NASA Releases Cryptic Airline Safety Data 148
An anonymous reader writes "NASA released part of a controversial study about air traffic safety Monday. The space agency spent $11 million on a survey of airline pilots. Agency officials were so disturbed by the findings that they intended to destroy the information rather than release it. But at an October congressional hearing, NASA administrator Michael Griffin changed tack and said the agency would release its findings. The research shows that safety problems occur far more often than previously recognized. NASA has been criticized however for not providing 'documentation on how to use its data, nor did it provide keys to unlock the cryptic codes used in the dataset.'"
Oh no! (Score:1, Funny)
I think the airlines should lobby to make me safer by having no pilots on board, then the fares would go down too.
I'm very afraid. Fire the pilots, or at least only have one on board. That would be safer.
Getting rid of my rights to a fair trial would also make me feel safer.
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The main issue in airline safety (in my opinion) is not a single pilot or airliner nor terrorists or passengers causing mayhem but it's miscommunication and over-stressed traffic controllers and too much traffic in specific airports (some airports have a plane take off a
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I would feel much more comfortable being judged by a computer algorithm. At least then trials would be deterministic.
Should I cite examples of the trials of Roge Blake [btinternet.com] or Space Commander Travis [btinternet.com] of Blakes 7, the law system of The Cluster in the Lexx four-part miniseries Tales from a Parallel Universe (especially the trial of Thodin), the system of instant justice in the megacities of Judge Dredd, or the legal system of the Edo in Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "Justice" [tvsquad.com]? I can't decide!
reminds me of the onion (Score:5, Funny)
Rep. John Haller (R-PA) introduces a bill that will allocate (classified) dollars over the next (classified) years to fight flesh-eating (classified).
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Right! (Score:4, Funny)
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NASA's mission (Score:3, Insightful)
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Re:NASA's mission (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:NASA's mission (Score:5, Insightful)
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Then classify an incident as 'unintended disassembly'.
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Re:NASA's mission (Score:4, Interesting)
1) Profit.
2) Beat our competition to it so we don't look weak.
Number 1 is a pretty hard sell at the moment because we don't really have a clue how to monetize space yet. Some rich people are beginning to take those risks for various reasons, and hopefully something will fall out of that. Don't expect people to be seriously considering bringing in trillion dollar asteroids to NEO to mine though.
Number 2 hasn't been a motivation for a while. The few players in this arena who can field whole space programs themselves don't view each other as competitors, nor do they view failing to make it to the next milestone first as a defeat in any sense. If China proves out a full, impressive space program which looks like it might be a military or economic threat to the West, then perhaps we will see something. Until then, I wouldn't count on this as a motivator either.
Straight risk-taking isn't really an option for governments right now either, especially Western ones, due to monetary concerns (like shoveling billions into various police actions.) This leaves us basically with billionaires that have a lot of time on their hands to bring down the cost so that governments, which ultimately are most likely to take those risks, will be able to justify the cost of doing so. So if you want to see space really done right, support those companies and persons who are working to make it cheap.
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1) Profit.
2) Beat our competition to it so we don't look weak.
Sometimes in the past groups of humans have done "crazy" things in the name of survival, as well.
Number 1 is a pretty hard sell at the moment because we don't really have a clue how to monetize space yet. Some rich people are beginning to take those risks for various reasons, and hopefully something will fall out of that. Don't expect people t
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As to trillion dollar NEAs, why not? Many if not most of them are likely to be old comets without a lot of heavy metals, but if we could find one that had high concentrations of heavy metals, we're likely only talking about a 100-150m diameter rock. It might take a generation or two to bring it in, but we could do it with existing technology.
When was the last time you saw anything in the space program really thought out and executed that had a payoff in a generation or two, as opposed to within the next 5 to 10 years? No one wants to take the risk right now, and that's my point. We have a very risk-averse government at the moment. An external influence will have to prove to them that the risks are low, or at least cheap. Neither is true presently.
