Well, you're wrong. The crew was not only the last line of defense to save to save the jet, they were also the ultimate cause of its demise.
1) They failed to reduce thrust from the takeoff setting.
2) They re-engaged a malfunctioning pitch trim system in violation of the QRC/QRH.
I can't think of a properly trained, experienced crew doing BOTH of these things. I certainly can't imagine them doing item 2.
The MCAS is just a fancy name for the Speed Trim System (STS) that's been on the 737 for DECADES.
I think that you might be missing my point. I think that the air crew's experience was probably the least relevant factor in the crashes. (Not a non-factor)
Boeing itself has stated that a pilot needed to react correctly in four seconds. However, Boeing's own analysis was that some pilots would take up to ten seconds to react correctly.
I do not know if that time calculation for correct reaction time assumed that pilots even knew about MCAS.
A system which Boeing actively took measures to misrepresent to regulators and ACTIVELY conceal from pilots. Boeing, against the cautions of some of its own engineers and test pilots, installed an automated single point of failure flight control system that turned the 737 Max into what now some are calling
Flying Coffins.
It is astonishing to realize that about three days after the first crash, when Boeing’s own engineers figured out that it was an MCAS induced crash, that no meaningful action was taken.
And five months later ….
https://www.c-span.org/video/?465775-1/boeing-ceo-dennis-muilenburg-testifies-737-max-safetyI know that five and half hours is a lot to go through. Here are some interesting moments:
At about the 3:26:00 mark a pilot/congressman asks Boeing questions about MCAS. He is questioning if the STS procedures are in fact the same. (MCAS is not just another way to spell STS.) There is something there for everyone I guess. (It is about 5 minutes long)
At about the 1:25:00 mark Boeing provides a statement about what they currently think that they got wrong. (My guess is that they will expand and revise these comments as time goes by)
At the start of the hearing (at about 9:15) Chairman Defazio sums up, fairly well I think, some (but not all) of the Boeing 737 issues.
I do not want this happen, but I think that commercial airplane engineering and production in the US will become much smaller in years to come. Boeing managers and executives have turned this company into a Libertarian Scam. I do not know if it will survive. I wouldn’t be surprised to see Boeing investors, once they see an impact to their precious shareholder value, will demand that the commercial airplane business gets sold off.
We will all lose.