the first car I bought was a 1977 mustang. it was fast. I mean you would tap on the gas and the wheels would spin. anyway few days after I bought it, i was on the freeway on ramp, i noticed 2 big rigs coming over, I knew I could go faster and safely merge. so I did, now I stepped on the gas I moved left and the trucks were at a safe distance behind me. but I had a problem the accelerator got stuck so the throttle was wide open, the car just kept going faster and faster, i stepped hard on the gas pedal trying to get it unstuck. didnt work, next option I could think of was put it in neutral. so i coasted with the throttle stuck at full gas it was noisy, i safely pulled over on the shoulder, open the hood and was able to release the level for the throttle that got stuck.
now think about a few years back when some japanese company had problems with cars accelerating out of control. they say it was the car floor mats or a problem with software or whatever i dont really remember and for this it doesnt matter. there was a problem that would happen rarely but it did happen.
now a few people got killed including a police officer that had 2 or 3 other passengers in the car. he was at 100 mph trying to control the car while a passenger was talking to 911 operator. a few other cars had burned their breaks all the way to the metal because they kept breaking while the car was at full speed.
now if you know how to drive this is basic, and I mean basic knowledge. you will burn the breaks if you step on them while stepping on full gas at the same time. you cant stop car like that. you put it in neutral and let the car rev up as much as it wants but the breaks now will safely slow it down.
so who's fault was it for all those crashes, the drivers who didnt follow basic rules or the whatever made the cars accelerate out of control or combination of both. I think it was a combination of both.
i know, you already mentioned the crews that crashes failed to follow basic rules of flight. lots of really experienced pilots here with billions of hours in simulations and trainers who I really believe are really good in their field. even a guy who said his father trained way above what is required and I believe that. I trust all your knowledge in this field as I have none.
but you still cant tell what happened in the pilots head when they first thought "oh toejam, something is wrong". you were not there. you blame the pilots for compounding the errors and that is true, they did agravated a situation, just like the car drivers made the situation worst, they should have just put the car in neutral, stop, turn off the engine and call a tow truck. people died. but it's not just the pilots/drivers errors, something else happened. and all the errors started after that first "oh toejam something happened".
anyway I am gonna have a beer and have a good thought for all the people that died in those planes and all the people that died in those car crashes.
semp