CVR transcript. It will turn your stomach. If you read it and don't think these guys did anything wrong, you really need to question your aviation skills. I'm not trying to be rude here, but do you have an ATP?

37 posted on 06/15/2005 5:26:52 PM PDT by Rokke
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Comment #38 Removed by Moderator

To: anton

Well, either take my word for it or find someone you trust who's a pilot. They were not at any altitude that they didn't previously get permission to be at. But as they flew they'd get transferred from controller to controller as they enter airspace controlled by different controllers, and one of them commented on the rarity of seeing commercial traffic of that altitude. He'd already gotten a "strip" with all the flight's information, including their cleared altitude, on it. If the plane hadn't been at the altitude it had been previously assigned, the controller would have been much more concerned, as that would have been against regulations and potentially dangerous.


39 posted on 06/15/2005 5:32:17 PM PDT by Turbopilot (Viva la Reagan Revolucion!)
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To: Zacs Mom
That link was to a Yahoo article, not an actual NTSB report. In general, reporters know nothing more (and in many cases less) about aviation than the general public, and when writing about aviation they seem to want to prove it. They seem to believe that flying causes crashes the same way they believe that guns cause murders.

And I have no idea who David Stempler is, or what the Air Travelers Association is, but the name doesn't sound like a group with professional knowledge of aviation, regulation, air traffic control, crash investigation, or any other relevant specialty. It sounds like a "special interest group" along the lines of the Brady Campaign.
40 posted on 06/15/2005 5:37:49 PM PDT by Turbopilot (Viva la Reagan Revolucion!)
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