My initial impression of the behaviors of the pilot caused me to consider whether this was intentional homicide. The details Petter arranges create a lesson that is easily forgotten: that there are many instances where the lack of training caused the crew to make incorrect decisions. The incompetence is the lack of preparation, which is often times only obtainable in hindsight. To frame it this way: the flight was full. 300 smart affluent people chose that airline. How can we tell when airlines are so desperate that they put the wrong people in command; or choose to operate a flight with improper ground support? We need more cultural insights into the airlines.
@davecrupel2817 honestly I can say I'm surprised. I've been watching these kinds of aviation disasters videos for years and I don't think I've ever seen a more incompetent crew.
@@gregoryb.9630It was in 1980. Aviation was still a new industry all over the world, barely 20 years, especially in less developed countries. Things have changed a lot. As Petter explained here, the accidents from the 1970s and 1980s - their investigations, and the processes that resulted - have allowed the fantastic safety records we experience nowadays. And pretty much all international airlines operate under the same standards now. Might be another story if you fly domestic in Nepal or Congo.
Hi, I’m a former cabin attendant who gave 32 years of my life to this profession. I would like to thank you with all my heart for the words of gratitude and admiration towards this amazing people who had been killed in this horrible tragedy. I watch all your videos and I an a subscriber to your channel, and I always admire that you mention the cabin crew and praise them. Thank you on behalf of all cabin attendants. We are not just servers!
I will say that this channel, and age, has greatly improved my respect for cabin crew. It was unfortunately rather typical but as i have learn more, i have understood how wrong i was.
Mentor Pilot is indeed doing on amazing job praising the cabin crew in majority of his videos. I would have never realized what is going on in the back without his videos. "Documentary" series like Air Crash Investigation barely ever showed any work is cabin crew. Kudos to you and all other cabin crew members for doing this amazing job keeping everyone on board safe.
When I was a little kid, I never saw the cabin crew as servers. I always saw them as security for stupid (or evil) passengers and the type of folks you wanna be around when things go wrong. Asking them for a drink/snack was a bonus. lol. But I never really learned how much training cabin crew goes through, or the detail of what they do normally, until watching Mentour.
Honestly, when you said that the cabin crew left a trail of empty fire extinguishers while trying to save all those people.. I just broke down. I can't imagine the horror they had to go through.
I think this is the first time I’ve been left speechless by one of your videos. I mean, what were the crew thinking? Their ineptitude cost over three hundred lives. Totally unbelievable.
I had my mouth open at parts, I don't ever do that! Usually it's one or two mistakes, and unfortunately that's life so you learn from it. But I'm pretty sure I could have got her down and everyone out alive, and I've never been in a fucking cockpit. At least I would have tried the term unbelievable is correct.
I’m just sitting here in silence after watching this. Going to feed my dog so I don’t neglect him, like the pilots did to those pour souls behind them.
let me help you out a bit. There's something that is taboo to talk about, but I don't care, so I'll say it. The saudis have been inbreeding for thousands of years. It's part of their culture. One effect is a general diminishment of mental capacity.
In every single one of these stories - every single one - the cabin crew performs excellently, often well above the call of duty. They are absolutely the unsung heroes of aviation.
Sadly I have to disagree here. Cabin crew should've taken control and evacuated the people without asking the captain who was clearly lost and confused for the TENTH TIME! Just open the gdamn emergency exits and worry about consequences later, when everybody is alive and safe from danger!
@@mickeypopaNah, those passengers were in a blind panic by the time that plane hit the ground. People were fighting in the aisles, for Christ's sake. The flight attendants were mostly young Filipino women, and no red-blooded Middle Eastern man is going to do what a woman says.
Yes! Also a watcher from back in the day, with the couch, red and green pillows, and cute pups. I hope Petter does a little video talking about his (and his team’s) journey, while seated on his old couch! Hope the pups are still doing well too! 🐶🐶
I lost it at the firefighter incompetence. Jesus christ how many people were involved in this incident that should have never been 10m near an airport is baffling. Makes you really appreciate how much things improved.
The true criminals are the pilots. Following an emergency landing due to an on-board fire with a call of ‘don’t evacuate’ is unfathomable and unforgivable
@@PunkDogCreations Did Jesus Christ tell you that? (Sorry, but somehow I think he'd be way less concerned about someone taking his name in vain and way more concerned about a situation in which 300 innocent people died for no good reason. In fact, I rather think that invoking his name when this kind of thing happens is quite appropriate.)
My mom and dad evacuated from an L-1011nin the 1960s. My dad was part of the development team at Lockheed and one of the things that Lockheed had to do was fill up the plane with people and show it could be evacuated within the time limit. My mom and dad volunteered to be some of the people doing the test.
There was an excellent study done where scientists tweaked the test. They’d recognised that there was no real sense of urgency to the evacuation; people just got up and started for the exit, queueing, polite, etc. So they offered a cash reward to the first people off the plane. That set off what is probably a more realistic scramble - people pushing, climbing over seats, etc. That series of tests demonstrated that under such conditions, aisles and doors needed to be much wider than the standards at the time.
@alexc4300 that's absolutely brilliant. I keep having to stop the video and remind myself it was the 70s and people don't know the things they don't know. What an awful way to die. It's really good to think there were also people like that trying to figure things out and make us all safer. Thanks for sharing.
All aircraft must pass an evacuation with a full load of passengers before certification is given. I grew up in Burbank, California where the L1011 was designed and built, and remember its first test flight from Burbank to Palmdale. This was a big deal at the time. The L1011 was a very good aircraft in it's day.
@@Niteowlette we lived in Chatsworth and my dad worked for Lockheed in the building right next to the airport. The evacuation certification test that my parents participated in was in Palmdale.
Rest in peace, everyone. I was going to comment about you not mentioning those heroes (flight attendants), but you thankfully did. I have massive respect for them.
This is by far the craziest air disaster I've ever heard of. I mean, when you realize that at the moment of touchdown that almost everybody was very likely still alive...
I just don't get it... If I'm in that situation once black smoke fill the cabin I do not care what my instructions are I would open the door myself, throw out the closest 10 people and then myself. Every door has instructions on it on how to open them. The airline can always send their lawyers after me but at least I'd be alive...
@@221b-l3t I think you are underestimating just how intense the smoke got once those ac packs were shut off. The entire cabin was very likely just instantly filled with smoke so thick that you could not breathe, let alone see enough to find a door. Even if you managed to have the foresight to hyperventilate before the smoke came, held your breath long enough to try to reach the door, and already knew precisely how to open it, I seriously doubt you are going to be able to make it down the aisle that is likely already filled with other people and trash and debris. People were fighting each other before they even landed.
@@221b-l3t The pilots let the plane roll down the runway during those minutes the flight attendants needed to get the doors open. By the time the plane actually stopped, it was too late.
@@TheTonyMcDI can only speak for myself, but when I’m in an exit row, I know how to operate the door. I can hold my breath for 30 seconds at bare minimum with no preparation, and groping in the dark for the handle wouldn’t be all that much of a hurdle if it was that serious a situation.
I remember this tragedy well because my dad was working at the UAL Training Center in Denver (DENTK) at the time, instructing cabin crews on emergency procedures. I remember him having to go over this story in excruciating detail, and one of the things I know they looked at was the fact that the L1011's main cabin doors...like all of the "Jumbo"/widebody doors are power actuated as opposed to the older, narrow-body doors that are manually actuated. The doors on the L1011 (and DC-10, B747 and 767) are actuated, then swing in and UP...whereas the older models swing in and OUT. The question was, "Was there such a mass panic and crush that would jam the doors from being able to move "up" as people tried to get "out." My dad's department was focused on Crew training to manage and evacuate passengers and so they were really concerned about how the entire crew worked to evaluate the emergency and what actions they took (or didn't take) that resulted in the tragedy. Later, I react badly to this story because my dad finished his career as a FE/2nd Officer on DC-10's (also for UAL). The Flight Engineer is such an important position...and here the FE utterly failed in his job. Every so often you can find accidents where the FE was ignored (like UAL 183 in Portland) or where the FE failed in his job and killed everyone. The FE should have been managing the aircraft systems and he may not have been "in control" of the situation, but his mismanagement of the situation killed everyone on that airplane.
If he loses both his engines he can still operate the airplane like a glider and with a bit of luck (no high hills) he can land on a large enough field.
Thanks for making video on this accident. One of my relatives had lost his life in it. Very close to my heart. It remained a mystery. Hardly anyone ever explained it with such details. Love from Pakistan ❤
About the inflammability of matches: Decades ago at my parents house, there was a sudden strong smell of burning matches. We immediately began looking for the source, couldn't find it, and over the next few hours the odor dissipated. Several years later we were moving some furniture and we found a large box of wooden kitchen matches that had fallen to the floor behind a piece of furniture, ignited, but failed to burn thru the box, then ran out of oxygen and self extinguished.
A cousin of mine was a small town fire chief. He told me once to always beware of matchbooks and boxes. Mice will chew on the paper and can unintentionally spark up a fire. A glass mason jar is a good place to store matches.
The culprit in this situation is the “STRIKE ANYWHERE MATCH”. These are the ones that are white tipped. They were made illegal for sale in the USA in the 60s when I was a kid. All you have to do is drop a box of these matches and they could ignite.
Cabin crew, as a profession, really don't get the respect they deserve. In so many accidents, the only reason anyone survived at all was that the cabin crew kept the passengers calm and facilitated fast evacuations from the plane. Even where there were no survivors, cabin crew frequently distinguish themselves - be they the cabin crew here, or Betty Ong and the other cabin crew members on 9/11, cabin crew members are often unsung heroes.
😮 the way you relayed this story and never once swore or really criticised is evidence of your professionalism and that no doubts you are very good at poker. The ineptitude was catastrophic imo. Tragedies are bad enough without failures to address them. Thank you mentor pilot. Regards
This incident always disturbs me so much. My father was Lockheed’s F/E Instructor on the Tristar in early 1980, and he was responsible for the final checks and approval of the L-1011 certification for the F/E on the incident flight. He’d also been offered a job with Saudia after he’d provided training to a number of their employees, and we moved to Jeddah about a year after this tragedy. My father told me that he was really distressed as soon as he heard of this incident because he hadn’t been entirely comfortable passing the F/E, whose performance on the simulator was marginal at best, and that decision haunted him for years. I think I’ve still got his logbook in which he recorded the training sessions. It’s one of the incidents my dad (accidentally, I’m sure) used to drive a deep seated fear of flying into me.
As a pilot, even though I don't fly anymore, I cant believe the captains behavior during this entire thing. Blows my mind. I never had an in flight emergency but I still can't believe this.
