
Well, good ole "fly by wire" MAY have struck again, as the mystery of the Airbus crash in the Swiss ALps, begins to unfold! First question in my mind is the 8 minutes from 38,000 feet. Even at 2,000 feet per minute decent to 8,000 feet where the crash occurred. The figures don't add up, 2,000 feet per minute would only be a 16,000 foot reduction in altitude, which would be at 22,000 feet, so the aircraft must have been descending at much higher rate of descent, more like 3400 feet per minute. Next question, was the crew conscious? If so, why could they not communicate? Is this a nother "Lithium iron" ran a way battery problem and with no electric system, no radio's! If that was the case, they would not be able to control the aircraft, as the pilots could only tell the computer what to do, then the computer would direct the aircraft. No back up control cables, and as far as I know, no "RAT" which could be deployed for back up electrical systems.
Another fine "engineering" demonstration of "Murphy's Law".
I remember a few years back, seeing a A300 on a test flight and they crashed straight ahead after takeoff because the computer reduced the thrust setting, and the test pilots could not over ride the computer to avoid a crash.
I understand the Boeing aircraft's system can be over rode by the pilots and I don't recall any Boeing crash which the pilots could not control the aircraft.
Maybe in time we will learn of the real reason, and improvements can be made in the interest of safety>