SpottedKitty wrote:LaCroix wrote:but in this time and age, and being an indonesian pilot, I'm pretty sure that taking the safe bet would have cost him his carreer, so he tried to go around, instead.
Are you thinking about parallels with the crash at San Francisco last year? I remember coming across a suggestion that the Korean cockpit crew couldn't come right out and tell the captain he was flying much too low and slow, because of a "superior is not to be questioned" mindset. All they could do was suggest and talk around the problem until it was obvious the plane was in a stall and wouldn't reach the runway threshold.
This is part of the underlying problem, imho.
Even if the pilot would have said, "screw it, I'm not gonna fly into that storm, it's just too huge", he'd probably getting in trouble/shafted for disrupting flight plans and costing money.
And he can't really justify his decision, because there will always be someone there to call him out for being a coward or incompetent. Or that they already flew through worse. And there is no proof that actually it was that bad but his own say-so, until the plane was already getting damaged. Which will cause even bigger problems and he will most likely be past the point of no return at this time.
Thus, social and economic pressure will make pilots usually opt for the high-risk option and fly into weather that is worse than what their planes are built to withstand. And if they are flying "on the limit", a tiny defect on the plane (which are usually serviced by a maintenance crew that is under the same pressure to get results as the flight crews, and might take shortcuts) will put the plane from "still safe" into "oh crap" territory.
You can see that trend a bit in western air travel (pay less, work more - just look at the number of strikes during the last few years), but over there, with even less job protection, it's much worse.
A minute's thought suggests that the very idea of this is stupid. A more detailed examination raises the possibility that it might be an answer to the question "how could the Germans win the war after the US gets involved?" - Captain Seafort, in a thread proposing a 1942 'D-Day' in Quiberon Bay
I do archery skeet. With a Trebuchet.