As a retired banner pilot, I've had many in-flight emergencies (small planes are much more subject to failures than passenger jets). Remaining calm is crucial to surviving and not making a mistake, but remaining too calm is deadly, as is shown here. Early in my career I flew one plane that was notorious for engine troubles, and the tower got used to me saying "glider 86AB is landing again" during maintenance test flights over the runway. 🤣
I have lived under Islam in the UAE. Men are raised steeped in a sense of shame and inadequacy. You'll notice most of the disastrous crew failures in this channel's videos involved Arab or if not Muslim nationality. It's hubris and pride born of a fear of ostracism from the group.
@@GodelFishbreath That's a regular factor in accidents of all types. I know from personal experience of a car accident that your initial behaviour when faced with an unexpected emergency is often not rational and the true magnitude doesn't sink in until much later. People often act stunned and go through the motions of what they would normally be doing - eg the frequent examples of passengers collecting their luggage in an evacuation. Trained professionals on the other hand will say 'I didn't think about it, my training just kicked in'.
I don’t know if applicable here but I have witnessed Egyptians barely react to crisis. When I asked about it the explanation was belief in preordained destiny. Fighting events that unfold therefore is to defy God’s will.
@@richardkudrna7503 whoever said that is wrong because in our religion we should always do our best never allow ourselves or others be in position of harm so fighting it with everything is a must. In case our livelihoods are at risk every haram (not allowed) becomes halal (allowed). So idk whoever told you this but they’re wrong.
Another well-made, well narrated, and well researched video. As a firefighter paramedic of 30 years, I can toss out a few observations I've encountered and learned. *Fire can double in size every minute *Plastics and foam items are basically "frozen gasoline" and are incredibly flammable and release some of the most toxic smoke *Fire protection and suppression is always given a back seat to most other factors when designing a building...or an aircraft *Extreme measures are taken to toy with numbers and square footage to avoid or alter Fire detection and suppression systems *In an emergency people will 1. Panic and resort to animal behavior 2. Disengage, disbelieve, and become comatose 3. Resort back to what's comfortable rather than face problem. 4. Deny, there's an issue and fall to confirmation bias. Fires happen ....emergencies happen. When flying, don't wear polyester material. Keep your shoes on (real shoes, not flip flops) while taking off and landing. Observe your exit options, review the emergency material EVERY FLIGHT and pay full attention to the flight staff. Their number one job is your safety and not catering to your every need and hear you complain. Great job as always Mentor!!
I do that, but I'm not worried about myself. It's the other passengers that would block me because they didn't read and panic. You're never getting a room or plane full of people to behave properly. You can evacuate if there's plenty of time and well trained personnel around, but not with a fire like this.
I was present at the Bradford City stadium fire in the UK in 1985. That fire went from "some visible smoke" to "entire stadium ablaze" in well under 5 minutes. The fire brigade was called *by accident* when the fire was still very small and appeared manageable, arrived within 3 minutes, and still found a complete stand on fire. 56 people died that day. Fire is no joke.
I don’t know if it’s your accent or the immense respect you show for the perils of your chosen profession or maybe even your knowledge and ability to describe the harrowing situations these crews find themselves in but something you’re doing is just “right”. I really appreciate that you give props to those in these emergencies that deserve it such as the young flight attendants in this disaster who gave their lives trying to ensure their passengers safety and wellbeing. Another job well done. I look forward to the next one.
My father was a civil engineer from the US working with many expats in Saudi Arabia with a company called CCC, building their infrastructure. He was there in Riyadh airport and witnessed the fire taking place. They had tractors and other equipment on hand and offered to use them to break through the fuselage of the plane to get the passengers out, but the authorities denied any efforts to do so, so they were forced to watch the plane burn to the ground. My father has told us this story over the years, but this is the first time I’m seeing it documented.
Nope, expats. Saudi Arabia hires foreigners (expats) for the majority of their technical jobs and as domestic servants. They are not immigrating, they are just working a contract. I worked a two year contract in their shipyards in the 80’s.
@@secondace9495 Immigrants move to a foreign country to live there permanently, while expats move to a foreign country and live there only for the duration of their employment. We lived in Saudi Arabia for only three years.
@@secondace9495there really isn't a definition of who is an expat and who is an immigrant. By the dictionary, expats don't intend to stay permanently and immigrants do, but that doesn't work in places that don't allow permanent migrants but still use the term. In reality, the word immigrant has connotations of low class, low wealth and searching for upward mobility , while expat has connotations of high skill, high wealth and high status. Low skilled poor workers and people of color tend to be labeled immigrants , while high skilled wealthy and typically white people tend to be labelled as expats.
@@TheSkcube I thought the definition was that expats moved to the country mainly because their employer assigned them there, while immigrants moved to the country for more personal reasons. A highly skilled, wealthy person who just wanted to move to a different country would still be an immigrant because no employer assigned them there.
I am an uneducated layperson who knows nothing about aviation, I need things explained to me in simple terms. When Mentour Pilot says, "I would rather face a double engine failure than face this", then you know it's one of the worst things that can happen.
What fuels fire? Oxygen. There is no water pump 40k feet in the air and there is no way to starve the fire without starving ourselves. And the design if aeroplane is by necessity compact; wherever the fire starts it is only a short matter of time before it begins to damage flight controls while filling the whole cabin with smoke. It is not a survivable occurrence unless you can get on the ground in a matter of a few minutes.
@@prismpyre7653 Or the fire is controllable and can be extinguished easily. Thankfully, technology allowed us to be able to avoid passengers from bring inflammable items on board
@@geechisuede98this is half of the truth. The glide number of a commercial plane is about 15. If you fly at 8km you only have 120km of distance assuming no maneuver
One year prior to this incident, another flight on the same route from Jeddah to Karachi, operated by PIA 740, experienced a similar fire caused by gas stoves. My grandfather was among the passengers on that flight. Unfortunately, the aircraft was unable to land and exploded mid-air. My father told me that, at that time, it was customary for pilgrims to carry gas stoves with them. There were no inspections or instructions from the airport staff regarding these stoves. It was norm those days.
@@gregoryb.9630well that explains the rather ominous warning I saw on my last flight in Finnair telling passengers to stop using their device if it overheats and to let the flight crew know.
@@gregoryb.9630That’s most likely not going to happen. It would be prohibitively expensive and it would weight down the plane. Really the only option is to prevent passengers from taking on batteries onboard cargo and make sure that the batteries carried into the cabin don’t have a chance to start a fire
What gets me is the attitude to safety. Even with the flight crew being incompetent, had their immediate reaction been "uh-oh let's declare emergency and return immediately just in case" they might have been able to save everyone.
That actually was their reaction, mostly. In my opinion the problem was that they were too incompetent to follow through effectively, and ended up just wasting time, instead of taking effective action.
@@vasilivh They first discussed if a fire alarm was really a fire alarm and then went through pages for in total 4 minutes meanwhile climbing higher and flying farther away.
@@ouwebrood497 this is true, but no other options than returning to Riyadh were really on the table (aside from a moment of wishful thinking that they could just continue). It just took too long to actually DO something, like they couldn't commit to the one course of action they had
We studied this accident when I went to FAA accident investigator school. A lot was learned from this occurrence . You explain it well. Good job Petter!
Mentour pilot, I've been a subscriber for quite a long time now and I've watched every single story you dropped since then but damn this one takes the cake. My heart sank so much i felt it slow down when the flash fire happened, they were ao close to surviving , when you talked about the flash fire it just killed my spirit knowing how helpless they were at that moment. Also why did shutting down the engine take so long, what on earth were they thinking, when they knew there was a fire onboard no matter how small, i guess we'll never know.
Hello! I am 15 years old and hugely into aviation. I'm not hesitant to say that your videos have inspired my love for aircraft and how they work to the core. Thank you so much!
this one was really hard to watch. so much preventable pain and loss. thank you for making these - they remind me why it's important to be caring but strong.
I remember when "Smoke and Fire" procedures changed from 'Working through a long checklist" to solve a problem Vs. GET THIS PLANE ON THE GROUND and evacuate!! This was an excellent explanation of the factors in this disaster. Thanks.
Wait, you mean skip the whole "Let's fly out over the water and enter a holding pattern while we dump a lot of fuel so we do not have to do an overweight landing? I am sure the smoke is not that serious." part?
@@Melanie16040 The flight over the water didn't do them it, they were already lost when the fire started. Maybe they would've landed in 27 minutes instead of 23 minutes, they had 11.
I seem to remember the Swissair 111 disaster, which occured about one month after I flew on a Swissair MD11. The pilots wanted to dump fuel rather than make a quick landing.
@@Fay7666 What I hear you saying is: That was one of the instances in which an emergency descent followed by off field landing wold have been the proper course of action.
This is the most frustrating aviation accident I’ve ever heard of, and it completely breaks my heart. Some people are not capable of staying level headed in emergencies, and those people should not be given responsibility for the lives of that many other people.
@ms-jl6dl, That's why there is so much psychological testing for pilot suitability now. Increased simulator training contributes to this psychological preparation. It's not a perfect system but pilots do practice a very strenuous and robust mental simulation, so this type of situation doesn't happen.
@@ms-jl6dl lots and lots of simulator training, especially when faced with unexpected problems. There are many ways to test if someone is good under pressure. I am no pilot (only flew once in a sea plane for fun haha) but my dad and I are both very good in emergencies. Our brains clear and we enter an extreme state of focus and calm. My mom on the other hand can become overwhelmed easily by the anxiety. However she is great during the aftermath and the long haul, whereas my dad and I will crash as soon as the adrenaline wears off. Different people’s nervous systems and brain wiring are better for different situations. Of course training can make any person much better at reacting to emergencies, but overall different personality types fit better roles. Either way, lots of emergency training and competency evaluations under pressure should be done. That is what I believe to be the best way to keep people safe. At minimum 1 of the two pilots in a cockpit should be able to score very highly whilst under pressure, whatever that might mean.
I was an FAA engineer in a Civil Aviation Assistance Group in Spain 10 yrs. I had 2 FAA coworkers there that had worked in Saudi Arabia. One of them told me the most amazing incident while he was in Saudi Arabia was a passenger in the rear who actually built a fire on the floor in the aisle to make tea. I don’t know the date or flight number, but it would have been in the late 1970’s or early 1980’s.
It is sometimes attempted nowadays- the most secluded even literal cave dwelling tribe members still wish to take the pilgrimage, and that they have holy protection.
It’s actually this very flight ”One early theory was that the fire began in the passenger cabin when a passenger used his own butane stove to heat water for tea.[” Flight Saudia163 HZ-AHK
I have been to Saudi Arabia many times, doing business and consulting with Saudia Airlines. Absolutely no part of this story surprises me in the least. The old saying "they could screw up a one car funeral procession" springs to mind. That is all I will say on the matter. I also know the L1011 better than most. I worked on almost 25% of the total L1011's ever produced at Delta Air Lines as a mechanic and did extensive mods to them as an avionics engineer. It was a very complicated aircraft that was absolutely the most sophisticated aircraft when it was produced. Even when it was retired it had the smoothest autoland in the sky. But again, it was super complex and you did not want anything but the best pilots flying it.
