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Post a Comment On: Doug Ross @ Journal

"The Ominous Facts Regarding Korean Airline Pilots by a Former Instructor"

10 Comments -

1 – 10 of 10
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Good overview. 28 years retired ATC

9:18 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

So they can't fly any better than they drive.

10:58 PM

Anonymous whitehall said...

I had some similar stories with the nuclear reactor simulator we built and were handing over to the Asian operating crew.

I could finesse the control rods every time but they just could not get the hang of it and groused about my technique to save face with their bosses.

Seems to be a cultural thing although Asian crews are generally relatively good, compared to say, Mexican nukes.

12:37 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Comments regarding their schooling are simply unfounded. Unless you have attended Korean schools you would have no idea how they teach. I do agree that there society is very regimented though, but don't see a clear connection between that and their ability to adapt. Japan's Nippon (Japan is even more regimented as a society) is rated one of the safest airlines in the world. Where do Nippon pilots receive their training?

1:11 AM

Anonymous Chunkdog1 said...

Can someone post exactly what "vectored in" means?
And can I get that answer in dimwit terms please?

10:02 PM

Anonymous Jersey Dave said...

I heard that Japanese airlines had issues some decades back and refined their training heavily, they are today among the best in the world. The first step is always to acknowledge an issue exists, then one can start to fix it. rec.aviation.military has a huge thread about this.

12:30 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

For Chunkdog: 'Vectored' means a controller gave headings to the pilots to direct them based on watching the flight on radar. Cap'n John

11:17 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

"Pointed to" = "vectored in"

5:20 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Comments regarding their schooling are simply unfounded.

No, they are not. I have lived in Korea for 16 years and have an ESL business. One of the hardest things to get the kids to do is to apply that which they memorize. The younger kids are pretty good at breaking out and showing creativity. Once they reach the 5th or 6th grade, they are pretty much stuck in their robotic ways. I love Korea and the people and culture are great. This is just a facet of the system that is pretty terrible. Of course, every country has things it needs to improve.

11:38 AM

Blogger Whaddaworldwehave said...

Let's refloat the 'Queen Mary' guys ! I'm fed up with this 'Russian' Roulette of contemporary flying. Or at least bring back the Connie (with the old-style Stewardesses and 'President' Service of course).

11:52 AM

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