Also you can be guaranteed people would be afraid of moving a rock of any significance to N
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There, fixed for you.
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Not to even think about all the tech spin-offs and basic industrial advances.
Re:NASA's mission (Score:5, Funny)
Re:NASA's mission (Score:4, Insightful)
"Mod me insightful, please"
And mind what? got an instant 5+ insightful.
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This makes me fairly inclined to believe what they have to say -- they're in the unique position of being experts on the subject, but also relatively unbiased. If NASA releases an overwhelmingly positive or negative report about the state of the FAA, it's not going to considerably effect NASA no matter what the outcome. (Although, an accurate report outlining specific failures of the FAA
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You don't fix problems by trying wacky new things that you have no confidence in. You do things that are tried and true.
Oh, and by the way, did you ever consider tha
blame the media (Score:5, Insightful)
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Got it.
Great. Do you fly an airline, and which one is it, so I can avoid them for life because now I know they hire
On a wing and a prayer (Score:3, Informative)
Your tax dollars at work.
his reminds me of the time President Bush dismissed an EPA http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2002/06/03/tech/main510920.shtml? [cbsnews.com] Bush dismisses global warming warning on global sarming as the work of the the bureaucracy.
Re:On a wing and a prayer (Score:4, Funny)
Oh yeah... that was so funny, I
that G-sey feeling (Score:5, Interesting)
Moments later, with no hesitation at all, the pilot came onto the intercom in the most baritone lounge-chair voice you can imagine:
"I just had a chat with air traffic who told me they would feel a lot more comfortable if I banked to the right. I said to myself 'if they're more comfortable, then I'm more comfortable' so we did. Now we're all feeling very comfortable. It should be a smooth ride into Toronto, so relax and enjoy the in-flight service."
No doubt we were bearing toward Baltimore as he spoke and air traffic was still busy determining how to turn him around again.
I also wondered what additional service is required when they ping the G ball for 15 seconds like that. I just found a web page that states that the g-force limit of a 737 is unknown. Fortunately, the answer wasn't recovered from the flight recorder of the plane I was on that day.
My father was once on a flight that dumped fuel over the ocean, circled back, and landed five minutes after takeoff. I've always suspected that incidents were more frequent than the airline industry wishes to publicize. I wonder if that smooth recovery speech is part of the pilot simulator training. I wonder if he was giving us that speech while the copilot was checking out the lights that indicate the wings are indeed still attached.
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rj
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The bank angle, of course, being the problem so many airlines are in financial trouble nowadays.
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I wonder how pathetic those latches are if they open during a sharp turn? The bins should be latched securely enough to withstand any maneuver the aircraft is capable of within design spec. Clearly, someone got cheap.
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Or comedy gold.
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Reminds me of a flight I was on in Australia at the end of my R&R from Vietnam. We left Sydney on a Flying Tiger Stretch 707 headed for Cam Ranh Bay with a fuel stop in Darwin. Over the Outback, we experienced an hydraulic failure involving a control surface; the rudder, as I recall. We land in Darwin with no problem, the plane is worked on for about nine hours and we take off around midn
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Airplanes have a maximum takeoff weight, and a maximum landing weight. They are not necessarily the same. If the plane is dumping fuel over the ocean, I deduce that it was probably a transoceanic flight. The plane had a long way to go and would want to carry as much fuel as possible. Someone could get sick, and the pilot would need to turn back to the airport. The landing gear can't hold
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While the g-force limit of a 737 might be unknown, it has been designed and tested to exceed by at least 150% the stress/strain requirements for a transport-cate
Woopteedoo (Score:2)
Flight Hours, Flight Legs, Career Hours, Aircraft 1, % Hours Aircraft 1, Aircraft 2, % Hours Aircraft 2, Aircraft 3, % Hours Aircraft 3, Aircraft 4, % Hours Aircraft 4, Aircraft 5, % Hours Aircraft 5, Aircraft 6, % Hours Aircraft 6.
