I find it hard to understand how the pilots would not know the stab trim was moving, and how to cut it off.
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2018/11/16/world/asia/li...
If you know computer is getting garbage data / plane acting in an unusual way, you can dial things back. These planes and their engines are so reliable and maintenance is usually so good that it seems you could fall back to closer to direct law flying (power setting / pitch / etc) and at least keep plane out of the drink / gain some altitude.
Boeing is already being sued.
A bit OT but how hasn't the cockpit voice recorder been found yet? It's been weeks while giving off a detectable ping and is in 30m of water, that's recreational level diving. You simply follow signal strength.
Given the big economic hit that occurred last time when Indonesian carriers were banned from Europe you have to wonder whether they actually want to find it.
I believe the force of impact, which was almost vertically nose down at high speed just caused such a shattering of the airplane that it might have fatally destroyed the CVR, or else driven it under many feet of mud and silt.
Re: Your last point - I think this time around the CVR could vindicate the crew and point the blame at Boeing, so it may seem in their best interest to recover it and have extra proof for the court case. Then again, the level of corruption in Indonesia could affect what happens with the recovery process.
edit: of course with the downvotes for an honest question. this site can be ridiculous.
Now, that doesn't mean I didn't double check the aircraft types for some upcoming flights flights...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stabilizer_(aeronautics)#/medi...
It's very possible for the effect of the extreme trim condition to be more than the elevators can overcome. The pilot can certainly override the trim setting, but the issue here is that they weren't expecting that to change, since they weren't trained on the fact that the plane might do it automatically (in those flight conditions).
Here's a good video explaining how trim works (in normal operation) on a (slightly older) 737:
In theory then, solving the stabilizer problem that caused the crash is as simple as flipping both switches to cutoff, then using the wheel to set the stabilizer back to a sane value. Handling a stabilizer runaway is a standard part of US 737 training, and the updated Emergency Airworthiness Directive just says to follow the stabilizer runaway checklist. Again, in theory, this should have been a no-brainer, "common" emergency, and following the usual checklist would have fixed the issue.
However, pilot's mental model of the aircraft has been broken. In the previous generation of 737's, there were exactly two things outside the wheel that could control the stabilizers - the cockpit trim switches, and the autopilot, and each had it's own cutoff switch. Now we have three systems that can control the stabilizer wheels, and the new one doesn't have a labeled switch, nor was anyone told it existed.
So essentially, trim changes the relative 'zero point' of the elevator, and if past a certain angle, even if the pilot applied full nose-up elevator, the altered airflow over the smaller control surface would be unable to counter the altered airflow by the stabiliser itself having been adjusted. I now see why recovery is so dependent on quickly disabling the trim system and resetting the stabiliser to 'true zero'.
>> if the nose of a plane suddenly drops, isn't the pilot's first instinct to pull back on the controls to raise it?
Not exactly, as the correct way to get out of a stall is pointing the nose down, in order to pick up airspeed to gain more lift. The stall horns were going off, so the pilots may have thought they were stalling. In addition, as others have mentioned, the yoke alone may be unable to beat out the trim by the autopilot.
>> From what I've read, in Boeing aircraft at least, the pilot's controls can always override the automatic systems.
Historically, you are exactly right. This is the _biggest_ reason pilots are pissed at Boeing right now. It's believed that the autopilot was turned off entirely when the plane started thinking it was stalling, and trying to point itself down. This is not present on any of the original 737 aircraft, only the MAX series, and Boeing didn't inform pilots of this.
Was that three previous flights of the same aircraft? And if so, why was it still in service?
There was an interesting comment on airliners.net that the USSR operated new airliners on freight services for several years before putting them on passenger services. So far I've confirmed that for the Tu-154 trijet, for example, which flew freight for two years before taking a revenue passenger.
But in the West there has always been a tension between certificating for safety versus commercial imperative. Why hasn't the 737Max been grounded pending investigation? Because that would lead to companies losing money. Why would the FAA care about that? Because it considers manufacturers and airlines as 'stakeholders'.
I would tend to trust the FAA, given the rather impressive track record of aviation. The difference from "Oh, the humanity!" to today, where North America and Europe have entire years without fatalities is astonishing. It's even more impressive considering passenger-miles/p.a. increased by something like 3 or 4 orders of magnitude.
So it would seem that the FAA is doing a rather good job with these decisions. And "not considering airlines as stakeholders" may sound sensible, but is actually a phrase devoid of meaning: If you want to consider safety only, you or I or the Russians could come up with the trivial (and only correct) solution, which is to ban air travel.
Having flown with regional carriers in Russia during my (and their) wild times in the 90s also makes your praise of their processes suspicious of being parody. I personally saw a pilot take a sip from a suspiciously small bottle of clear liquid. But my seat neighbour reassured me: If you think it's dangerous to fly with a drunk pilot, you should see the way he flies when he's sober!
Because jumping to conclusions is not helpful. Let the NTSB do their job and find out what went wrong.
There’s versions of these type of statements for all aircraft manufacturers. Does it add anything to the conversation to state them? Not in my opinion.