- published: 11 Sep 2015
- views: 10387
Gulfstream G-IV Bedford NTSB Hearing
NTSB Animation of Marlin Air Cessna Citation Accident Investigation Near Milwaukee Wisconsin
Acting Chairman Christopher Hart's first briefing on crash of Space Ship Two in Mojave, Calif.
Helicopter Safety Starts In The Hangar by the National Transportation Safety Board
NTSB PM Press Briefing SWA Flight 812 Apr 3 2011
RTSB Crash test Number 1 [ROBLOX Transportation Safety Board]
Transportation Safety Board
Dreamliner News - All Nippon Airways, National Transportation Safety Board, Boeing
Pilot Procedural Compliance - NTSB
Transportation Safety Board slams Transport Canada and MMA over Lac-Mégantic disaster
Credit: NTSB (National Transportation Safety Board) Photo: Courtesy of Mass State Police Full ERA14MA271 Docket available at: http://go.usa.gov/3DBuQ Probable Cause The NTSB determines that the probable cause of this accident was the flight crewmembers’ failure to perform the flight control check before takeoff, their attempt to take off with the gust lock system engaged, and their delayed execution of a rejected takeoff after they became aware that the controls were locked. Contributing to the accident were the flight crew’s habitual noncompliance with checklists, Gulfstream Aerospace Corporation’s failure to ensure that the G-IV gust lock/throttle lever interlock system would prevent an attempted takeoff with the gust lock engaged, and the Federal Aviation Administration’s failure to d...
Video courtesy: NTSB Washington, D.C. - The National Transportation Safety Board today determined that the probable cause of an aircraft that lost control and impacted water was the pilots' mismanagement of an abnormal flight control situation through improper actions, including lack of crew coordination, and failing to control airspeed and to prioritize control of the airplane. On June 4, 2007, about 4:00pm CST, a Cessna Citation 550, N550BP, impacted Lake Michigan shortly after departure from General Mitchell International Airport, Milwaukee, Wisconsin (MKE). The two pilots and four passengers were killed, and the airplane was destroyed. The airplane was being operated by Marlin Air under the provisions of Part 135. The aircraft was carrying a human organ for a transplant operation...
"As the educational outreach arm of the FAA, the FAASTeam is committed to serving the General Aviation community, and making our skies even safer. Join the FAASTeam help us make a difference!"
Testing some of the best cars on ROBLOX. (WARNING:) if car is bad don't use it (except Reliant ;))
Rob Johnston of the Transportation Safety Board updated CTV Morning Live on the investigation into Wednesday's OC Transpo/VIA Rail collision.
787 Returns to Japanese Skies, but It's Only a Start After a smooth test flight to test troublesome batteries, Boeing and ANA must now turn to a more delicate task ? selling passengers on the idea that the Dreamliner is safe. http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/29/business/global/29iht-dreamliner29.html?partner=rss&emc;=rss NTSB looks for cause, larger lessons in Boeing 787 battery fire WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The top U.S. transportation safety regulator is looking beyond what caused a Boeing Co Dreamliner battery to fail in January at larger lessons that can be applied to the airplane certification process and new technologies. http://news.yahoo.com/ntsb-looks-cause-larger-lessons-boeing-787-battery-133355816.html Dreamliner set to fly in a week as Boeing fixes battery By Tim Kelly and Rhys Jo...
CREDIT: National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) http://www.ntsb.gov WASHINGTON – The National Transportation Safety Board today released a nine-minute video that highlights the crucial role that procedural compliance plays in commercial aviation safety. “Aviation flight operating procedures are developed and refined to provide repeatable steps for safely flying a plane in order to minimize the risk of an accident,” said NTSB Chairman Christopher A. Hart. “So it’s disheartening when we learn from our investigations that the very procedures that are designed to ensure safety were deviated from, leading to a preventable accident.” The video, which is primarily targeted at pilots, uses findings from seven commercial airplane accidents to show how deviations from standard operating proce...
NTSB Vice Chairman Dinh-Zarr Briefs Media on transportation safety for school age children.
When the National Transportation Safety Board office in Alaska first hears about a plane going down, protocol is to begin gathering information: how bad the crash is, the number of survivors, and where exactly the wreckage is located. From: ALASKA AIRCRASH INVESTIGATIONS: Forest Flight Down http://bit.ly/1XiDs9B
Mr. Speaker, the Transportation Safety Board is reporting more derailments, runaway trains and violations of rail safety rules, including exhausted engineers. Following the Lac-Mégantic disaster, rail companies were required to report on potential risks, the locations and how they are being addressed. During the election, the government promised to increase transparency, yet it is refusing to make public critical reports on rail risks from rail traffic. Will the minister today, in this place, commit to making public safety risks posed by rail operations across our nation?
National Transportation Safety Board The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) is an independent U.S.government investigative agency responsible for civil transportation accident investigation. =======Image-Copyright-Info======== License: Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 (CC-BY-SA-3.0) LicenseLink: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ Author-Info: Hervé Cozanet Image Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Ship_Voyage_Data_Recorder.jpg =======Image-Copyright-Info======== -Video is targeted to blind users Attribution: Article text available under CC-BY-SA image source in video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T5c6WjtNJ64
The government wants to limit driver fatigue, stop accidents caused by alcohol use, and increase safety features on trains. NTSB General Aviation Safety Alert. This three-dimensional animated reconstruction shows the accident sequence for a motorcoach departure and overturn on northbound Interstate 95 (I-95) near . Also: NTSB, Barnstorming, Personal Helo, EU-ETS on Hold, SpaceX Grasshopper, Skivvy Skydives Airship Ventures of Moffet Field, CA operators of the world's .
