13 October 2014

AIRCRAFT CRASH - 'F***, we're dead!': Pilot's cry as Air France jet plunged into Atlantic as final moments of doomed Flight 447 and its two sleeping pilots are revealed Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2790768/f-dead-pilot-shouted-air-france-jet-plunged-atlantic-final-moments-doomed-flight-447-two-sleeping-pilots-revealed.html#ixzz3G2XANZj7 Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook






F***, we're dead!': Pilot's cry as Air France jet plunged into Atlantic as final moments of doomed Flight 447 and its two sleeping pilots are revealed


  • Air France 447 crashed into Atlantic on May 31 2009 killing all 288 people 
  • It took 2 years to find all the dead, who included 5 Britons and 3 Irish
  • Now, flight recorder reveals conversations of pilots moments before crash
  • They were captain Marc Dubois, 58, and two junior co-pilots, 37 and 32
  • Dubois had been up all night in Rio with his girlfriend, an opera singer 
  • So when plane stalled inexperienced Pierre-Cedric Bonin, 32, was at controls
  • But instead of lowering plane's nose as per stall protocol, he lifted it

Two out of three Air France pilots were sleeping minutes before one shouted 'F***: we're dead!' as their plane plunged into the sea with the loss of all 228 people on board.
Horrific details of the last moments of Flight 447, which claimed the lives of five Britons and three Irish doctors, have emerged in a disturbing new investigation into the 2009 disaster involving an Airbus 330.
Published in the October edition of Vanity Fair magazine, it raises terrifying questions about safety aboard civilian passenger jets, and the 'culture' of the Air France pilots on board.
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Lost at sea: Horrific details of the last moments of Flight 447, which claimed the lives of five Britons and three Irish doctors, have emerged in a disturbing new investigation into the 2009 disaster involving an Airbus 330
Lost at sea: Horrific details of the last moments of Flight 447, which claimed the lives of five Britons and three Irish doctors, have emerged in a disturbing new investigation into the 2009 disaster involving an Airbus 330
'Company baby': Marc Dubois (left), the 58-year-old captain of the plane had gone for a sleep after staying up all night with his girlfriend the night before, leaving inexperienced Pierre-Cedric Bonin (right), 32, alone at the controls
'Company baby': Marc Dubois (left), the 58-year-old captain of the plane had gone for a sleep after staying up all night with his girlfriend the night before, leaving inexperienced Pierre-Cedric Bonin (right), 32, alone at the controls
'Company baby': Marc Dubois (left), the 58-year-old captain of the plane had gone for a sleep after staying up all night with his girlfriend the night before, leaving inexperienced Pierre-Cedric Bonin (right), 32, alone at the controls, before it crashed
Questions: Published in the October edition of Vanity Fair magazine, it raises terrifying questions about safety aboard civilian passenger jets, and the 'culture' of the Air France pilots on board
Questions: Published in the October edition of Vanity Fair magazine, it raises terrifying questions about safety aboard civilian passenger jets, and the 'culture' of the Air France pilots on board
Excerpts from recorded conversations between 37-year-old David Robert, Pierre-Cedric Bonin, 32, and Marc Dubois, the 58-year-old captain of the plane, reveal that two of them were asleep when the plane got into difficulty in a tropical storm.
Referring to Bonin, a 'Company Baby' on the Rio de Janeiro-Paris flight, the piece reads: 'With most of the weather still lying ahead and an anxious junior pilot at the controls, Dubois decided it was time to get some sleep.'

Chief investigator Alain Bouillard is quoted as saying: 'If the captain had stayed in position through the Inter-tropical Convergence Zone, it would have delayed his sleep by no more than 15 minutes, and because of his experience, maybe the story would have ended differently.
'But I do not believe it was fatigue that caused him to leave. It was more like customary behavior, part of the piloting culture within Air France.
'And his leaving was not against the rules. Still, it is surprising. If you are responsible for the outcome, you do not go on vacation during the main event.'
The Airbus 330 crashed after suffering a loss of lift - or a 'stall'. But instead of lowering the plane's nose to deal with the stall, as they should have done according to normal procedures, the pilots raised it (stock image)
The Airbus 330 crashed after suffering a loss of lift - or a 'stall'. But instead of lowering the plane's nose to deal with the stall, as they should have done according to normal procedures, the pilots raised it (stock image)
Jane Deasy (Left) and  Aisling Butler (Right)were 
Victims: Irish doctors Jane Deasy (left) and Aisling Butler (right) were among the 228 victims on board the doomed flight
Up until now it was known that Dubois was sleeping off a night in Rio with his girlfriend, an off-duty hostess and opera singer who was on the doomed flight.
'I didn't sleep enough last night. One hour - it's not enough,' said Dubois, before he went to sleep.
Referring to 'the flight-rest compartment, a small cabin containing two berths just behind the cockpit', the piece describes how Robert was also 'dozing there'.
The article continues: 'On the night of May 31, 2009, the pilots of Flight 447 certainly did not serve their passengers well.'
The plane was suffering from a loss of lift - or a 'stall' - and its airspeed sensors had malfunctioned.
But instead of lowering the plane's nose to deal with the stall, as they should have done according to normal procedures, they raised it.
Dubois finally entered the cockpit 1 minute and 38 seconds after the pitot tubes malfunctioned, but by that time panic was setting in.
Anguish: Relatives and friends arrive at Tom Jobim airport in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 01 June 2009, to receive information about the crash
Anguish: Relatives and friends arrive at Tom Jobim airport in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 01 June 2009, to receive information about the crash
Long search: It took two years to retrieve bodies from the bottom of the sea, along with essential records such as the flight's voice recorder
Long search: It took two years to retrieve bodies from the bottom of the sea, along with essential records such as the flight's voice recorder


Robert said: 'F***, we're going to crash! It's not true! But what's happening?'
Soon after, either Robert or Bonin are heard to say: 'F***, we're dead' before - 4 hours and 15 minutes into the flight - it crashes into the Atlantic.
It took two years to retrieve bodies from the bottom of the sea, along with essential records such as the flight's voice recorder.
Air France has denied that its pilots were incompetent, but has since improved training, concentrating on how to fly a plane manually when there is a stall.
Both Air France and Airbus are facing manslaughter charges, with a judicial investigation led by Paris judges under way.


Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/


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