So will all the helo goal tenders find their way back?
 BREAKING: The NTSB just dropped the Blackhawk helicopter’s black box recordings from the deadly Washington, DC crash with a commercial jet—and it’s a jaw-dropper. Here’s what it tells us:
— Project Constitution (@ProjectConstitu) February 18, 2025
 Altitude Chaos: The chopper’s altimeter was off—way off. Pilot read 300 feet,… pic.twitter.com/bmWjHx9Utx
Quote:
This wasn't just one mistake, it was a cascade of failures. 67 lives gone.
Every single crash is.doubledog said: BREAKING: The NTSB just dropped the Blackhawk helicopter’s black box recordings from the deadly Washington, DC crash with a commercial jet—and it’s a jaw-dropper. Here’s what it tells us:
— Project Constitution (@ProjectConstitu) February 18, 2025
 Altitude Chaos: The chopper’s altimeter was off—way off. Pilot read 300 feet,… pic.twitter.com/bmWjHx9UtxQuote:
This wasn't just one mistake, it was a cascade of failures. 67 lives gone.
Cascade of failures... RIP
Made worse by the apparent lack of visual ques. "Do you have the CRJ in sight NOT being followed by any # such as "at " your hand, clock, bearing, whatever, just seems inadequate and would not take many more words.txags92 said:Yeah, seems like allowing them to proceed on visual separation, particularly at night, is prone to allowing aircraft to get way too close to each other.Jetpilot86 said:
The answer will be restricted helo ops as visual landings are happening on that runway.
1. Identify a respected institution.
— David Burge (@iowahawkblog) November 10, 2015
2. kill it.
3. gut it.
4. wear its carcass as a skin suit, while demanding respect.#lefties
Quote:
BREAKING: The NTSB just dropped the Blackhawk helicopter's black box recordings from the deadly Washington, DC crash with a commercial jetand it's a jaw-dropper. Here's what it tells us:
Altitude Chaos: The chopper's altimeter was offway off. Pilot read 300 feet, instructor saw 400, but the real number? 278 feetwell above the 200-foot ceiling. They were flying blind on bad data.
They are saying that the altimeters used by the pilot and copilot were calibrated 100' differently from each other, and their actual altitude was 178' above what the pilot was seeing and 78' above what the instructor was seeing. So the pilot was seeing an altimeter that told her she was 100' above the ceiling (within the +/- 150 that I believe the Army allows), the copilot saw them at 200' above the ceiling (outside the +/- 150), and their actual altitude was over twice as high as they were cleared to be.AgLiving06 said:Quote:
BREAKING: The NTSB just dropped the Blackhawk helicopter's black box recordings from the deadly Washington, DC crash with a commercial jetand it's a jaw-dropper. Here's what it tells us:
Altitude Chaos: The chopper's altimeter was offway off. Pilot read 300 feet, instructor saw 400, but the real number? 278 feetwell above the 200-foot ceiling. They were flying blind on bad data.
Help me understand this?
Is this saying the pilots thought they were higher above the ceiling than they actually were? This doesn't help their case since they should have been below 200 on their own readings right?