Agreed. I definitely think ATC was far too complacent.
This is more confirmation that PAT25 was simply looking at AAL3130 who he was lined up on down the Potomac River. The CRJ was off to his left and turned into him.Martin Q. Blank said:Yes, AAL3130.FireAg said:
Man…the helo pilot says he sees the plane twice…and he asks for (and gets permission for) visual separation…
That leads on to think he was looking at the wrong aircraft…
Martin Q. Blank said:This is more confirmation that PAT25 was simply looking at AAL3130 who he was lined up on down the Potomac River. The CRJ was off to his left and turned into him.Martin Q. Blank said:Yes, AAL3130.FireAg said:
Man…the helo pilot says he sees the plane twice…and he asks for (and gets permission for) visual separation…
That leads on to think he was looking at the wrong aircraft…
You are right about that, but the unknown here is just what is `infrequent' vs rare. Whose idea of rare, or seldom, or infrequent -- the words have different intensities. It might not have been SOOO unusual that they felt need to watchdog it. But given night visibility and the multiple vectors to watch --- how does the helo know one airliner from another batch of lights? This sounds like the weak point that shipping has somewhat more solved.Catag94 said:GAC06 said:
33 is less used than 1, but I wouldn't say it's "seldom used".
Understood. I guess what I'm saying is since it's used less, has a heli route.8 miles from the threshold, when the CRJ switched to 33, and tower knew he had a UH60 on route 4, you'd think it would have occurred to ATC that 'Hey, it's rare we actually have a potential for aircraft to meet right here. I should really watch this one'.
GAC06 said:Martin Q. Blank said:This is more confirmation that PAT25 was simply looking at AAL3130 who he was lined up on down the Potomac River. The CRJ was off to his left and turned into him.Martin Q. Blank said:Yes, AAL3130.FireAg said:
Man…the helo pilot says he sees the plane twice…and he asks for (and gets permission for) visual separation…
That leads on to think he was looking at the wrong aircraft…
By far the most plausible explanation with what we know now
Informative post. On the bold ---- so what IS the way they tell one "set of airliner lights" from another? Sounds like they are content not to have one. (Ship types are usually clear).v1rotate92 said:
Prayers for the victims of this crash. Warning: Speculation. Lots of probable, most likely, and maybe, Don't read if you don't want speculation. I've flown in and out of DCA. I've also flown hundred of hours with NVGs in a fixed wing.
Highly unlikely DEI contributed at all to the cause of this crash. The root cause is the congested airspace and a procedure that relies too heavily on pilot visual deconfliction with no backup. Most likely the Army pilots misidentified the aircraft they were to deconflict or "pass behind." They probably misidentified the aircraft ATC told them to pass behind...They probably focused on an aircraft 3-5 miles behind the Eagle RJ and due to various reasons could not see the RJ. When using NVGs, it greatly improves the ability to see aircraft at night but they limit peripheral vision. It helps to have more than just the pilots scanning the sky in congested airspace. Loadmasters, engineers etc normally help with this. If you polled pilots about where an accident would occur in the USA, DCA would be at the top of the list. Not to say it's dangerous but it has some built in risk that say DFW does not. Still much safer to fly than drive
GAC06 said:
My NVG experience is a decade old now and I've never flown helos but it seems crazy to me anyone would be on goggles in that environment. There are tons of lights and would render the NVG's I'm familiar with worse than useless. Maybe they have something a lot better now.
FTAG 2000 said:375'AggieMD95 said:Catag94 said:TheCurl84 said:Anonymous Source said:
Man...thanks for clearing that up. I was afraid this was the start of a new normal.Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy: "Obviously, it is not standard to have aircraft collide. I want to be clear on that." pic.twitter.com/MtVrku3GAL
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) January 30, 2025
IMO Duffy messed up in his first big test. Saying that both flight paths were "normal" is not reassuring, at all. It makes me wonder why we haven't seen more of this happen. Surely it isn't "normal" to have helicopters crossing the take-off and landing paths of flights at DCA.
As ETFan posted earlier in this thread, here is the published "standard" helicopter routes chart for the area.
Notice the DCA airport and the close proximity of routes 1 and 4 crossing departure/approach traffic patterns of runways 1/28 and 33/15.
Also notice the altitude restriction is at or below 200'.
All this to say, the heli route is standard.
Did collision occur at or below 200 ft ?
torrid said:Juan Brown's video indicates this is a common practice. Maybe not a good one, but not unusual.Rockdoc said:
I'm sorry but that helicopter should have never been on a course to cross that arrival flight path. ATC should have prevented it from taking that course. Period. It's just too busy out there.
fc2112 said:
It was stated earlier that Route 4 has a limit of 200 feet max. Collision happened at 375 feet.
