
As I have learned, Boeing manuals require manual extension of speedbrakes on RTO and stress the necessity of doing so despite they would extend automatically upon activation of the thrust reversers (I suspect, only if at least one of the TR is operative). I watched several videos with RTO drills in simulator, showing this procedure. But all these drills involved engine fire apparently without any thrust assimetry. In the case of a severe engine failure a strong yawing moment may arise abruptly and the pilot (assume for simplicity, that the captain is the PF) would struggle to regain directional control over the aircraft. After the throttles are slammed back, the pilot would have to level the pedals gradually, as the aircraft is brought back to the normal heading. It is stressed in all manuals and tutorials for pilots that keeping safe trajectory of the aircraft is paramount and has priority over any other action. Having not myself even a driver's license but understanding, as an aeronautical engineer, the physics of aircraft operations, my guess is that deploying the speedbrakes is essential to directional control, as they ensure good contact of the wheels with the runway, and must be done as quickly as possible while the pilot strives to recapture the directional control. But I have almost zero knowledge in psychological aspects of airmanship. So, what in opinion of the real 737 pilots is right: 1) to pull the speedbrakes handle immediately after slamming the throttles back (as it is done in drills I have watched) or 2) after slamming the throttles back the pilot must do anything only when he have fully recovered the correct heading of the aircraft?