@@MentourPilot Thanks! Love your videos. This one was gut wrenching though because I know the L1011 and I know Saudis. A culture of arrogance, butt covering, and nepotiam, combined with an airplane that pushed technology and standards was a fatal combination.
@@acars9999 Openly said: The behaviour of the Flight Engineer was very strange, too, and he had another cultural background. Of course he suffered from his illness but nevertheless - and even knowing that he had not the medical capability for this profession.
I was going to comment that, after living in Saudi just 9 years ago, sounds like Saudi being Saudi. And the heroes were the Filipinos… which, again, sounds like Saudi. Those poor people. This was heartbreaking!!
It was moreso the manifestation of existing systemic issues in broader Airline/industry/nepo/safety/training. Even after this incident it took several more including ValueJet for the US to care about cargo fires etc
I'd say the flight/personnel planners were even worse. Each of these crew-members should have had a notation in their files that they should only be paired to experienced collegues, yet instead they ended up together..... pretty much a "the lame leading the blind" scenario.
As a passenger I would have found it impossible to not decide to open an emergency door myself. As long as I wasn't already overcome by smoke while the plane was moving.
@@volvo09Unfortunately, that is likely what had happened. The pilots may have access to their own independent oxygen system, but the passengers only have a few minutes of emergency oxygen designed specifically to help with sudden decompression, not fires.
A panicked and uncontrolled crowd would definitely push for the exits without knowing that the door must be first pulled inwards to be opened therefore making it impossible to open the doors. This is similar to that theater fire in the US that lead to the regulation that all fire exits must open outwards, but of course it’s not possible on an aircraft. I imagine the flight crew could and would have opened the doors if there were enough space for them to do so.
@itopaloglu - Beverly Hills Supper Club, Southgate, KY, just south of Cincinnati, OH. 165 died. Including large chunks of families. May 1977. The mention and memory of it still send shock waves through this area. The land stands vacant; multiple attempts to redevelopment it have been unsuccessful.
I'm a now retired flight attendant (37 years in the industry). The flight attendants on this flight were likely overcome by toxic smoke and had passed out. There were no portable breathing hoods as required emergency equipment in 1980. Thankfully, there have been many airline safety improvements in the last 40 years.
@@Hans-Peter-o9n not sure what type of doors those were, but it's very difficult to operate any emergency exit if 20 people are on top of you. More likely though, the cabin was already filled with smoke to the point that the wing exits were unsurvivable.
This one is a tough one to feel inspired confidence in the legacy of the emergency. Still fascinating to watch and learn about! Thank you for covering it!
the moment the Captain was singing, you just knew everyone was going to die. He was in such denial he neglected to recognize it was really really freaking bad.
As someone from Pakistan, specifically Karachi, I wanted to add that people from our country have a very bad tendency to freak out and lose their rationality in cases of panic or stress. It is more than likely that because of that fact, once the plane had landed, there would have been complete and utter chaos. People screaming, getting hurt, pushing and shoving for the exit doors, not knowing that they have to be opened inwards first. It feels cruel knowing that there could have been survivors, not everyone had to perish. It is so important to maintain a rational head and to listen to cabin crew in case of emergencies like this. May they all rest in peace.
@@snowleopard0412remember europeans had a great deal of advancement over hundreds of years. Pakistan got dragged out of the iron age in recent memory, and many parts are still woefully underdeveloped. You can't just make up that half dozen or more generational change with a pamphlet.
A synopsis at 13:47: all 3 crew members had previously washed out of training. They were rejected as flight crew candidates due to (unspecified) deficiencies. Their further training and subsequent crew placement was based on illogical decisions by uninformed "authorities". This is a common theme in disaster scenarios.
If I remember right, at least one of the flight crew (The Captain I think) had some relation to Saudi Royalty and used that connection extensively to protect his career.
It's a problem when positions are allocated according to membership of an important family or having money rather than suitability. Unfortunately, this is not the only case.
At least on a ship you're surrounded in something that can extinguish it. In a plane, you are fuel and the air you're flying on is also fuel and you're surrounded by fuel and then literal fuel in the wings etc. Just bad.@CiaranMaxwell
By far one of the most intriguing and mysterious air disasters I’ve read about… I’ve been trying to find a documentary about this crash forever. Thank you!
As a US Air Force troop, I deployed to Riyadh in late 1981 as part of the US Military Training Mission to Saudi Arabia. The burnt out remains of Saudia Flight 163 were still there, just off the runway.
What makes me more angry than this whole thing is the fact that they literally landed, it’s not like they crashed, THEY LANDED. ALL THEY NEEDED TO DO WAS TO APPLY MAX BRAKING AND EVACUATE. Unbelievable.
yeah it took a while for me to realize they were actually going to get the plane on the ground, and THEN everyone was going to burn. Kind of amazing how long the plane flew with hardly an issue with a fire raging.
Almost brought me to tears, especially when you honored the heroic flight attendants. I have watched many of these videos, but the senseless loss of life here is so very sad.
examples of industry training and culture moreso. Institutional practices across airlines or countries, communication gaps between even best pilots have variable obedience to hierarchies or ad-hoc thinking? The same problems occur in military (read "Armies of Sand" by Pollack) or all across Manufacturing, Medical and other sectors. At some point we do stop blaming muppet pilot/doctor/operator and instead change the rules & system itself
I wonder if religious principles could also have played a role? Such as thinking that "god", "allah" or whoever would solve the problem for you and if not, just let it happen and accept your fate?
@@toltect3744 No, in Islam, a Moeslim must try our best first, if after trying our best the end result didn't go according to what we hope for, then we give our fate to God.
Well done Petter for calling out how incredible the flight attendants were. Compare this incident to the JAL fire after collision in January with the fantastic flight crew as well
This is one of the greatest examples of just pure negligence these 301 people did not have to die that day what an utterly avoidable tragedy R.I.P all who died 🪦💔
Lovely words about the cabin crew at the end. It was like they were in a fighting withdrawal, keeping the smoke and fire at bay as long as they could. So tragic they didn’t get out
I’m so, so glad that you said what you did at the end about the Cabin Crew. When I first heard about Saudi 163 years ago, the thing that got me most was how those poor cabin crew were absolute left helpless and had no chance of being able to do what they were capable of, because the entire system let them down. The FAA, their pilots, Saudi Airlines….. absolutely nobody had their back. Their training was completely inadequate yet despite that - they all made an outstanding and heroic effort. They were smart and they knew what was needed without anyone in a class room telling them. Yet tragically, that was in vain because they also hadn’t been supplied with adequate safety equipment to assist, an adequately safe aircraft which was their workplace nor was anybody in that cockpit any use or support to them. They must have felt so alone and seen how let down they had been by it all. The fact that they were all so young and had to go through this absolutely horrific and terrifying death is just heartbreaking. They were in that cabin and faced with that fire and they will have known how bad the situation was. They probably knew there was a chance they wouldn’t get off that plane yet they all tried their best. They used up all their rudimentary equipment, they moved passengers down the cabin and they were all near fire exit doors clearly trying to get to them through the panicking passengers who prevented them in helping everyone. Theirs is absolutely the most tragic part of this disaster and of all the videos I’ve seen about this incident, you are the first person to draw attention to their devastatingly hopeless situation. They are indeed, the heroes of this tragedy. I hope that every new cabin crew recruit around the world, learns of their sad fate and knows each of their names. Because of those young ladies, aviation safety was changed for the better forever. I wish they could know that their efforts weren’t in vain after all. On the contrary, their plight changed compartment fire classification and evacuation procedures forever. RIP ladies. Hope you’re always flying high. ❤
@@M_SC Cabin Crew never usually get the recognition they deserve on a lot of aviation channels. They work so hard in such a complicated workspace. Whenever I see people say things like their job is easy and they get paid to just make tea and sit on a beach, I always challenge them to say how they think they would manage to do their daily job, in a confined metal tube where directional flow and space is limited, where peoples anxieties and frustrations are often heightened, while it wobbles them around all over the place to the point where every piece of equipment they use has to have brakes applied or it be strapped down. And do it all in heels and often thick, tight, uncomfortable uniforms. Where on a 10 hour shift they may have to rotate one spare seat between 14 of them. And that’s just the daily stuff. Because they’re trained to save lives too. And funnily enough, most of the time people either don’t respond to my challenge or reply with some made up BS about how good they’d be at it. Without the Cabin Crew, pilots couldn’t take those passenger planes anywhere. And I wouldn’t be as safe as can be as a passenger. They’re not just essential, they’re exceptional human beings who choose to do an exceptional job.
This is such a weird story....you'd think once you land a burning plane, you hit the brakes like it's nobody's business and make sure you get the people out as soon as possible......I can only imagine the the waiting emergency crews being utterly flabbergasted with the plane calmly passing them..... I think a lot of the blame goes to the utterly disfunctional flightcrew
That, plus I think they still didn't fully realize the extend of the danger. Remember that the engineer saw relatively little smoke (by coincidence) and they assured themselves everything would be fine.
@@VincentGroenewoldhowever, the cabin crew repeatedly told them they needed to evacuate. Part of me feels that they might not have listened to the cabin crew not just because of the language gap but because of the power differential between Saudi/American men and mostly young Filipino women
@@Cybele1986 Indeed. The Captain gave not a single time an answer to the Cabin Crew. Maybe he would have acted differently when not young Filipino Women but an older Arabian Male would have called him in this way. The American Flight Engineer is a very strange case in its own in this case.
@@Cybele1986 Honestly I wouldn't be so sure because a power gap shouldn't have too much of an influence in this case. If someone tells you there is a fire that can kill you most people are going to minimize their own risks of dying as long as it is plausible enough of a risk.
This three previous-washout cockpit is prime example of the swiss cheese model and the fact that you should always consider a) the bigger picture and b) the worst case. Everyone who allowed these people back in the cockpit, thought it a similar minor issue and never dreamed up the possibility of three of that calibre ending up in one cockpit together and what it would mean. "One time is no time, until it is the last time" - as a German idiom would say. Meaning: we always excuse doing unwise things by doing them "just once", until that "just once" becomes the moment when it backfires.
