I want to hear from you guys say, well yeah, the sensor thingy should be redundant just in case.
semp
Is that what the mainstream media told you was necessary? Because they don't understand modern aviation either.
The aircraft I teach has TWO REDUNDANT AOA SENSOR "THINGIES". Guess what? If EITHER sensor malfunctioned that malfunctioning sensor ALONE, ALL BY ITSELF, will trigger the "stick pusher", which will repeatedly push the nose down as long as the malfunctioning sensor is not promptly disabled (by a competent, trained pilot I might add.)
So there you are. REDUNDANT sensors pushing the nose down! Does this confuse you?
It shouldn't. Because when the aircraft has redundant sensors, when one goes bad the aircraft designers make the system do the safest thing. Without the pilot determining which sensor is correct, the default is to use the sensor that senses the stall.
Which answers this accurately put question the FLS asked you:
Two sensors disagree. Now what?
What should be fixed is letting unqualified pilots fly poorly maintained aircraft.
In short, if Boeing had the MCAS using BOTH AVAILABLE SENSORS ON THE AIRCRAFT (there are two) the MCAS would STILL have activated when only ONE sensor malfunctioned. Because that is the safest thing to do until A COMPETENT, TRAINED PILOT analyses the situation and disables the malfunctioning sensor.
I bet you are still confused.