Really? I thought he had an Irish accent.Have you heard the audio of the pilot asking for a fire engine?
Frightfully British - almost Sgt Wilson class...![]()
Really? I thought he had an Irish accent.Have you heard the audio of the pilot asking for a fire engine?
Frightfully British - almost Sgt Wilson class...![]()
Really? I thought he had an Irish accent.
Beat me to it, I was about to say something similar.People do illogical things when under extreme stress. Perhaps when under the immediate threat of fire their brains hunted for a pattern to normalise the situation (life flashing before your eyes) and normal behavior is to get your bag before leaving, and it wasn't even a concious decision. There may have been others that just remained in their seats, Manchester has been mentioned, and in that case, several who died made no attempt to leave but just stayed frozen in their seat.
The art of good risk management is working out what could have happened but didn't, then working out which of those things should be controlled. Just looking at what's actually happened has given us the idiocy of plastic bags of tiny bottles of toiletries and long queues at passport control.Identify some occasions where similar actions caused death.
He's not so great.and the response of the air traffic control guy who can't quite believe he's heard right as the unbelievably calm voice is totally out of kilter with the words, without a hint of urgency never mind panic
When I was a teenager, I decided that I no longer wanted to go on holiday with my parents, so I stayed at home, with my older sister supervising. She managed to set fire to a chip pan a couple of days later. I freaked out completely and decided that the best thing to do was to pick it up and throw it into the back garden. That was mistake #1. I got hold of the pan by the hot end, which was mistake #2. Mistake #3 was to open the back door and get the flames blown back in my face, which rapidly led to mistake #4 - dropping a burning chip pan on the floor of the kitchen ...Beat me to it, I was about to say something similar.
No one can honestly know how they'd react without actually being put in that situation.
I remember the caretaker in my hall of residence telling us about the time he was in a burning building. He said, "you might like to think you'll be the big hero and do this and that, but when you see that fire you just panic."
When I was a teenager, I decided that I no longer wanted to go on holiday with my parents, so I stayed at home, with my older sister supervising. She managed to set fire to a chip pan a couple of days later. I freaked out completely and decided that the best thing to do was to pick it up and throw it into the back garden. That was mistake #1. I got hold of the pan by the hot end, which was mistake #2. Mistake #3 was to open the back door and get the flames blown back in my face, which rapidly led to mistake #4 - dropping a burning chip pan on the floor of the kitchen ...
At that point, we started behaving more logically and managed to put the flames out before we burned the house down. Total damage was a messed-up kitchen and minor burns to my hands!
So, when people say that they would be calm in an emergency I do not necessarily believe them ...![]()
A report I read claimed the plane had reached 89mph before making its emergency stop. I don't think planes taxi at that speed!
GC
I'd have crowd surfed and dipped the lockers of any decent gear on the way past
How come no one's mentioned mobile phones,or whatever they're called these days? I bet there were a few cretins trying to take pictures of the incident,or film it as people were desperately trying to get past them.