21:41 as someone with mild dyslexia, I can confirm that dyslexia results in more than just confusion while reading. If it's hard or confusing for you to read something, it often times results in not reading very carefully or having to reread the same words multiple times. It might not have caused the entirety of his situation, but it might have been why he spent as much time as he did just flipping through pages
I think this is obvious but dyslexic ppl shouldn’t be flight engineers considering the job requires a lot of reading especially during crucial high pressure situations. Dyslexia doesn’t limit people from every career, in fact they can do most. But in a high pressure environment where your reading abilities affect whether people live or die, it’s obvious a dyslexic person shouldn’t take that role. If one’s personality/skills/intelligence/mental or physical capabilities dont align with being a surgeon, pilot, grocery store worker, restaurant server, whatever it may be, maybe one should just find a Different Career Path. It baffles me that people deemed clearly unfit for a role will go to such great lengths, bribes, moving to different countries, switching airlines, nepotism, to get a role they are unfit for and potentially dangerously unfit for. Towards the end, it was obvious that they had accepted their own doom, rather than taking the effort to help save lives due to their own blunders.
Outstanding video. I remember this accident well. The TriStar L1011 plane burned fuselage stayed in place in Riyadh airport for almost a year. Every time you flew through the airport you could not miss it.
I was in Saudi Arabia on business in early 1981. I recall flying from Dhahran to Riyadh, and seeing the burned out hulk of the plane parked on the taxiway. It was a really sobering experience. But, I'm still convinced that its the safest way to travel, in large part due to the highly disciplined approach the industry takes to extracting every bit of usable knowledge from events such as this, and then applying that information to make flying even safer.
The sole reason you don't turn back is because you're practically lined up on another runway in front of you! Even if it means dive at 3,000ft/min, be overweight, and land at twice Vref, you put the bird on the ground as hard as you need to. Because let's face it, if you don't, the airframe is a total loss anyway!
@@MattDinnery Correct, as a pilot you should know where the other runways are around you before you leave, you may not be required to but hell I do it takes all of a few seconds. Only if you know the other airport/runway is give or take 2 minutes LONGER then turning around and lining back up from where you just left do you most likely want to turn around. but obviously you need to be a good judge of situations firstly and no chance with these pilots.
I've been caught in a gas flash over when I was 18 working construction. It caught me from my waist up and burned all of my chest, arms, and face. I remember lying in bed for 3 weeks while being tended to by my grandmother. That had to be the worst pain I've ever experienced, and I'm now 48. I can't imagine what these passengers endured and I feel for any who did not succumb to the smoke before they were burned. RIP to all
@M_SC my grandmother had been a nurse. Every night she would smear silver oxide and vitamin e oil on my burns and every afternoon I had to have the scrub bath which felt like getting burned all over again, to remove the dead tissue and prevent infection. 6 months later in April I went to Marine Corps bootcamp lol, this after Dr's said I'd never be able to handle full sun. I'm almost 49 and I've had a great life mostly. 5 years ago I had surgery for a broken neck I sustained during the Military. I'm basically medically retired at this point due to injuries I've sustained thru the years. But I'm not mad about it lol
I travelled a lot on internal flights in Saudi in the 80s. I remember cabin crew stopping a passenger setting up his primus stove in the aisle to cook his lunch!
They still try it now, as folks from the most backwater desert tribes still make flights for pilgrimage. Thankfully it gets stopped before boarding more often, but passengers on their special journey assume they have special divine protection anyway.
Several years ago I saw a stafftrainingvideo based on a real-life scanerio if a doors hot or you gear fire at back of door don't open that door in a building even if a plane air gets in there's a flash over everyone's killed and properly people on ground
I had flying fear issues and since the time i have been following your channel, i am kind of more relaxed and less scared. Thanks for sharing such videos. One thing i do now is that when something has to happen, it will happen. So no point worrying. Thanks once again. Love from Dubai.
Truly heartbreaking. I was so relieved when I saw the perfect landing with the plane still not engulfed in flames. How excruciating those last few minutes must have been.
I worked for nearly 42 years in a large power plant. Our continuing training often included studies of events from other industries, including aviation. How tragic that so often these events would never have happened had better policies and procedures (especially CRM) been in place at the time; but these accidents were the hard lessons which caused better policies, procedures and training to be developed...they are truly "written in blood".
Gawd that's heart wrenching. Despite all the screw ups by the flight crew they still made it onto the ground, stopped, and everybody died being able to see the ground and safety as they choked on the smoke. This has to be one of, if not the most, depressing review you've done. Not a bad thing, just very very sad.
Yeah it's now often called "flight, fight, or freeze", because freeze is also a very common reaction. It comes up a lot in assault cases - the mind simply freezes up and the victim can't do anything. That may have happened to one or more of the flight crew - particularly the captain.
A tragedy well-covered... I learned a lot from your video, and your explanations were flawless and easy to understand. Thank you for making this~ and may all the lost souls rest in heaven💔
Go to brilliant.org/MentourPILOT/ to get a 30-day free trial + the first 200 people will get 20% off their annual subscription.
Pls pin
Thank you, I asked about this video about 1 and half years ago, and you reply “ I got you sir”. Thanks you once again Peter.
😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢@@JoséPontes-q2f
Congratulations on reaching 2 million subscribers Petter.
@@JoséPontes-q2f lol
The level of incompetence shown by so many people involved in this accident is just unbelieveable!!!!!!!
Yeah, this was very bad…
Can't say I'm surprised.
My initial impression of the behaviors of the pilot caused me to consider whether this was intentional homicide. The details Petter arranges create a lesson that is easily forgotten: that there are many instances where the lack of training caused the crew to make incorrect decisions. The incompetence is the lack of preparation, which is often times only obtainable in hindsight. To frame it this way: the flight was full. 300 smart affluent people chose that airline. How can we tell when airlines are so desperate that they put the wrong people in command; or choose to operate a flight with improper ground support? We need more cultural insights into the airlines.
@davecrupel2817 honestly I can say I'm surprised. I've been watching these kinds of aviation disasters videos for years and I don't think I've ever seen a more incompetent crew.
@@gregoryb.9630It was in 1980. Aviation was still a new industry all over the world, barely 20 years, especially in less developed countries. Things have changed a lot. As Petter explained here, the accidents from the 1970s and 1980s - their investigations, and the processes that resulted - have allowed the fantastic safety records we experience nowadays. And pretty much all international airlines operate under the same standards now. Might be another story if you fly domestic in Nepal or Congo.
Hi, I’m a former cabin attendant who gave 32 years of my life to this profession. I would like to thank you with all my heart for the words of gratitude and admiration towards this amazing people who had been killed in this horrible tragedy. I watch all your videos and I an a subscriber to your channel, and I always admire that you mention the cabin crew and praise them. Thank you on behalf of all cabin attendants. We are not just servers!
I know well that the cabin crew's primary responsibility is passenger safety and I appreciate their professionalism.
I will say that this channel, and age, has greatly improved my respect for cabin crew. It was unfortunately rather typical but as i have learn more, i have understood how wrong i was.
Mentor Pilot is indeed doing on amazing job praising the cabin crew in majority of his videos. I would have never realized what is going on in the back without his videos. "Documentary" series like Air Crash Investigation barely ever showed any work is cabin crew. Kudos to you and all other cabin crew members for doing this amazing job keeping everyone on board safe.
When I was a little kid, I never saw the cabin crew as servers. I always saw them as security for stupid (or evil) passengers and the type of folks you wanna be around when things go wrong. Asking them for a drink/snack was a bonus. lol. But I never really learned how much training cabin crew goes through, or the detail of what they do normally, until watching Mentour.
OK. I have called one a waitress in her flying restaurant, but she knows she is much more than that.
She also knows that I think it is a valuable job.
Honestly, when you said that the cabin crew left a trail of empty fire extinguishers while trying to save all those people.. I just broke down. I can't imagine the horror they had to go through.
I think this is the first time I’ve been left speechless by one of your videos. I mean, what were the crew thinking? Their ineptitude cost over three hundred lives. Totally unbelievable.
I had my mouth open at parts, I don't ever do that! Usually it's one or two mistakes, and unfortunately that's life so you learn from it. But I'm pretty sure I could have got her down and everyone out alive, and I've never been in a fucking cockpit. At least I would have tried the term unbelievable is correct.
I’m just sitting here in silence after watching this. Going to feed my dog so I don’t neglect him, like the pilots did to those pour souls behind them.
The flight attendants had more and better communication and plans than the criminally stupid flight crew.
This is the first time I left speechless at any video @@dirkbester9050
let me help you out a bit. There's something that is taboo to talk about, but I don't care, so I'll say it. The saudis have been inbreeding for thousands of years. It's part of their culture. One effect is a general diminishment of mental capacity.
Helpful tip: If you get FIRED twice as a pilot (or recommended to be FIRED), perhaps the cockpit isn't your happy place?
Note to Saudia and any other airline. Not the first time an airline hired an incompetent after failing tests and red flags.
Mates rates everywhere
I think in this case, he got fired for a third and final time.
@@TheBackyardChemist But sadly taking so many lives with him.
@@NicolaW72 Oh yeah. Watching this video is almost scarier than watching a mechanical failure....because all those lives MIGHT not have been lost.
In every single one of these stories - every single one - the cabin crew performs excellently, often well above the call of duty. They are absolutely the unsung heroes of aviation.
Sadly I have to disagree here. Cabin crew should've taken control and evacuated the people without asking the captain who was clearly lost and confused for the TENTH TIME! Just open the gdamn emergency exits and worry about consequences later, when everybody is alive and safe from danger!
@@mickeypopaNah, those passengers were in a blind panic by the time that plane hit the ground. People were fighting in the aisles, for Christ's sake. The flight attendants were mostly young Filipino women, and no red-blooded Middle Eastern man is going to do what a woman says.
Totally insane. The plane lands successfully yet everybody dies.
that is the one and only time that ever has happened in aviation history.
Insane is an understatement. God knows what the pilots were thinking.
They weren’t thinking. They were going through the standard proceedures, retreating into basic training.
I was shocked when I heard this too. Fire in mid air usually ends in a crash. They managed to land the plane safely and yet nobody survived. Crazy.
Not a million miles away from that British Airtours incident. Didn't even leave the ground and people died.
Congrats on 2 million Mentour! Well deserved!
Thank you so much! It’s crazy… 💕
Wow! That was FAST! I was watching when Petter hit the ONE million mark....and it wasn't that long ago!
Yeah, it feels like 1M wasn't that long ago
Yes! Also a watcher from back in the day, with the couch, red and green pillows, and cute pups. I hope Petter does a little video talking about his (and his team’s) journey, while seated on his old couch! Hope the pups are still doing well too! 🐶🐶
@@Emm325 I always did like the pillows and the pups 💜
I lost it at the firefighter incompetence. Jesus christ how many people were involved in this incident that should have never been 10m near an airport is baffling. Makes you really appreciate how much things improved.
The true criminals are the pilots. Following an emergency landing due to an on-board fire with a call of ‘don’t evacuate’ is unfathomable and unforgivable
Do NOT use Jesus Christ as a profanity. There are better ways of expressing your frustration.
