#261825 - 07/12/13 06:00 PM
Re: Air Crash Survival
[Re: AKSAR]
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Pooh-Bah
Registered: 09/15/05
Posts: 2485
Loc: California
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The Asiana 214 crash does raise some troubling issues as far as maximizing your own chance of surviving a plane crash are concerned.
None of the passengers had any warning prior to the crash so one minute you're chatting with the person next to you and the next minute your whole upper body is slamming into the seat in front of you at a high rate of speed. After landing, the pilots initially announced that people should remain in their seats so the eventual evacuation was delayed further. Three of the cabin crew were ejected out the rear, presumably leaving the passengers in the rear section without any crew to direct them. Two of the escape slides deployed into the cabin, and not outward, thus blocking those exits and immobilizing two more crewmembers. The 911 tapes seem to indicate that ambulances did not arrive for a signficant length of time (callers say "20 minutes" but not sure if their sense of time can be trusted), but it's not clear if any of the firefighters were tending to the injured or perhaps just to the most seriously injured because there were so many injured.
Not sure how much smoke was an issue before everyone was evacuated.
Edited by Arney (07/12/13 11:36 PM) Edit Reason: Clarify first sentence
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#261827 - 07/12/13 06:52 PM
Re: Air Crash Survival
[Re: Arney]
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Veteran
Registered: 08/31/11
Posts: 1233
Loc: Alaska
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The Asiana 214 crash does raise some troubling issues. You raise several good points Arney. Regarding the lack of warning, I'm not sure what could be done about that. It appears the pilots thought they could manage the landing, or else do a go around, until seconds before impact. The message there (for me at least) is that takeoffs and landings are always critical times. I try to stay alert and make sure my belt is extra tight. I'm also not sure what could have been done differently regarding the ejected crew. The tail section was ripped off the plane, and apparently both of the fatalities were sitting in that section. Also I believe at least one of the crew in that section was severly injured. The two aspects I find most troubling are the pilots delaying the evacuation and the escape slides inflating inside. The pilots knew they had just had a severe crash and everything I've ever heard about crashes is to get out as fast as possible. I think that was clearly an error on the pilots part, and I hope pilots in the future will take a lesson from that. Regarding the slides inflating inside, one account I read indicated that the NTSB crash examiners plan to investigate that. We may eventually see some improvements in escape slides as a result. I'm sure seconds seemed like minutes and minutes seemed like hours to the people laying on the runway. One account I read said that the ambulances were sent to a nearby staging point and then dispatched to patients as the Fire/EMS folks triaged patients and called for transport. This would all be appropriate under ICS. All accounts I've read indicate the the hospitals thought the triage was handled extremely well. I've never been involved in a real Mass Casualty Incident, but I have had some MCI training. A MCI will by its very nature tend to initially be chaotic and overwhelm emergency responders. The key is to quickly separate the dead, from the severly injured, from the walking wounded. Meanwhile mobilize more resources and focus them first on those for whom you can do the most good. Given that only two people died, the responders clearly did some things right. I think we should also look at the positive aspects. An airliner with 307 people crashed, had its tail ripped off, and burned. Yet only 2 died. Of the 305 survivers I think about 180 went to the hospital, but most of those have already been released. I think there were about 30 with severe injuries. The death toll could easily have been much more severe. Clearly a lot of things worked well.
_________________________
"Toto, I've a feeling we're not in Kansas any more." -Dorothy, in The Wizard of Oz
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#261839 - 07/12/13 11:34 PM
Re: Air Crash Survival
[Re: AKSAR]
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Geezer in Chief
Geezer
Registered: 08/26/06
Posts: 7705
Loc: southern Cal
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The death toll has now risen to three; your point remains valid.
_________________________
Geezer in Chief
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#261844 - 07/13/13 02:24 AM
Re: Air Crash Survival
[Re: AKSAR]
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Veteran
Registered: 02/27/08
Posts: 1580
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Good idea, Jacquie! Maybe I'll start taking exit row seats, too -- as ireckon likes to remind us, in the unlikely event there is a crash, and in the even more unlikely event that I survive the crash... Another thing we can learn from the crash is: don't get covered up by foam. There is apparently a possibility that the fire trucks killed two passengers who were covered up by foam. It's unclear whether they were still alive when the truck ran over them. http://www.cnn.com/2013/07/12/us/asiana-airlines-crash/Let's keep the victims in our thoughts.
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#261853 - 07/13/13 08:01 PM
Re: Air Crash Survival
[Re: AKSAR]
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Veteran
Registered: 08/31/11
Posts: 1233
Loc: Alaska
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For those interested in incident response, a number of articles are appearing about the Asiana crash. I think it is valuable for everyone to understand how agencies respond to this sort of thing. Incident Commander Talks about 777 Response, OpsConcerns stemming from recorded 9-1-1 dispatch calls released Wednesday have focused on the sufficiency of medical response to the crash scene. Robinson explained that, as the emergency incident commander, his job was to set the distance for emergency vehicles that would arrive soon after him. "I parked far away from the plane, because as I positioned my unit, all other units fall in behind me," Robinson said. "No less than 30 vehicles, ambulances, fire engines, mobile units, commands, helicopters, are all parking from my point, behind me. I have to choose a safe point where everyone else is going to park." As he took command of the scene, Robinson said his emergency units, including two rescue units, were already there and asking for more assistance for survivors. "They were there probably in a little over a minute," Robinson said of Station 2, dubbed "crash house" because of its proximity to the runways. "They got there fast. They were there before I got there, and I got there fast." He went to work calling for a "recipe of resources," including mutual aid backup from San Mateo County and San Francisco, shuttle buses for survivor transport from the plane area to a safe distance, and the coroner's office -- just in case. By the time the first sweep for passengers was complete and firefighter had turned to fighting the fire, the "cavalry arrived" with backup assistance and a San Francisco Fire Department assistant chief, who took over command from Robinson, he said.
