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CarlosSi wrote:It’s normal to engage any automation on ground roll?
KPTKRampy wrote:CarlosSi wrote:It’s normal to engage any automation on ground roll?
I mean, if you hit the TO/GA button on any Boeing aircraft it technically engages the autothrottle…
CarlosSi wrote:KPTKRampy wrote:CarlosSi wrote:It’s normal to engage any automation on ground roll?
I mean, if you hit the TO/GA button on any Boeing aircraft it technically engages the autothrottle…
Right but is it normal procedure to engage it during the ground roll? I’m no 737 pilot so it baffles me why one would even touch AP or AT on ground roll and mistake one for the other.
Caspian27 wrote:CarlosSi wrote:KPTKRampy wrote:
I mean, if you hit the TO/GA button on any Boeing aircraft it technically engages the autothrottle…
Right but is it normal procedure to engage it during the ground roll? I’m no 737 pilot so it baffles me why one would even touch AP or AT on ground roll and mistake one for the other.
The auto throttle on the 737 is normally “armed” while setting up at the gate. This means that the mode appears white on the FMAs (Flight Mode Annunciation above the primary flight display) the auto throttle “activates” when the TO/GA button is pushed during thrust lever advancement. It then sets the takeoff thrust and the PM makes sure the engines are producing +1% to -0% of planned N1 engine thrust.
Francoflier wrote:Also, what is the guarded switch below the AP / AT / FD(?) switches? It's hard to tell from the pictures.
Francoflier wrote:The A/P and A/T push buttons are on top of each other, rather small, look exactly the same and even their labeling only differs by one letter....
Francoflier wrote:...As the article said, there is not much they can do now unless Airbus decides to redesign the panel and recertify it, which they'll try to avoid as much as possible of course. Awareness will be raised during regular training and hopefully it reduces incidences to an acceptable level.
Francoflier wrote:Do the G6000 have it? They seem to have the same p/b layout as the A220.
Also, what is the guarded switch below the AP / AT / FD(?) switches? It's hard to tell from the pictures.
Pontiac wrote:Francoflier wrote:...As the article said, there is not much they can do now unless Airbus decides to redesign the panel and recertify it, which they'll try to avoid as much as possible of course. Awareness will be raised during regular training and hopefully it reduces incidences to an acceptable level.
I am not seeing where the switchgear in question is in this picture.
That said, would it not be a hell of a lot easier to change the shape/type of switches under an AD? Make one a red rocker*, the other a black paddle switch?
*Sammy Hagar approved
GalaxyFlyer wrote:Pontiac wrote:Francoflier wrote:...As the article said, there is not much they can do now unless Airbus decides to redesign the panel and recertify it, which they'll try to avoid as much as possible of course. Awareness will be raised during regular training and hopefully it reduces incidences to an acceptable level.
I am not seeing where the switchgear in question is in this picture.
That said, would it not be a hell of a lot easier to change the shape/type of switches under an AD? Make one a red rocker*, the other a black paddle switch?
*Sammy Hagar approved
Right in the center of the FGC, between 227 and 9900 and above the red guarded switch.
No, that’d be impossible. I don’t see why there’s an AT button. There is Engage/Disengage buttons on the throttles on the Globals.
CrewBunk wrote:GalaxyFlyer wrote:Pontiac wrote:
I am not seeing where the switchgear in question is in this picture.
That said, would it not be a hell of a lot easier to change the shape/type of switches under an AD? Make one a red rocker*, the other a black paddle switch?
*Sammy Hagar approved
Right in the center of the FGC, between 227 and 9900 and above the red guarded switch.
No, that’d be impossible. I don’t see why there’s an AT button. There is Engage/Disengage buttons on the throttles on the Globals.
In the centre ofthe FCP, from top to bottom: AP (with green engagement light above), AT (with green engagement light above), XFR toggling the left/right arrows then the guarded EDM switch (with a red warning light above).
There is no engagement button on the thrust levers, only an autothrust disconnect button. So, the AT button on the FCP would be to re-engage the AT system in flight.
GalaxyFlyer wrote:And that’s what I don’t understand—why didn’t the design just use throttle installed ENG/DISENGAGE switches?
Pontiac wrote:That said, would it not be a hell of a lot easier to change the shape/type of switches under an AD? Make one a red rocker*, the other a black paddle switch?
*Sammy Hagar approved
YYZYYT wrote:
Avatar2go wrote:Is it possible to lockout the autopilot on the takeoff roll, or below 400 feet? Or is that not desireable for some reason?