And this is much of it. Because the reverse is also true --- airliners are not supposed to come in lower than certain altitudes ever and on landing that is set as well. So a helo can reliably expect to fly safely UNDER incoming traffic if they are below a certain level and on some common courses.78669AG said:torrid said:Juan Brown's video indicates this is a common practice. Maybe not a good one, but not unusual.Rockdoc said:
I'm sorry but that helicopter should have never been on a course to cross that arrival flight path. ATC should have prevented it from taking that course. Period. It's just too busy out there.
Common practice at 200 ft not 350-400ft
torrid said:Juan Brown talked about it in the video. AA plane was following a standard approach to runway 1, but then directed to take a dogleg and curve around to land on runway 33. Again, this seems to be a standard practice at least with the regional jets as they can land on the shorter 33. I'm not sure why, maybe some scheme to handle the high frequency of flights.Patentmike said:Using this for the included map….VaultingChemist said:Army Blackhawk helicopter pilot should have flown the flight path seen in white but deviated from that approved flight plan near Reagan National Airport in DC.
— JackReacher (@DCjusticeseeker) January 30, 2025
Why? pic.twitter.com/878l5rZwHe
Genuine question, did the Blackhawk know runway 33 was active? I thought someone mentioned traffic was generally on runway 1 and the AA flight received permission to use 33 instead.
Southlake said:
Nobody is jumping to conclusions. This is why we say we speculate.
The Blackhawks don't have TCAS and RAs are inhibited under 3k
titan said:You are probably right. This has looked like a both sides thought clear path set for them type of collision from early on and the real wild card apart from the helo being too high and off path is the change to runway 33 at just that time seems to be problematic enough that would like to know why the plane before them *refused* to accept the change that was mentioned? Was that an experienced airliner pilot that knew was risky in some way not obvious or just routine refusal?akaggie05 said:
My prediction is that the last minute change to runway 33 for the CRJ will be cited as a major factor in the whole chain of events. If you've spent a lot of time at DCA you see a steady stream of traffic arriving and departing from runway 1. For all practical purposes it's essentially a single runway field. 33 is seldom used, due to short length and it also has a crossing with runway 1 itself on the ground, which causes other issues with traffic flow. My guess is that the helo pilots were used to avoiding the primary approach path for runway 1 and had watched several other jets in the patterns lined up for 1, then got somewhat lax about deviating a bit because they were still well away from where they thought all the traffic would be. Last minute change to 33 for the CRJ, poor / confusing communication about visual ID, and there you have it.
Thanks. So as surmised, nothing unusual about such a refusal at all and they are routine.AggieFlyboy said:titan said:You are probably right. This has looked like a both sides thought clear path set for them type of collision from early on and the real wild card apart from the helo being too high and off path is the change to runway 33 at just that time seems to be problematic enough that would like to know why the plane before them *refused* to accept the change that was mentioned? Was that an experienced airliner pilot that knew was risky in some way not obvious or just routine refusal?akaggie05 said:
My prediction is that the last minute change to runway 33 for the CRJ will be cited as a major factor in the whole chain of events. If you've spent a lot of time at DCA you see a steady stream of traffic arriving and departing from runway 1. For all practical purposes it's essentially a single runway field. 33 is seldom used, due to short length and it also has a crossing with runway 1 itself on the ground, which causes other issues with traffic flow. My guess is that the helo pilots were used to avoiding the primary approach path for runway 1 and had watched several other jets in the patterns lined up for 1, then got somewhat lax about deviating a bit because they were still well away from where they thought all the traffic would be. Last minute change to 33 for the CRJ, poor / confusing communication about visual ID, and there you have it.
I refuse last minute runway changes all the time…sometimes I take them…it's a judgement call based off the situation at hand
The runway change will be a minor factor at most
Hmmm. There is the place they may want to look at then. Not so much as to assign blame, but going forward this will only get worse around the world in some ways, so start coming up with ways where the IDs are known at night as well to even the smallest of aircraft. (Wartime of course excepted----any rationale realizes safety disappears in war zones--ships douse lights as well)v1rotate92 said:
Good question Titan. You are correct. They are content to not have one. Most of the time, it's extremely obvious the aircraft the aircraft ATC is referring to. ATC will say something like, "...a Delta airbus at your 10 Oclock 5 miles..." obviously at night you only see bright lights and depth perception is ineffective. Pilots then refer to NAV display and ID the aircraft on the moving map.