How this is useful safety information is left as an excersize for the reader.
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Getting their data into 1NF is left as an exercise to the reader.
THESE people launch the space shuttle? The reason they don't build a fifth one is because their inventory database has the columns:
Name,SKU, QtyShuttle1, QtyShuttle2 , QtyShuttle3 , QtyShuttle4Re: (Score:2)
How this is useful safety information is left as an excersize for the reader
Well, it doen't take a genius to draw a few conclusions. Looking at some "coincidences":
We have 25360 two-column rows (745 +30/34 pages at 34/page) with no clear ordering. From the magnitude of the hours, I would suspect it has a base unit of at least one month, and probably more (due to the presence of a few high numbers such as 300 hours).
We have 25308 "career hours" rows (744 +12/3
2500 pages of partial SQL in PDF - nice. (Score:3, Informative)
Hey, NASA, thanks a lot.
(oh, and if you're worried about people using a modified/hacked data set, publish a hash on your website.)
Re:2500 pages of partial SQL in PDF - nice. (Score:5, Informative)
That's part of the point. The data collection is ANONYMOUS. The goal is that pilots will report MORE if they know that their voluntary reporting of incidents that don't require FAA reports will stay anonymous. Stuff happens up there. Sometimes it's bad stuff that's nobody's fault. But a pilot is far more likely to call attention to a potentially bad situation that's nobody's fault if he knows that it won't come back and bite him.
If you add the exact time and coordinates of every incident it wouldn't be hard to back-track and put names with each one. There are VERY detailed FAA records of who flew every flight leg in the country over the last few years. It's not hard to back-up anonymous data if you leave too many variables that can be referenced with outside data -- see what happened to Netflix/IMBD [slashdot.org].
If it takes anonymity to get better data, then let's get better data. I'd much rather have more anonymous pilots reporting close calls truthfully than have fewer pilots reporting data and trying to put a positive spin on it. You can make as many laws as you want requiring disclosure, but every single pilot in the known universe will always put a positive spin on things if he knows that his job (and his family) are on the line.
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Not Your Job (Score:5, Informative)
"[the agency shall] provide for the widest practicable and appropriate dissemination of information concerning its activities and the results thereof."
Re:Not Your Job (Score:4, Insightful)
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An xls file would have been nice... (Score:3, Informative)
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Summary: (Score:5, Funny)
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This is proof that my tinfoil hat, cell blocking paint, magic underwear and living in a basement are prudent methods of self-protection!
People are out to get me! They're googling me and my words!
Ask any pilot, more regulations != not safer (Score:1, Insightful)
regulations can help (Score:2)
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I have filed a NASA ASRA Report! (Score:5, Informative)
Yes and no. (Score:2)
No, I do not agree that that is justification for any kind of avoidance. Systems do not change by avoiding the abuses and failures within them. Systems change by confronting the flaws head-on and continuing
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Only one question why stop at doctors ? Lets *ALL* do this.
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Unfortunately, not ethical.
Who's lying and how much? (Score:2)
The information "removed" was previously released. What's changed is that it now carries the caveat that it hasn't been peer reviewed. That's where they extract the facts and inject the "not properly vetted" in attempt to use the connotation to make it sound worse.
One of the people in charge of designing and carrying out the project is complaining about the data handling. He's one of the people who created the data. T
data analysis (Score:2)
It's ~24600 rows (746 pages) of what must be pilot data.
The first 746 pages are Flight Hours (A1), Flight Legs (A2), and would be how many of each the pilot has undertaken, in the last N years.
The next 746 pages are Career Hours (A8), this is also sorted, so I think it was the key they used.
The last 746 pages are percentage and plane-type breakdown per pilot.