CriticalPoint wrote:Avatar2go wrote:Is it possible to lockout the autopilot on the takeoff roll, or below 400 feet? Or is that not desireable for some reason?
The Auto pilots on Boeings cannot be engaged below 400’ on the 787 it’s 200’. If you try you get an AP wailer.
CarlosSi wrote:KPTKRampy wrote:CarlosSi wrote:It’s normal to engage any automation on ground roll?
I mean, if you hit the TO/GA button on any Boeing aircraft it technically engages the autothrottle…
Right but is it normal procedure to engage it during the ground roll? I’m no 737 pilot so it baffles me why one would even touch AP or AT on ground roll
KPTKRampy wrote:Just had this question pop into my head, Airbus’ own aircraft has a feature on the throttle pedestal, where you position the throttle levers over a detent (?), you press then autothrottle button on the A/P control panel and the autothrottle takes over. Did airbus add that feature to the aircraft when they took over the program?
fly4ever78 wrote:FYI, there are some airplanes that require you to push an "Auto Flight" button on the FCP on takeoff roll to engage the Auto thrust/throttle: the 717 and MD-11 for example.
SPREE34 wrote:When anything automated goes afoul, just fly the aircraft, and figure out the automation issue when it's safe to do so. Basic airmanship. "Chidren of the Magenta" comes to mind.
CarlosSi wrote:KPTKRampy wrote:CarlosSi wrote:It’s normal to engage any automation on ground roll?
I mean, if you hit the TO/GA button on any Boeing aircraft it technically engages the autothrottle…
Right but is it normal procedure to engage it during the ground roll? I’m no 737 pilot so it baffles me why one would even touch AP or AT on ground roll and mistake one for the other.
CrewBunk wrote:Francoflier wrote:The A/P and A/T push buttons are on top of each other, rather small, look exactly the same and even their labeling only differs by one letter....
Which is why one should be very careful which button they are pushing, not just flailing around in a blind panic. Especially during a critical phase of flight, when there is absolutely no reason to be pressing anything on that panel.
KPTKRampy wrote:Just had this question pop into my head, Airbus’ own aircraft has a feature on the throttle pedestal, where you position the throttle levers over a detent (?), you press then autothrottle button on the A/P control panel and the autothrottle takes over. Did airbus add that feature to the aircraft when they took over the program?
PhilMcCrackin wrote:Stacking the AP and AT buttons together like that is poor design. That needs to be remedied.
PhilMcCrackin wrote:Humans make mistakes. I think it's unrealistic of you to sit here and call them idiots and suggest that they NOT do what led to the issue as if they consciously made the mistake.
Francoflier wrote:Add to all that the fact that any slightly hurried movement of the thrust levers will apparently disconnect the A/T (as per Poorpilot's post above... another puzzling feature) and all the elements for a screwup are .
CrewBunk wrote:PhilMcCrackin wrote:Stacking the AP and AT buttons together like that is poor design. That needs to be remedied.
I have a surprise for you ….. so are the AP and AT buttons on the A320 (A318, A319, A320, A321), A330 and A340. On the 767, 777 and 787, they are about an inch apart.
It is SOP where I fly, on all that the AP and the AT can not be engaged below 400’. (Including the A220). It is also included in the limitations noted in the Flight Crew Operating Manual. (Slightly different on the 787/777 but we use 400’ for fleet commonality).
FlyingBrit wrote:Interesting. Have had this happen a couple times on takeoff in the 220 (admittedly new-ish to the type). ATs are armed for takeoff, however the throttles are very touchy and can be fairly easily deactivated.
Francoflier wrote:FlyingBrit wrote:Interesting. Have had this happen a couple times on takeoff in the 220 (admittedly new-ish to the type). ATs are armed for takeoff, however the throttles are very touchy and can be fairly easily deactivated.
That's the part I don't quite understand. Does the A/T disconnect because of jerky thrust lever movement or because of accidental pushing of the A/T disconnect switch while operating them?
24Whiskey wrote:They aren’t getting deactivated. They aren’t being armed for takeoff period.
It’s not noticed until you bring the thrust up through 60% N1 and you realize A/T isn’t taking it from there. It’s just a simple whoops moment where the pilot monitoring just sets appropriate thrust manually.
Unfortunately some crews are trying to salvage the situation by engaging AT during TO roll at relatively high speeds. There’s more problems with just accidentally engaging AP, the autothrottle may not set thrust to the proper flex setting.