As a low-time PPL, I'm not qualified to judge on how the pilots reacted, but for the sake of the discussion, here is what I learned from the interim reports (
3rd here) and various discussions on pilot forums (mostly pprune.org):
Facts:
- The events happened during a sleep phase of the pilots circadian rythm
- When the Captain (Dubois) leaves the flight deck to take his rest, there is no briefing about the responsibilities of each FO (Robert PNF and Bonin PF at that time)
- When auto-pilot disconnects and the facts that speeds are unreliable is acknowledged, pitch & power procedure is not mentioned
- Robert (PNF) did acknowledge the degradation to Alternate Law at 02h 10' 22" (CVR transcript, page 90 of 3rd interim report)
- as mentioned in the article, lack of CRM
- When Dubois returns, there is no report of what happened (unreliable speeds, subsequent climb, alternate law)
- CRM doesn't improve after captain's return
Speculations:
- It is possible at 1st that Robert and Bonin were thinking that the initial climb and the beginning of the descent were caused by up- and downdrafts, as the plane was flying in a turbulent area
- When CAS falls below 60 kt, the stall warning is inhibited (3rd interim report page 20). The logic behind is the following: at such low speeds, the AoA vanes are unreliable. This may have contributed to the crew's confusion: while deeply stalled, no warning when the pilots are pulling on the sticks, but if they begin to push the nose down, the speed increases and AoA readings become valid again, triggering the stall warning
- While the AoA readings are sent to the flight computers, there is no AoA dial or tape for the pilots. Maybe they would have realized that they were in a deep stall if an AoA indication had been available for them
- While it didn't contribute to the crash as no stall recovery was attempted, the THS (Tail Horizontal Stabiliser) auto-trimmed itself up to the stops although speeds and, a little later, AoA readings were unreliable. As the auto-trim is actuated by relatively slow electric motors, it could have delayed for too long a recovery started with enough altitude
- Like someone said, training and culture seemed to fail the crew
Blue skies to the crew and their passengers.
On a side note, the 'bus aerodynamics proved a pretty solid stability because the plane didn't enter a spin while so deeply stalled (40+° AoA) in turbulent air and engines power going from TOGA to IDLE and back to TOGA.