It mainly seems to be the larger jets, but there are a few interesting smaller, older aircraft, couple of fighters, and business jets
One can understand why not release the findings (Score:1, Flamebait)
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Open the blind when flying over the EU, sometimes you can see them wizz by close enough to feel the "wash", it's was quite an awsome sight the first time I saw it. What I find remarkable is that there are so few disasters.
Regardless of the logic in the traffic comparison, being in a plane still makes me anxious enough that I can't sleep a wink, even on trips from Oz to the EU with an airline that has never lost a plane [wikipedia.org].
TCAS Stats (Score:2)
the statistics relating to near misses that were averted by the TCAS system
(in some cases unbeknownst to the pilots themselves until they had landed)
many more people would think twice or perhaps even thrice before boarding
an aircraft.
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during the take-off and landing stages in both cases the secondary systems have to kick-in because either the
pilot was pulling up too fast and as a result would have hit the tail on runway for take-off, or they were landing
with an awkward angle.
In both cases the system automatically kicks in and "attempts" to rectify the situation. The trouble is there is a
calculation it does relating to a "project
NASA funding depends on politics (Score:1)
Well duh (Score:1)
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It's not the engineers. Engineers are required to take english classes for their degrees, while no one is required to study any engineering. I find it's most often the case that the engineer knows more about grammar than the english lit. person knows about electronics.
On another note some people just grow tired of setting it after frequent power outages...
I don't really have anything interesting to add to the discussion, I just wanted to ask for your phone number. Hex is just fine as long as you includ
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Apparently, you are one. An engineer, I mean.
Not all the data (Score:3, Informative)
More interesting data that was released is here: http://www.nasa.gov/news/reports/NAOMS_air_carrier_survey_data.html [nasa.gov]
Although - these are really just answers to questions. I've spent some time going through the various links and I don't see anything that describes the questions that most of the columns relate to - although this file seems to contain the most information about the results. http://www.nasa.gov/pdf/207238main_NAOMS%20Reference%20Report_508.pdf [nasa.gov]
Is a near miss proof of danger, or of safety? (Score:5, Interesting)
Is this proof that that the system is unsafe? Seems to me that something went wrong, safety systems kicked in, people took action as trained, and a problem was mitigated. So, the safety zone being 5 miles paid off. All went well. That's why we have a 5 mile safety zone and not a 4 mile one (or two, or whatever).
Congratulations to the safety engineers, the pilots, and traffic controllers. Through their training, planning, and risk assessment the practices and procedures were in place to handle a mishap and not result in a tragedy.
I recall the last few years of service of the Maine Yankee power plant not far from here. One day there was some kind of problem. Safety systems came in to play. The plant was shut down. Nobody was hurt. Nothing dangerous was released. All was well. Some people screamed at the danger of having the plant around. To me, this made no sense. I say the engineers and operators should have been celebrated for having built something that continued to be safe even as its lifespan was drawing to and end. All the safety systems still worked and everyone went home that night to their families.
Does the system need overhaul? Surely it does. I happen to know a few people who work for the FAA. One is a controller and the other some kind of inspector who flies around a lot and is in charge of some things. I hear stories from them -- though nothing specific -- and I know the stress they're under. We all know the stories off the equipment in use in those towers being insanely antiquated.
Still and all, these things only prove that to keep thing safe, we're losing efficiency. There is no evidence that we're sacrificing safety. Thousands of these massive things scream down runways at hundreds of miles and hour then leap into the sky propelled by unimaginable forces --all in close quarters to one another -- day in and day out. What a marvel of safety and a triumph of engineering.
I'm looking forward to my next flights -- all but the stupid TSA part anyway.
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As a practical matter, the best way to keep people performing to standards is to treat every successful operation of the safety system as a failure of the human operators. It isn't objectively correct, more a psychological trick that reduces the tendency towards complacency.
No one says we shouldn't log and investigate... (Score:2)
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If you are in any critical job like flying an airliner, or operating a nuclear reactor, or driving a warship then you might overract to these "unsafe" events to help keep people focused and fight complaciency. As long as you don't confuse the two perspectives everything works out.
