Thanks SparWeb Would you by any chance have anything to do with the Q400? I am due to move to the CS300 some point this year.
Not directly, but plenty of 100's to 300's cycling through the facility where I work. My resumé has a lot of spicy stuff on it.
Oh I envy you - I'm sure you're very eager to switch to the C-Series jets!
What about the other Bombardier stable-mates, like the RJ's and Globals?
Or are you having so much fun (not) doing emergency descents in the Q400 that you never get the chance?
A quick summary on my thoughts about a few of the recent comments:
I doubt that the grandfathering clauses would be changed by this accident. Restricting that would make many aircraft operations completely uneconomical. By an order of magnitude. Not exaggerating! It would prohibit any aircraft more than 10 years old from flying.
The causes of this accident appear (for now) to be from a bad system safety assessment, and that (for what it's worth) is a very modern process of analysis. It didn't exist in the 70's but definitely a hallmark of modern avionics design now. The failure, we believe, is in the assumptions and conditions used for the analysis. If the audience is willing, I can show you some of these assumptions and how they affect certification of equipment. Takes a bit of time to prepare that kind of stuff, but I'm game if you are.
I take the comments by Chesley Sullenberger seriously. If he's concerned about the FAA, then so am I. My work has some projects that have been stalled by the US government shut-down and a few still are delayed,
and I'm not even working at a US company! It must be awful for the aviation companies that are in the USA.
Canada (and EASA) may be taking upon themselves a detailed review of the 737 certification. I hear rumours and rumblings from Transport Canada that a resources are being moved to respond to this need. Last fall I attended a seminar on system safety analysis (only 1 week after the Lion Air crash; how I regret not asking a question at the time). The expert at Transport Canada had a tremendous grasp on the issues and methods to assure reliability of modern aircraft systems. He was even reporting some cutting edge stuff like avionics faults that could be traced to cosmic radiation (facts to back it up!). I have a lot of faith that if people at TC, like this person, are evaluating the Boeing certification, independently of the FAA, that we WILL get to the bottom of these tragedies.
It just can't happen quickly enough.
No one believes the theory except the one who developed it. Everyone believes the experiment except the one who ran it.
STF