AOA has a lot of bearing on pitch and vice versa, and the aoa combined with airspeed controls the PLI (pitch limit indicator showing the pitch that will result in a stall). Pitch up and retard power as this crew did, and pitch/AOA increases to stall. They were deep stalled for 6 minutes! I suppose Im having issues conceptualizing the AOA VS Pitch as they were in straight and level flight and not an AOA driven accelerated stall. In this case critical pitch indications would not be the same as AOA but pitch stall angle would almost mirror AOA (-+chord) isnt that correct?
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the PF makes a sidestick control input which raises the nose and causes the aircraft to climb rapidly to 38,000ft. There was no reason to climb, the PF did not announce an intention to do it, and the aircraft was not cleared by ATC to do so. The natural result of climbing without an increase in power is a loss of speed.
I agree with you on pilot shortage issues. I champion the fact that a properly trained low time pilot is better then a poorly trained high time pilot (My bad on assuming that most of his 3000 hours were as a cruise pilot, while that may actually be) However, in this instance it appears that we had a low time (for a heavy a330) cruise pilot that was not well trained and turned a standard emergency procedure into a major disaster. Colgan was at 2000 feet and had seconds to realize his error, this pilot had several minutes.
Procedure is the maintain pitch and thrust and he made a full nose up pitch to 10000fpm instantly with no thrust change. Cruise pilots are not allowed to be PF under FL200 and only are allowed to do takeoffs and landings in the sim, so it goes without saying that this person had zero recent hand flying experience. Additionally Airbus pilots are trained to realize that the plane is smarter then them and cant be stalled, and has almost no real control feel. They saw and called out "alternate law" meaning no or less stall protections but then held the stick back for several minutes while undoubtedly feeling the 10,000 fpm drop......any pilot on earth should, during a several minute period of straight stalling at least try to vigorously break the stall with full nose down and thrust. We train for it at the regional level. Private pilots do stalls under the hood as well.
The address to the pilot shortage is to make it a job that people want to do and can afford to live on. It currently takes a college degree and $60k+ in training to get a $20k a year job. If the job was attractive people would do it. Taking short cuts like becoming a cruise pilot instead of gaining experience and yes, years of 121 training and re-training......before touching a "heavy" aircraft seems to make a lot more sense. I'm not conflicting, I'm saying that people need to start at the ground level but still making a living wage and work their way up to heavy aircraft. There are waaaaay more jobs at 135 and regional 121 operations then the majors.
No one at the Indy 500 this year got their drivers license in a Formula One car nor do truck drivers get their permits in fully loaded 18 wheelers on Artic roads.