@@PunkDogCreations Did Jesus Christ tell you that? (Sorry, but somehow I think he'd be way less concerned about someone taking his name in vain and way more concerned about a situation in which 300 innocent people died for no good reason. In fact, I rather think that invoking his name when this kind of thing happens is quite appropriate.)
@@PunkDogCreations womp womp lil bro
My mom and dad evacuated from an L-1011nin the 1960s. My dad was part of the development team at Lockheed and one of the things that Lockheed had to do was fill up the plane with people and show it could be evacuated within the time limit. My mom and dad volunteered to be some of the people doing the test.
Ahh, that’s very cool!
There was an excellent study done where scientists tweaked the test. They’d recognised that there was no real sense of urgency to the evacuation; people just got up and started for the exit, queueing, polite, etc. So they offered a cash reward to the first people off the plane. That set off what is probably a more realistic scramble - people pushing, climbing over seats, etc. That series of tests demonstrated that under such conditions, aisles and doors needed to be much wider than the standards at the time.
@alexc4300 that's absolutely brilliant. I keep having to stop the video and remind myself it was the 70s and people don't know the things they don't know. What an awful way to die. It's really good to think there were also people like that trying to figure things out and make us all safer. Thanks for sharing.
All aircraft must pass an evacuation with a full load of passengers before certification is given. I grew up in Burbank, California where the L1011 was designed and built, and remember its first test flight from Burbank to Palmdale. This was a big deal at the time. The L1011 was a very good aircraft in it's day.
@@Niteowlette we lived in Chatsworth and my dad worked for Lockheed in the building right next to the airport. The evacuation certification test that my parents participated in was in Palmdale.
48:12 the final minute of this video was lovely, acknowledging the unsung, and often overlooked heroes. Thank you for that.
The least prestigious, least acknowledged, and of course, lowest paid went above and beyond even though they had no leadership or guidance.
If they saw the fire, should have evacuated even without the pilots order.
Rest in peace, everyone.
I was going to comment about you not mentioning those heroes (flight attendants), but you thankfully did.
I have massive respect for them.
That Captain can never and will never rest in peace
This is by far the craziest air disaster I've ever heard of. I mean, when you realize that at the moment of touchdown that almost everybody was very likely still alive...
I just don't get it... If I'm in that situation once black smoke fill the cabin I do not care what my instructions are I would open the door myself, throw out the closest 10 people and then myself. Every door has instructions on it on how to open them. The airline can always send their lawyers after me but at least I'd be alive...
@@221b-l3t I think you are underestimating just how intense the smoke got once those ac packs were shut off. The entire cabin was very likely just instantly filled with smoke so thick that you could not breathe, let alone see enough to find a door. Even if you managed to have the foresight to hyperventilate before the smoke came, held your breath long enough to try to reach the door, and already knew precisely how to open it, I seriously doubt you are going to be able to make it down the aisle that is likely already filled with other people and trash and debris. People were fighting each other before they even landed.
@@221b-l3t The pilots let the plane roll down the runway during those minutes the flight attendants needed to get the doors open. By the time the plane actually stopped, it was too late.
@@TheTonyMcDI can only speak for myself, but when I’m in an exit row, I know how to operate the door. I can hold my breath for 30 seconds at bare minimum with no preparation, and groping in the dark for the handle wouldn’t be all that much of a hurdle if it was that serious a situation.
Very depressing story considering that all those lives could have been saved.Thanks for the excellent presentation though.
I remember this tragedy well because my dad was working at the UAL Training Center in Denver (DENTK) at the time, instructing cabin crews on emergency procedures. I remember him having to go over this story in excruciating detail, and one of the things I know they looked at was the fact that the L1011's main cabin doors...like all of the "Jumbo"/widebody doors are power actuated as opposed to the older, narrow-body doors that are manually actuated. The doors on the L1011 (and DC-10, B747 and 767) are actuated, then swing in and UP...whereas the older models swing in and OUT. The question was, "Was there such a mass panic and crush that would jam the doors from being able to move "up" as people tried to get "out." My dad's department was focused on Crew training to manage and evacuate passengers and so they were really concerned about how the entire crew worked to evaluate the emergency and what actions they took (or didn't take) that resulted in the tragedy.
Later, I react badly to this story because my dad finished his career as a FE/2nd Officer on DC-10's (also for UAL). The Flight Engineer is such an important position...and here the FE utterly failed in his job. Every so often you can find accidents where the FE was ignored (like UAL 183 in Portland) or where the FE failed in his job and killed everyone. The FE should have been managing the aircraft systems and he may not have been "in control" of the situation, but his mismanagement of the situation killed everyone on that airplane.
the fact that peter tell he rather lose both of his engines than dealing with an uncontained fire tell show bad an inflight fire could be.
If he loses both his engines he can still operate the airplane like a glider and with a bit of luck (no high hills) he can land on a large enough field.
I rather deal with no engines as a passenger than an inflight fire too.
"could be"? no bruh, there is no 'could' here
Well he didn't specify the altitude for the dual engine loss .... at 37000 feet in a developed country, no problem, piece of cake ;)
Not gonna work during takeoff!
Thanks for making video on this accident. One of my relatives had lost his life in it. Very close to my heart. It remained a mystery. Hardly anyone ever explained it with such details. Love from Pakistan ❤
I'm sorry for your loss.
So sorry.
I've watched dozens of Petter's accident review vids. This one really affected me. It is the most chilling.
About the inflammability of matches: Decades ago at my parents house, there was a sudden strong smell of burning matches. We immediately began looking for the source, couldn't find it, and over the next few hours the odor dissipated. Several years later we were moving some furniture and we found a large box of wooden kitchen matches that had fallen to the floor behind a piece of furniture, ignited, but failed to burn thru the box, then ran out of oxygen and self extinguished.
A cousin of mine was a small town fire chief. He told me once to always beware of matchbooks and boxes. Mice will chew on the paper and can unintentionally spark up a fire. A glass mason jar is a good place to store matches.
@@davecarpenter4917 When I was a kid they were always stored in a tin.
@@frithbarbatsafety matches are now a thing.
The culprit in this situation is the “STRIKE ANYWHERE MATCH”. These are the ones that are white tipped. They were made illegal for sale in the USA in the 60s when I was a kid. All you have to do is drop a box of these matches and they could ignite.
I still see Strike Anywhere matches for sale, but they are indeed dangerous for the reasons described above.
Cabin crew, as a profession, really don't get the respect they deserve. In so many accidents, the only reason anyone survived at all was that the cabin crew kept the passengers calm and facilitated fast evacuations from the plane. Even where there were no survivors, cabin crew frequently distinguish themselves - be they the cabin crew here, or Betty Ong and the other cabin crew members on 9/11, cabin crew members are often unsung heroes.
They don't get respect, or even minimum wage! They really need to unionize
😮 the way you relayed this story and never once swore or really criticised is evidence of your professionalism and that no doubts you are very good at poker. The ineptitude was catastrophic imo. Tragedies are bad enough without failures to address them. Thank you mentor pilot. Regards
total morons, Darwin awards
This incident always disturbs me so much. My father was Lockheed’s F/E Instructor on the Tristar in early 1980, and he was responsible for the final checks and approval of the L-1011 certification for the F/E on the incident flight. He’d also been offered a job with Saudia after he’d provided training to a number of their employees, and we moved to Jeddah about a year after this tragedy. My father told me that he was really distressed as soon as he heard of this incident because he hadn’t been entirely comfortable passing the F/E, whose performance on the simulator was marginal at best, and that decision haunted him for years. I think I’ve still got his logbook in which he recorded the training sessions. It’s one of the incidents my dad (accidentally, I’m sure) used to drive a deep seated fear of flying into me.
this story has always fascinated me. to make it to the ground intact and to still have no survivors, its just so eerie.
Your narration of this tragedy is so professional. Absolutely inspiring the way you acknowledged the flight attendants!
As a pilot, even though I don't fly anymore, I cant believe the captains behavior during this entire thing. Blows my mind. I never had an in flight emergency but I still can't believe this.
I have often wondered if sheer disbelief is the reason that people deny that horrific events have happened.
As a retired banner pilot, I've had many in-flight emergencies (small planes are much more subject to failures than passenger jets). Remaining calm is crucial to surviving and not making a mistake, but remaining too calm is deadly, as is shown here. Early in my career I flew one plane that was notorious for engine troubles, and the tower got used to me saying "glider 86AB is landing again" during maintenance test flights over the runway. 🤣
It´s indeed mind-blowing.
I have lived under Islam in the UAE. Men are raised steeped in a sense of shame and inadequacy.
You'll notice most of the disastrous crew failures in this channel's videos involved Arab or if not Muslim nationality.
It's hubris and pride born of a fear of ostracism from the group.
@@GodelFishbreath That's a regular factor in accidents of all types. I know from personal experience of a car accident that your initial behaviour when faced with an unexpected emergency is often not rational and the true magnitude doesn't sink in until much later. People often act stunned and go through the motions of what they would normally be doing - eg the frequent examples of passengers collecting their luggage in an evacuation. Trained professionals on the other hand will say 'I didn't think about it, my training just kicked in'.
I just saw the Mayday episode of that incident. I couldn’t believe how casual the pilots were treating the emergency.
What season and ep
@callumery119 Yeah I was gonna ask the same. I've seen all of them but have never seen this incident featured
I don’t know if applicable here but I have witnessed Egyptians barely react to crisis. When I asked about it the explanation was belief in preordained destiny. Fighting events that unfold therefore is to defy God’s will.
@@callumery119season 24, episode 8 of Mayday titled "Under Fire"
@@richardkudrna7503 whoever said that is wrong because in our religion we should always do our best never allow ourselves or others be in position of harm so fighting it with everything is a must. In case our livelihoods are at risk every haram (not allowed) becomes halal (allowed). So idk whoever told you this but they’re wrong.
Very good analysis about their relationship and their different cultures.
The humility is such important for a pilot, as much as self-confidence.
Yeah burning alive is probably the worst way to die and that story is really tragic and sad
Everyone died due to smoke inhalation.
You will likely die from the smoke before you are burned alive.. but that’s not much better 😞
I remembered this story wrongly I thought that passengers wore oxygen masks
I'm still watching (they're taking off), but I assume it's before mandatory oxygen masks. I'm waiting to find out. The smoke alarms going off!
@@zeus866If the masks are deployed but some aren't being used by passengers, what is that oxygen going to do to a cabin fire?