Moderator, Captain Don Wykoff – Chair, Flight Time/Duty Time Committee, Air Line Pilots Association, Int’l Dr. Evan Byrne – Chief, Human Performance and Survival Factors Division, National Transportation Safety Board Office of Aviation Safety Mr. Klaus Luhta – Chief of Staff, International Organization of Masters, Mates and Pilots Captain Rich Hughey – Chair, President’s Committee for Cargo, Air Line Pilots Association, Int’l Mr. Gerald P. Krueger, PhD, CPE – Operator Performance Researcher, Krueger Ergonomic Consultants
Credit: National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) WARNING: Contains content some may find disturbing at 11:00 Link to NTSB Docket http://dms.ntsb.gov/pubdms/search/hitlist.cfm?docketID=57043&CFID;=74211&CFTOKEN;=4445ee7fed54827b-9FA100FF-D47A-F9C8-FC16EB6F8B222EFB Click to subscribe! http://bit.ly/subAIRBOYD The most viewed aviation channel on YouTube.
Credit: NTSB Board Meeting March 12, 2013 WASHINGTON - The National Transportation Safety Board met to consider five Safety Alerts aimed at reducing the number of general aviation accidents. A Safety Alert is a brief information sheet that pinpoints a particular safety issue and offers practical remedies to address the hazard. Each year the NTSB investigates about 1500 GA accidents in which about 475 pilots and passengers are killed and hundreds more are seriously injured. The safety issue areas under consideration at the Board meeting will include: Reduced-visual-reference accidents, including controlled flight into terrain and uncontrolled descent to the ground due to spatial disorientation Aerodynamic stalls at low altitude in daylight visual weather conditions Pilot inattention to i...
Credit: National Transportation Safety Board - NTSB WPR11MA454 Deteriorated Parts Allowed Flutter Which Led to Fatal Crash at 2011 Reno Air Races WASHINGTON - The National Transportation Safety Board determined today that deteriorated locknut inserts found in the highly modified North American P-51D airplane that crashed during the 2011 National Championship Air Races in Reno, Nevada, allowed the trim tab attachment screws to become loose, and even initiated fatigue cracking in one screw. This condition, which resulted in reduced stiffness in the elevator trim system, ultimately led to aerodynamic flutter at racing speed that broke the trim tab linkages, resulting in a loss of controllability and the eventual crash. On September 16, 2011, as the experimental single-seat P-51D airplane "T...
On June 16, 1995 Gettysburg Railroad 4-6-2 #1278 had a minor boiler explosion severely injuring the crew. An investigation from the national transportation safety board determined the cause was poor training and maintenance. This video was produced shortly after as a training video for those operating steam locomotives. I believe several new rules were enacted for steam locomotive maintenance as a result of the incident. The footage is off of a disk I get copied from a VHS so enjoy the mono sound. I got a hold of the video from a friend being very valuable to me as my father is in it (green hard hat in from of 2317 at 12:18 on the video) who passed away too early at 36 in 1998. I am actually uploading this video on what would be his 54th birthday.
Courtesy: NTSB - Aircraft Accident Report - Loss of Thrust in Both Engines After Encountering a Flock of Birds and Subsequent Ditching on the Hudson River, US Airways Flight 1549, Airbus A320-214, N106US, Weehawken, New Jersey, January 15, 2009. A synopsis of the Board's report, including the probable cause, conclusions, and recommendations, is available on the NTSB's website, at http://www.ntsb.gov/Publictn/2010/AAR1003.htm. CREW ACTIONS AND SAFETY EQUIPMENT CREDITED WITH SAVING LIVES IN US AIRWAYS 1549 HUDSON RIVER DITCHING, NTSB SAYS Washington, DC - In addition to the decisions and actions of the flight crewmembers, overwater safety equipment likely saved lives that might have otherwise been lost to drowning, the NTSB said. Today the Safety Board met to conclude its 15-month invest...
Credit: National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) Photo Copyright : Virgin Galactic Lack of Consideration for Human Factors Led to In-Flight Breakup of SpaceShipTwo 7/28/2015 The National Transportation Safety Board determined the cause of the Oct. 31, 2014 in-flight breakup of SpaceShipTwo, was Scaled Composite’s failure to consider and protect against human error and the co-pilot’s premature unlocking of the spaceship’s feather system as a result of time pressure and vibration and loads that he had not recently experienced. SpaceShipTwo was a commercial space vehicle that Scaled Composites built for Virgin Galactic. The vehicle broke up during a rocket-powered test flight, seriously injuring the pilot and killing the co-pilot. The feather system, which was designed to pivot the tai...
Here is the NTSB Hearing on Glass Cockpits in GA aircraft and their affect on training and safety. SB-10-07 NTSB STUDY SHOWS INTRODUCTION OF GLASS COCKPITS IN GENERAL AVIATION AIRPLANES HAS NOT LED TO EXPECTED SAFETY IMPROVEMENTS Washington, DC Today the National Transportation Safety Board adopted a study concluding that single engine airplanes equipped with glass cockpits had no better overall safety record than airplanes with conventional instrumentation. The safety study, which was adopted unanimously by the Safety Board, was initiated more than a year ago to determine if light airplanes equipped with digital primary flight displays, often referred to as "glass cockpits," were inherently safer than those equipped with conventional instruments. The study, which looked a...