The risk is that the fuel tanks could explode and engulf rescue vehicles parked too close. Also, having fire trucks and ambulances running around randomly greatly increases the risk of collisions and running over someone, which apparently happened in one case. The rule in ICS is that first on scene takes command until relieved. As the incident reponse expands, the initial Incident Commander may be relieved by a more qualified IC. The relief is done in a formal manner and communicated. In ICS, everyone should always know who reports to them and who they in turn report to. 911 calls highlight emergency response challenges in Asiana crashThe call to evacuate the plane was made 90 seconds after it came to a halt on the runway, Hersman said on Wednesday. The crew first told passengers to remain seated, but an evacuation began after a flight attendant reported seeing fire outside the plane. The NTSB will examine whether proper evacuation procedures were followed, Hersman said, adding that "hindsight is 20/20." Some passengers on the taped 911 calls reported not seeing ambulances and fire trucks. But emergency responders say procedures call for not bringing vehicles too close to the scene, in order to avoid chaos and collisions. In this case, there was also a worry that the plane could explode, said Mindy Talmadge, a spokesman for the San Francisco Fire Department. "There's active fire, and there's fuel leaking, and there's debris all over the field, the last thing you want to do is take a chance of the plane exploding," she said in a phone interview on Thursday. A fire burned through much of the plane's cabin, although Hersman said the fuel tanks did not rupture. Dudgeon said procedures called for a methodical approach in identifying the injured, starting in one spot and working forward. That could potentially leave some victims unattended for many minutes. "If you start to worry about go here, go there, you miss things," Dudgeon said. "As a paramedic, when you're doing triage, you start where you are. You keep moving forward until you've triaged everybody."
_________________________
"Toto, I've a feeling we're not in Kansas any more." -Dorothy, in The Wizard of Oz
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#261857 - 07/13/13 11:07 PM
Re: Air Crash Survival
[Re: AKSAR]
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Old Hand
Registered: 04/16/03
Posts: 1076
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Yeah, folks have come to expect first responders to rush in with no regard for scene safety. I'll do the best job I can but I am not going to needlessly get killed or get my partners killed because patients insist that I sacrifice my life on demand.
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#261874 - 07/16/13 05:41 AM
Re: Air Crash Survival
[Re: AKSAR]
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Old Hand
Registered: 10/19/06
Posts: 1013
Loc: Pacific NW, USA
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I was reminded recently that I have flown over 500 flights in just about 20 years, more than the average flyer. And I'm not a happy flyer really, although by far I have far more confidence in air crews than I have fears that they may mess up. I can recall a handful of flights when we came in too slow and one where we were too low to land, the pilots had the sense to abort and go about for another landing. I distinctly remember I was in a window seat and knew we were off flight path and descending too rapidly like a sinking elevator, I had a growing panic and almost yelled to my row mates to brace for impact, and the sense of relief I felt when the pilot applied power and aborted. I think veteran pilots deadheading in passenger cabins and passengers have a decent sense of this when it happens, definitely - but in my experience its rare to occur. Far more frequent have been weather emergencies, which can be scary as hell. I don't like turbulence, having sat through some really bad southern and Midwestern flights, one of which caused a spinal injury to a Delta attendant. Then there are mechanicals, like a dead engine, including two experiences in foreign aircraft i will not recount - I did sing my death song both times expecting to bite it. I've never had to evacuate under duress but have read the safety card probably on 95% of flights, you never know. One of my morbid curiosities has been reviewing aircraft crash investigations and those with fatalities are grisly and consistently random in their physical effects on passengers. I say keep your EMT shears. For about 5 years you couldn't pry me from the exit aisle now when I fly coach I tend to sit about 4-5 rows behind. Even then I'm just playing the lottery and hoping for a relatively low speed crash like Asiana. If you crash the odds of having a really great pilot at the stick are pretty good, its fair to have faith in your pilot most flights. There are just no really great options to crash land jets at speed. Those passengers were lucky as hell to survive.
Sounds like lot of vivid memories but on the whole its been smooth air - thousands of hours of boredom punctuated by moments of sudden terror, like on a runaway roller coaster. Nothing you can do.
People aren't meant to fly otherwise they'd have wings, and feathers coming out of their assholes. A wise old TWA pilot told me that...
Edited by Lono (07/16/13 05:50 AM)
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#261875 - 07/16/13 11:20 AM
Re: Air Crash Survival
[Re: Lono]
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Geezer in Chief
Geezer
Registered: 08/26/06
Posts: 7705
Loc: southern Cal
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The stats claim you are safer flying than traveling the same distance by other forms of transportation.Life is a gamble.
_________________________
Geezer in Chief
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#261876 - 07/16/13 01:43 PM
Re: Air Crash Survival
[Re: AKSAR]
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Old Hand
Registered: 08/10/06
Posts: 882
Loc: Colorado
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It's quite amazing now to consider that in the 40's, 50's and early 60's the continuous loss of life that was considered normal in the business. But things can never be perfect.
A friend in the FAA who says that he believes his son will probably fly on airliners that have no pilot. The backup for the autpilot will be a flight attendant who has some simulator time to be able to land the plane if needed(maybe).
Considering that pilot error really is a major contributor to the remaining accident rate, it's a logical step to remove the pilot from the cockpit and substitute Windows Autopilot 1.0 instead. (and we all know just how error-free software is.... right?)
But you won't find ME on one of those flights!
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