Another well-made, well narrated, and well researched video. As a firefighter paramedic of 30 years, I can toss out a few observations I've encountered and learned. *Fire can double in size every minute *Plastics and foam items are basically "frozen gasoline" and are incredibly flammable and release some of the most toxic smoke *Fire protection and suppression is always given a back seat to most other factors when designing a building...or an aircraft *Extreme measures are taken to toy with numbers and square footage to avoid or alter Fire detection and suppression systems *In an emergency people will 1. Panic and resort to animal behavior 2. Disengage, disbelieve, and become comatose 3. Resort back to what's comfortable rather than face problem. 4. Deny, there's an issue and fall to confirmation bias. Fires happen ....emergencies happen. When flying, don't wear polyester material. Keep your shoes on (real shoes, not flip flops) while taking off and landing. Observe your exit options, review the emergency material EVERY FLIGHT and pay full attention to the flight staff. Their number one job is your safety and not catering to your every need and hear you complain. Great job as always Mentor!!
I do that, but I'm not worried about myself. It's the other passengers that would block me because they didn't read and panic. You're never getting a room or plane full of people to behave properly. You can evacuate if there's plenty of time and well trained personnel around, but not with a fire like this.
@@VincentGroenewold "You are never getting..." exception: they are Japanese.
Reasons to read the comments, thanks a lot for the advisories!
Thank you, making a note! While realising my fire survival mainly depends on other people...
I was present at the Bradford City stadium fire in the UK in 1985. That fire went from "some visible smoke" to "entire stadium ablaze" in well under 5 minutes. The fire brigade was called *by accident* when the fire was still very small and appeared manageable, arrived within 3 minutes, and still found a complete stand on fire. 56 people died that day.
Fire is no joke.
I don’t know if it’s your accent or the immense respect you show for the perils of your chosen profession or maybe even your knowledge and ability to describe the harrowing situations these crews find themselves in but something you’re doing is just “right”. I really appreciate that you give props to those in these emergencies that deserve it such as the young flight attendants in this disaster who gave their lives trying to ensure their passengers safety and wellbeing. Another job well done. I look forward to the next one.
My father was a civil engineer from the US working with many expats in Saudi Arabia with a company called CCC, building their infrastructure. He was there in Riyadh airport and witnessed the fire taking place. They had tractors and other equipment on hand and offered to use them to break through the fuselage of the plane to get the passengers out, but the authorities denied any efforts to do so, so they were forced to watch the plane burn to the ground. My father has told us this story over the years, but this is the first time I’m seeing it documented.
Nope, expats. Saudi Arabia hires foreigners (expats) for the majority of their technical jobs and as domestic servants. They are not immigrating, they are just working a contract. I worked a two year contract in their shipyards in the 80’s.
@@secondace9495 Immigrants move to a foreign country to live there permanently, while expats move to a foreign country and live there only for the duration of their employment. We lived in Saudi Arabia for only three years.
@@secondace9495there really isn't a definition of who is an expat and who is an immigrant. By the dictionary, expats don't intend to stay permanently and immigrants do, but that doesn't work in places that don't allow permanent migrants but still use the term.
In reality, the word immigrant has connotations of low class, low wealth and searching for upward mobility , while expat has connotations of high skill, high wealth and high status.
Low skilled poor workers and people of color tend to be labeled immigrants , while high skilled wealthy and typically white people tend to be labelled as expats.
@@secondace9495 Expats live in a foreign country for the duration of their employment, not permanently!
@@TheSkcube I thought the definition was that expats moved to the country mainly because their employer assigned them there, while immigrants moved to the country for more personal reasons. A highly skilled, wealthy person who just wanted to move to a different country would still be an immigrant because no employer assigned them there.
I am an uneducated layperson who knows nothing about aviation, I need things explained to me in simple terms.
When Mentour Pilot says, "I would rather face a double engine failure than face this", then you know it's one of the worst things that can happen.
What fuels fire? Oxygen. There is no water pump 40k feet in the air and there is no way to starve the fire without starving ourselves. And the design if aeroplane is by necessity compact; wherever the fire starts it is only a short matter of time before it begins to damage flight controls while filling the whole cabin with smoke. It is not a survivable occurrence unless you can get on the ground in a matter of a few minutes.
@@prismpyre7653 plus a plane with no engines is still a glider. As long as you're not in the middle of the ocean you'll be ok.
@@prismpyre7653 Or the fire is controllable and can be extinguished easily. Thankfully, technology allowed us to be able to avoid passengers from bring inflammable items on board
@@geechisuede98 Even a no engine water landing is likely preferable to an in-flight fire.
@@geechisuede98this is half of the truth. The glide number of a commercial plane is about 15. If you fly at 8km you only have 120km of distance assuming no maneuver
One year prior to this incident, another flight on the same route from Jeddah to Karachi, operated by PIA 740, experienced a similar fire caused by gas stoves. My grandfather was among the passengers on that flight. Unfortunately, the aircraft was unable to land and exploded mid-air. My father told me that, at that time, it was customary for pilgrims to carry gas stoves with them. There were no inspections or instructions from the airport staff regarding these stoves. It was norm those days.
Oh man...thats terrible😮 Sorry for your loss.
The famous photo of the burned out plane with the desert backdrop is so haunting knowing so many people died trapped inside 😔
Now add lithium batteries to every seat. Would it be worth adding an external fire sprinkler inlet similar to power and air?
@@gregoryb.9630well that explains the rather ominous warning I saw on my last flight in Finnair telling passengers to stop using their device if it overheats and to let the flight crew know.
@@gregoryb.9630That’s most likely not going to happen. It would be prohibitively expensive and it would weight down the plane.
Really the only option is to prevent passengers from taking on batteries onboard cargo and make sure that the batteries carried into the cabin don’t have a chance to start a fire
@@gregoryb.9630 never thought of that cause im afraid to fly
I heard this story during training. One of the most heartbreaking, completely avoidable disasters in aviation history.
Your channel is a gem, you explain everything so clearly and illustrate the story so well. Thank you for these stories!
What gets me is the attitude to safety. Even with the flight crew being incompetent, had their immediate reaction been "uh-oh let's declare emergency and return immediately just in case" they might have been able to save everyone.
That actually was their reaction, mostly. In my opinion the problem was that they were too incompetent to follow through effectively, and ended up just wasting time, instead of taking effective action.
That would have saved many minutes - but even more baffling is wasting the minutes after *you are all safely on the ground*.
@@vasilivh They first discussed if a fire alarm was really a fire alarm and then went through pages for in total 4 minutes meanwhile climbing higher and flying farther away.
@@ouwebrood497 this is true, but no other options than returning to Riyadh were really on the table (aside from a moment of wishful thinking that they could just continue). It just took too long to actually DO something, like they couldn't commit to the one course of action they had
We studied this accident when I went to FAA accident investigator school. A lot was learned from this occurrence . You explain it well. Good job Petter!
Mentour pilot, I've been a subscriber for quite a long time now and I've watched every single story you dropped since then but damn this one takes the cake. My heart sank so much i felt it slow down when the flash fire happened, they were ao close to surviving , when you talked about the flash fire it just killed my spirit knowing how helpless they were at that moment.
Also why did shutting down the engine take so long, what on earth were they thinking, when they knew there was a fire onboard no matter how small, i guess we'll never know.
Hello! I am 15 years old and hugely into aviation. I'm not hesitant to say that your videos have inspired my love for aircraft and how they work to the core. Thank you so much!
I'm the same (except the age)
Exactly the same here
hi im 3 years younger than you the rest is the same
Im also 15 and his videos have inspired me a lot
Same aswell
the intro is sooo good I can't believe how you still keep increasing quality
We do what we can!
I noticed it too... from the graphics to the sound effects and tension building background music, it's a very well produced video. Well done!
I'll have to rewatch this... Been occupied doing other things...
this one was really hard to watch. so much preventable pain and loss. thank you for making these - they remind me why it's important to be caring but strong.
I remember when "Smoke and Fire" procedures changed from 'Working through a long checklist" to solve a problem Vs. GET THIS PLANE ON THE GROUND and evacuate!! This was an excellent explanation of the factors in this disaster. Thanks.
Wait, you mean skip the whole "Let's fly out over the water and enter a holding pattern while we dump a lot of fuel so we do not have to do an overweight landing? I am sure the smoke is not that serious." part?
@@Melanie16040 Yes. Exactly that is meaned.
@@Melanie16040 The flight over the water didn't do them it, they were already lost when the fire started.
Maybe they would've landed in 27 minutes instead of 23 minutes, they had 11.
I seem to remember the Swissair 111 disaster, which occured about one month after I flew on a Swissair MD11. The pilots wanted to dump fuel rather than make a quick landing.
@@Fay7666 What I hear you saying is: That was one of the instances in which an emergency descent followed by off field landing wold have been the proper course of action.
This is the most frustrating aviation accident I’ve ever heard of, and it completely breaks my heart. Some people are not capable of staying level headed in emergencies, and those people should not be given responsibility for the lives of that many other people.
How do you recognise those people in advance?
@@ms-jl6dlexamination
@ms-jl6dl, That's why there is so much psychological testing for pilot suitability now. Increased simulator training contributes to this psychological preparation. It's not a perfect system but pilots do practice a very strenuous and robust mental simulation, so this type of situation doesn't happen.
@@ms-jl6dl Not allowing them to fly as per the rapports also in this case.
@@ms-jl6dl lots and lots of simulator training, especially when faced with unexpected problems. There are many ways to test if someone is good under pressure.
I am no pilot (only flew once in a sea plane for fun haha) but my dad and I are both very good in emergencies. Our brains clear and we enter an extreme state of focus and calm. My mom on the other hand can become overwhelmed easily by the anxiety. However she is great during the aftermath and the long haul, whereas my dad and I will crash as soon as the adrenaline wears off.
Different people’s nervous systems and brain wiring are better for different situations. Of course training can make any person much better at reacting to emergencies, but overall different personality types fit better roles. Either way, lots of emergency training and competency evaluations under pressure should be done. That is what I believe to be the best way to keep people safe. At minimum 1 of the two pilots in a cockpit should be able to score very highly whilst under pressure, whatever that might mean.
Please don't stop flying, we need Captains like you. Regards, Isken.
I was an FAA engineer in a Civil Aviation Assistance Group in Spain 10 yrs. I had 2 FAA coworkers there that had worked in Saudi Arabia. One of them told me the most amazing incident while he was in Saudi Arabia was a passenger in the rear who actually built a fire on the floor in the aisle to make tea. I don’t know the date or flight number, but it would have been in the late 1970’s or early 1980’s.
It is sometimes attempted nowadays- the most secluded even literal cave dwelling tribe members still wish to take the pilgrimage, and that they have holy protection.
The hoteliers in Malaysia have similar stories abt Arab tourists back in the early 2000 too
Well, tea is important! I'd believe that this had happened.
It’s actually this very flight ”One early theory was that the fire began in the passenger cabin when a passenger used his own butane stove to heat water for tea.[”
Flight Saudia163 HZ-AHK
I have been to Saudi Arabia many times, doing business and consulting with Saudia Airlines. Absolutely no part of this story surprises me in the least. The old saying "they could screw up a one car funeral procession" springs to mind. That is all I will say on the matter.