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Ah, yes - since the safety s
wow, pretty tough words. Are you responsible (Score:2)
I am. Nobody is saying that we should ignore even a single case where safety systems came in to play. All should be investigated and we should understand what, if anything, should be done differently.
That said, humans make mistakes. Parts fail. Random chance bring strange circumstances together. I'm a firefighter, trained in hazmat, confined space rescue, extrication, rope rescue, ice water rescue, Rapid Intervention, and half a dozen other kinds of emergen
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That's the exact opposite of what your original post strongly implies. An implication which you then repeat in the balance of this message.
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Why is it that you can't see a difference between internally investigating and correcting something as a routine review process and publicly declaring an entire industry to be rife with major safety issues and destined for disaster?
Clearly they are two different things.
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Re:Is a near miss proof of danger, or of safety? (Score:5, Informative)
but yes, you're correct, it's generally a system that 'fails well'.
I am an airline Pilot (Score:5, Insightful)
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Best. Euphemism. Ever.
In other news, a woman sues McDonald's for the loss of low temperature to her legs.
Let's snuff out needless rabble. (Score:2)
What's cryptic about the data? (Score:2)
Table 1 (746 pages):
Column A1 - Flight Hours (as labeled)
Column A2 - Flight Legs (as labeled)
Based on the values in the table, I'm guessing this covers a 5-6 month period. (based on my information of a max. 80 flight hours/month).
Table 2 (746 pages):
Column A8 - Career Hours (as labeled)
Table 3 (746 pages):
Acft 1
Acft 2
Acft 3
Acft 4
Acft 5
Acft 6
I think it's pretty obvious that "Acft" means aircraft. The document details the flight histories of the pilots in the response set, with 1 row per pi
C'mon! Wake up people!. (Score:2)
It's because all the keys in the datasets identify different kinds of UFOs !!
Stuck Mic (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Stuck Mic (Score:4, Interesting)
The odds that the FAA will ever get a fully automated system off the ground are essentially zero in my opinion. There are still airspace restructuring plans from decades ago that were canceled after running way over budget and missing every single deadline. The idea that the FAA will now leap from having equipment still branded with the Civil Aeronautics Board logo (like they do now) to a state of the art computer system is laughable.
The current stated goal of the FAA is to progress to 'Free Flight' where essentially pilots pick their flight path rather than being assigned one by ATC. Controllers then only issue commands to pilots if there is a potential conflict. If I were to start my career in ATC tomorrow, I would sincerely be shocked if it were implemented before I retired.
But then again, we could see another aluminum shower (mid-air collision) and that's been a pretty strong motivator in the past.
I love how pilots lie ... (Score:3, Interesting)
The pilot comes on, and says some bullshit about weather ahead and we're going to wait a few more minutes. I wanted to yell out 'Someone nearly got us killed, you lying sack of crap!', but likely that would get me thrown off the plane.
So whenever I hear the pilot come on, and tell some shit about weather or turbulence, or why the plane is delayed, I don't believe a word of it now. I think that's the part that pisses me off most, to know we're not being dealt with at an adult and honest level.
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Tell me there sparky, how would a pilot know that an airplane is about to land on him from behind? The rear-view mirrors?
And why would the guy get off the runway instead of just taking off?
Per usual, you back-seat pilots are a pain in the ass.
Let's say New York Center (ATC) has a thunderstorm right over one of the airways. So Center puts 20 mile separation between departure
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I'm assuming that tower/control would have said something like "Pull the fuck off, there's a plane right about to land on you". Or perhaps something nicer, but I'm guessing there would have been some *urgency* involved in the discussion, given how close it was.
"And why would the guy get off the runway instead of just taking off?"
I'm wondering if he could have even gotten up to speed or
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What happened, pilot?
Oh, sorry control. WE nearly missed that other plane.
MOD DOWN - yet another minicity fuckwad (Score:2)