I also know the L1011 better than most. I worked on almost 25% of the total L1011's ever produced at Delta Air Lines as a mechanic and did extensive mods to them as an avionics engineer. It was a very complicated aircraft that was absolutely the most sophisticated aircraft when it was produced. Even when it was retired it had the smoothest autoland in the sky. But again, it was super complex and you did not want anything but the best pilots flying it.
Thank you for your input!
@@MentourPilot Thanks! Love your videos. This one was gut wrenching though because I know the L1011 and I know Saudis. A culture of arrogance, butt covering, and nepotiam, combined with an airplane that pushed technology and standards was a fatal combination.
@@acars9999sadly, what you say is the terrible truth. I hope things have changed since then.
@@acars9999 Openly said: The behaviour of the Flight Engineer was very strange, too, and he had another cultural background. Of course he suffered from his illness but nevertheless - and even knowing that he had not the medical capability for this profession.
I was going to comment that, after living in Saudi just 9 years ago, sounds like Saudi being Saudi. And the heroes were the Filipinos… which, again, sounds like Saudi. Those poor people. This was heartbreaking!!
Ive not cried this hard at one of your videos before and they do make me cry on occasions! This hurt so much. So seemingly avoidable!
This was always the most baffling air disaster. The pilots were just morons.
It was moreso the manifestation of existing systemic issues in broader Airline/industry/nepo/safety/training. Even after this incident it took several more including ValueJet for the US to care about cargo fires etc
I'd say the flight/personnel planners were even worse.
Each of these crew-members should have had a notation in their files that they should only be paired to experienced collegues, yet instead they ended up together..... pretty much a "the lame leading the blind" scenario.
The Saudis need SOMEWHERE to park their surplus failsons.
As a passenger I would have found it impossible to not decide to open an emergency door myself. As long as I wasn't already overcome by smoke while the plane was moving.
@@volvo09Unfortunately, that is likely what had happened. The pilots may have access to their own independent oxygen system, but the passengers only have a few minutes of emergency oxygen designed specifically to help with sudden decompression, not fires.
A panicked and uncontrolled crowd would definitely push for the exits without knowing that the door must be first pulled inwards to be opened therefore making it impossible to open the doors. This is similar to that theater fire in the US that lead to the regulation that all fire exits must open outwards, but of course it’s not possible on an aircraft. I imagine the flight crew could and would have opened the doors if there were enough space for them to do so.
@itopaloglu - Beverly Hills Supper Club, Southgate, KY, just south of Cincinnati, OH. 165 died. Including large chunks of families. May 1977. The mention and memory of it still send shock waves through this area. The land stands vacant; multiple attempts to redevelopment it have been unsuccessful.
That makes perfect sense, yeah
Thanks for explaining why _seemingly_ nobody tried to overrule the captain's suicidal order :')
I'm a now retired flight attendant (37 years in the industry). The flight attendants on this flight were likely overcome by toxic smoke and had passed out. There were no portable breathing hoods as required emergency equipment in 1980. Thankfully, there have been many airline safety improvements in the last 40 years.
What about the doors above the wings? Don't they open outwards?
@@Hans-Peter-o9n not sure what type of doors those were, but it's very difficult to operate any emergency exit if 20 people are on top of you. More likely though, the cabin was already filled with smoke to the point that the wing exits were unsurvivable.
This one is a tough one to feel inspired confidence in the legacy of the emergency. Still fascinating to watch and learn about! Thank you for covering it!
the moment the Captain was singing, you just knew everyone was going to die. He was in such denial he neglected to recognize it was really really freaking bad.
As someone from Pakistan, specifically Karachi, I wanted to add that people from our country have a very bad tendency to freak out and lose their rationality in cases of panic or stress. It is more than likely that because of that fact, once the plane had landed, there would have been complete and utter chaos. People screaming, getting hurt, pushing and shoving for the exit doors, not knowing that they have to be opened inwards first. It feels cruel knowing that there could have been survivors, not everyone had to perish.
It is so important to maintain a rational head and to listen to cabin crew in case of emergencies like this.
May they all rest in peace.
That has always been my thinking on why no one got out after the plane landed.
Arent you ashamed to be like that ????????
@@snowleopard0412well he’s totally not? *Your* irrationality and illiteracy is showing. Didn’t understand what he said
@@snowleopard0412remember europeans had a great deal of advancement over hundreds of years. Pakistan got dragged out of the iron age in recent memory, and many parts are still woefully underdeveloped.
You can't just make up that half dozen or more generational change with a pamphlet.
In fact nobody would have died if the Flight Crew would have acted as professional as the Cabin Crew.
RIP to all those Victims.
A synopsis at 13:47: all 3 crew members had previously washed out of training. They were rejected as flight crew candidates due to (unspecified) deficiencies. Their further training and subsequent crew placement was based on illogical decisions by uninformed "authorities". This is a common theme in disaster scenarios.
If I remember right, at least one of the flight crew (The Captain I think) had some relation to Saudi Royalty and used that connection extensively to protect his career.
It's a problem when positions are allocated according to membership of an important family or having money rather than suitability. Unfortunately, this is not the only case.
Airplanes are incredibly safe, but are also the only transport method scarier than a ship, in the event of a fire.
Yeah, fire is pretty much the worst thing that can happen in an aircraft
@@MentourPilot Also true of ships. It's just much, much worse for an aircraft.
At least on a ship you're surrounded in something that can extinguish it. In a plane, you are fuel and the air you're flying on is also fuel and you're surrounded by fuel and then literal fuel in the wings etc. Just bad.@CiaranMaxwell
Spacecraft > Submarine > Airplane > Ship
@@ravennightingale1260 Can't you just blow ballast and surface in a submarine?
By far one of the most intriguing and mysterious air disasters I’ve read about… I’ve been trying to find a documentary about this crash forever. Thank you!
"We will never know for sure" is such an unnerving foreshadowing...
Yeah, from that moment you know that, whatever else happens, the captain didn't make it.
@@phueal we did get a fake out once from that, in fairness.
@@mandowarrior123 in which video?
As a US Air Force troop, I deployed to Riyadh in late 1981 as part of the US Military Training Mission to Saudi Arabia. The burnt out remains of Saudia Flight 163 were still there, just off the runway.
31:36 So the flight engineer was a literal npc
The worst aviation disaster to not involve an actual crash.
What makes me more angry than this whole thing is the fact that they literally landed, it’s not like they crashed, THEY LANDED.
ALL THEY NEEDED TO DO WAS TO APPLY MAX BRAKING AND EVACUATE. Unbelievable.
It's so baffling
yeah it took a while for me to realize they were actually going to get the plane on the ground, and THEN everyone was going to burn. Kind of amazing how long the plane flew with hardly an issue with a fire raging.
It's so heart-breaking for those poor passengers and flight attendants.
Crashing would've given them a much higher chance. Turning of the ventilation, not bothering to turn off the engines or evacuate, insanity.
Yes, exactly!
Almost brought me to tears, especially when you honored the heroic flight attendants. I have watched many of these videos, but the senseless loss of life here is so very sad.
As a South African this reminded me of the Helderberg disaster, SAA295, where we lost a 747 due to fire. Fires on planes are truly scary.
People have trampled others fleeing from a theater fire. Much less a plane.
The Three Stooges of Aviation. These 3 muppets being put inthe same cockpit was always going to end in disaster.
😞😞
examples of industry training and culture moreso. Institutional practices across airlines or countries, communication gaps between even best pilots have variable obedience to hierarchies or ad-hoc thinking? The same problems occur in military (read "Armies of Sand" by Pollack) or all across Manufacturing, Medical and other sectors.
At some point we do stop blaming muppet pilot/doctor/operator and instead change the rules & system itself
I wonder if religious principles could also have played a role? Such as thinking that "god", "allah" or whoever would solve the problem for you and if not, just let it happen and accept your fate?
I guess they were drilling holes in the swiss cheese of safety
@@toltect3744 No, in Islam, a Moeslim must try our best first, if after trying our best the end result didn't go according to what we hope for, then we give our fate to God.
OMG I just searched for a video on this flight a week ago and didn’t find it on your channel and now you have uploaded it. You are amazing!
Well done Petter for calling out how incredible the flight attendants were.
Compare this incident to the JAL fire after collision in January with the fantastic flight crew as well
JAL was a textbook evac perforned by the flight attendants. Great job!
Shout out to the perfectly behaved PASSENGERS on the JAP flight
Imagine landing, thinking you're safe... but being artificially trapped by an incompetent pilots and crew.. Tragic, truly.
Imagine having airport firefighters and not teaching them how to open the door to an aircraft....
@@penguin12902 Indeed. And not giving them respirators which every volunteer fire department in the countryside has.
And by the incompetent firefighters on ground too!
@@tareginda they lacked both equipment and training, it seems.
@@NicolaW72 not in 1980s in a desert country ig
I very rarely get really emotional when watching your videos, but oh my god, this one had me in tears. Excellent storytelling- one of your best yet.
This is one of the greatest examples of just pure negligence these 301 people did not have to die that day what an utterly avoidable tragedy R.I.P all who died 🪦💔
Lovely words about the cabin crew at the end. It was like they were in a fighting withdrawal, keeping the smoke and fire at bay as long as they could. So tragic they didn’t get out
Thank you Petter. This entire episode was a gut punch. Hats off to the heroic efforts of the cabin crew, and may the passed find piece.
I’m so, so glad that you said what you did at the end about the Cabin Crew. When I first heard about Saudi 163 years ago, the thing that got me most was how those poor cabin crew were absolute left helpless and had no chance of being able to do what they were capable of, because the entire system let them down. The FAA, their pilots, Saudi Airlines….. absolutely nobody had their back. Their training was completely inadequate yet despite that - they all made an outstanding and heroic effort. They were smart and they knew what was needed without anyone in a class room telling them. Yet tragically, that was in vain because they also hadn’t been supplied with adequate safety equipment to assist, an adequately safe aircraft which was their workplace nor was anybody in that cockpit any use or support to them. They must have felt so alone and seen how let down they had been by it all.
The fact that they were all so young and had to go through this absolutely horrific and terrifying death is just heartbreaking. They were in that cabin and faced with that fire and they will have known how bad the situation was. They probably knew there was a chance they wouldn’t get off that plane yet they all tried their best. They used up all their rudimentary equipment, they moved passengers down the cabin and they were all near fire exit doors clearly trying to get to them through the panicking passengers who prevented them in helping everyone.
Theirs is absolutely the most tragic part of this disaster and of all the videos I’ve seen about this incident, you are the first person to draw attention to their devastatingly hopeless situation.
They are indeed, the heroes of this tragedy. I hope that every new cabin crew recruit around the world, learns of their sad fate and knows each of their names. Because of those young ladies, aviation safety was changed for the better forever. I wish they could know that their efforts weren’t in vain after all. On the contrary, their plight changed compartment fire classification and evacuation procedures forever. RIP ladies. Hope you’re always flying high. ❤
Touching. Thanks for writing
@@M_SC Cabin Crew never usually get the recognition they deserve on a lot of aviation channels. They work so hard in such a complicated workspace.
Whenever I see people say things like their job is easy and they get paid to just make tea and sit on a beach, I always challenge them to say how they think they would manage to do their daily job, in a confined metal tube where directional flow and space is limited, where peoples anxieties and frustrations are often heightened, while it wobbles them around all over the place to the point where every piece of equipment they use has to have brakes applied or it be strapped down. And do it all in heels and often thick, tight, uncomfortable uniforms. Where on a 10 hour shift they may have to rotate one spare seat between 14 of them. And that’s just the daily stuff. Because they’re trained to save lives too. And funnily enough, most of the time people either don’t respond to my challenge or reply with some made up BS about how good they’d be at it.
Without the Cabin Crew, pilots couldn’t take those passenger planes anywhere. And I wouldn’t be as safe as can be as a passenger. They’re not just essential, they’re exceptional human beings who choose to do an exceptional job.
The “after” image of the plane is absolutely horrifying.
Mentour pilot , you are one if a kind. God bless you man.
The flight engineer going:
"Just put the fire out :)"
Literally same energy as "Just buy a house"
Or "just get a job"
Or "just be happy"
Alcoholism? Just stop drinking!
Honestly the captain was spot on with his comment about the flight engineer.
At that salary: normal.
This is such a weird story....you'd think once you land a burning plane, you hit the brakes like it's nobody's business and make sure you get the people out as soon as possible......I can only imagine the the waiting emergency crews being utterly flabbergasted with the plane calmly passing them..... I think a lot of the blame goes to the utterly disfunctional flightcrew
That, plus I think they still didn't fully realize the extend of the danger. Remember that the engineer saw relatively little smoke (by coincidence) and they assured themselves everything would be fine.
@@VincentGroenewoldhowever, the cabin crew repeatedly told them they needed to evacuate. Part of me feels that they might not have listened to the cabin crew not just because of the language gap but because of the power differential between Saudi/American men and mostly young Filipino women
@@Cybele1986my sentiments exactly!
@@Cybele1986 Indeed. The Captain gave not a single time an answer to the Cabin Crew. Maybe he would have acted differently when not young Filipino Women but an older Arabian Male would have called him in this way.
The American Flight Engineer is a very strange case in its own in this case.
@@Cybele1986 Honestly I wouldn't be so sure because a power gap shouldn't have too much of an influence in this case. If someone tells you there is a fire that can kill you most people are going to minimize their own risks of dying as long as it is plausible enough of a risk.
This three previous-washout cockpit is prime example of the swiss cheese model and the fact that you should always consider a) the bigger picture and b) the worst case.
Everyone who allowed these people back in the cockpit, thought it a similar minor issue and never dreamed up the possibility of three of that calibre ending up in one cockpit together and what it would mean.
"One time is no time, until it is the last time" - as a German idiom would say. Meaning: we always excuse doing unwise things by doing them "just once", until that "just once" becomes the moment when it backfires.
Indeed, exactly.
Congrats for the 2 million Well deserved!, and unbelievable video
21:41 as someone with mild dyslexia, I can confirm that dyslexia results in more than just confusion while reading. If it's hard or confusing for you to read something, it often times results in not reading very carefully or having to reread the same words multiple times. It might not have caused the entirety of his situation, but it might have been why he spent as much time as he did just flipping through pages
I have the same, and for me i can course me to read what i want to read or add stuff that is not there. And i can guss that the stress didn't help.
I swear I was going crazy in school, the only one having that same issue.
I think this is obvious but dyslexic ppl shouldn’t be flight engineers considering the job requires a lot of reading especially during crucial high pressure situations. Dyslexia doesn’t limit people from every career, in fact they can do most. But in a high pressure environment where your reading abilities affect whether people live or die, it’s obvious a dyslexic person shouldn’t take that role. If one’s personality/skills/intelligence/mental or physical capabilities dont align with being a surgeon, pilot, grocery store worker, restaurant server, whatever it may be, maybe one should just find a Different Career Path. It baffles me that people deemed clearly unfit for a role will go to such great lengths, bribes, moving to different countries, switching airlines, nepotism, to get a role they are unfit for and potentially dangerously unfit for. Towards the end, it was obvious that they had accepted their own doom, rather than taking the effort to help save lives due to their own blunders.
@@00shivani I don´t know about the last part but according to everything else in your comment: Indeed, exactly!
Is the issue with dislexia trying to make out what you're reading or would you have the same issue if you listened to the information?
Outstanding video. I remember this accident well. The TriStar L1011 plane burned fuselage stayed in place in Riyadh airport for almost a year. Every time you flew through the airport you could not miss it.
I was in Saudi Arabia on business in early 1981. I recall flying from Dhahran to Riyadh, and seeing the burned out hulk of the plane parked on the taxiway. It was a really sobering experience. But, I'm still convinced that its the safest way to travel, in large part due to the highly disciplined approach the industry takes to extracting every bit of usable knowledge from events such as this, and then applying that information to make flying even safer.
This story is absolutely insane and sad. Thank you for telling this story.
Fire means turn back immediately. Nothing the checklist said would’ve changed that
The sole reason you don't turn back is because you're practically lined up on another runway in front of you!
Even if it means dive at 3,000ft/min, be overweight, and land at twice Vref, you put the bird on the ground as hard as you need to.
Because let's face it, if you don't, the airframe is a total loss anyway!
@@MattDinnery Correct, as a pilot you should know where the other runways are around you before you leave, you may not be required to but hell I do it takes all of a few seconds. Only if you know the other airport/runway is give or take 2 minutes LONGER then turning around and lining back up from where you just left do you most likely want to turn around. but obviously you need to be a good judge of situations firstly and no chance with these pilots.
I've been caught in a gas flash over when I was 18 working construction. It caught me from my waist up and burned all of my chest, arms, and face. I remember lying in bed for 3 weeks while being tended to by my grandmother. That had to be the worst pain I've ever experienced, and I'm now 48. I can't imagine what these passengers endured and I feel for any who did not succumb to the smoke before they were burned. RIP to all
Yikes. That’s unspeakable. Your grandmother is brave. I’d want to be gone just being beside someone like that. I hope you had better luck after that
@M_SC my grandmother had been a nurse. Every night she would smear silver oxide and vitamin e oil on my burns and every afternoon I had to have the scrub bath which felt like getting burned all over again, to remove the dead tissue and prevent infection. 6 months later in April I went to Marine Corps bootcamp lol, this after Dr's said I'd never be able to handle full sun. I'm almost 49 and I've had a great life mostly. 5 years ago I had surgery for a broken neck I sustained during the Military. I'm basically medically retired at this point due to injuries I've sustained thru the years. But I'm not mad about it lol
Three complete incompetents in the cockpit. What a nightmare. Thank you for another excellent video.
This accident has been covered on other channels, but on this channel there's always an educational component included. Thank you
I travelled a lot on internal flights in Saudi in the 80s. I remember cabin crew stopping a passenger setting up his primus stove in the aisle to cook his lunch!
Not the brightest folks over there, eh?
@@jaysmith1408cultural norms defy intelligence over and over everywhere
Real education is unlearning what your culture taught you
They still try it now, as folks from the most backwater desert tribes still make flights for pilgrimage. Thankfully it gets stopped before boarding more often, but passengers on their special journey assume they have special divine protection anyway.
@@M_SCno ,it's just stupid
In freaking tears by the end. Thank you for the story of the cabin crew. Heroes until the end. 😢
The animation at 44:35 of the flash fire spreading from aft to forward as witnessed from the plane's exterior is well done and terrifying to watch.
Several years ago I saw a stafftrainingvideo based on a real-life scanerio if a doors hot or you gear fire at back of door don't open that door in a building even if a plane air gets in there's a flash over everyone's killed and properly people on ground
I had flying fear issues and since the time i have been following your channel, i am kind of more relaxed and less scared. Thanks for sharing such videos. One thing i do now is that when something has to happen, it will happen. So no point worrying. Thanks once again. Love from Dubai.
And you can be prepared in case of emergency.
Same here. Understanding has increased my acceptance and reduced my irrational fears.
But things don’t have to happen. And jumping to that conclusion prematurely when it’s not too late is what the pilots did! You are them!
@@M_SC he means, worry about what you have control over.
Truly heartbreaking. I was so relieved when I saw the perfect landing with the plane still not engulfed in flames. How excruciating those last few minutes must have been.
I worked for nearly 42 years in a large power plant. Our continuing training often included studies of events from other industries, including aviation. How tragic that so often these events would never have happened had better policies and procedures (especially CRM) been in place at the time; but these accidents were the hard lessons which caused better policies, procedures and training to be developed...they are truly "written in blood".
Gawd that's heart wrenching. Despite all the screw ups by the flight crew they still made it onto the ground, stopped, and everybody died being able to see the ground and safety as they choked on the smoke. This has to be one of, if not the most, depressing review you've done. Not a bad thing, just very very sad.
This is a prime example of Carelessness by the Pilots… Thank God for the Cabin Crew… God has you in his Grace!
The pilots freezing up during the time they needed to be evacuating the plane brings a whole new perspective to the term “flight or fright”.
fight or flight, sorry i gotta quite reading comments
Yeah it's now often called "flight, fight, or freeze", because freeze is also a very common reaction. It comes up a lot in assault cases - the mind simply freezes up and the victim can't do anything.
That may have happened to one or more of the flight crew - particularly the captain.
The only channel where I watch a video as soon as I see it on my feed
Ahh, that’s so nice to hear!
Same here, I was watching interesting video, but when I had saw Peter public new video I just dropped previous and ran to watch
A tragedy well-covered... I learned a lot from your video, and your explanations were flawless and easy to understand. Thank you for making this~ and may all the lost souls rest in heaven💔
congrats on 2M subscribers!!! also nice collab with veritasium :D
Thank you! Glad you liked it.
I don't think the captain was singing softly in Arabic. I think he was reading prayers in arabic to himself.
I hate it when people pray at the wrong moments. It's OK to pray, but please don't forget to solve the problem at hand.
@@ouwebrood497 Could be panicked or trying to calm himself down
@@Stavrose85still not a good time. There was no time for anything but decisive action
@@thepepchannel7940 Correct but I guess that what's happened to him.
@mentourpilot’s birthday is coming up in 20 days…let not forget him on that special day, for we are all grateful for his channels.