CAPFlyer wrote:
In the US, almost all (if not all) airlines have a requirement for an aircraft to be in a "stabilized approach" or else a go-around must be executed.
This is a true statement, but that has nothing to do with landing in a crab vs. landing with no crab. The "stabilized approach" requirements have more to do with energy management and being in a position to safely land the aircraft. "Stabilized approach" requirements are not relevant to the video or this discussion.
CAPFlyer wrote:
Failure to do so (other than putting the aircraft at a higher risk of crashing) can result in various disciplinary actions. The understanding I've always been given is that the Airline Operating Manual and policies have the effect of a FAR, including the ability of the FAA to levy fines for violations of Airline policies. Thus deviating from airline policies can be considered "completely illegal".
Partially correct, but some expanded clarification is needed here. In any Operating Flight Manual/Policy/Handbook used by the airlines, the rules, guidance, and suggestions basically have 3 levels of compliance:
1) FAR's (Federal Aviation Regulations) - These are the "heart" of an operating manual, incorporating Federal guidance based off of official regulations set forth by the FAA. This is the most basic level, by which all airlines and their pilots must adhere. The two major FAR's which constitute the vast majority of an Operations Manual for scheduled airline passenger service are FAR Part 91 and FAR Part 121. Anyone violating an FAR, whether they are an airline pilot or private pilot, can and probably will have certificate action enforced upon them by the FAA.
2) Ops Spec (Operations Specification) - This is a "contract", or agreement, if you will, agreed upon - on an airline specific basis - between that specific airline and the FAA as to how the airline will operate under it's own operating certificate. Violation or deviation from an Ops Spec by a pilot will usually have certificate action enforced upon them by the FAA.
3) Company policies or procedures - This is further guidance from the airline as to how they wish for their pilots to fly their aircraft encompassing things such as safety, operational efficiency, or customer service items. Violation of company policy or procedure will almost never result in certificate action from the FAA unless it is already covered or related to the above 2 items. The FAA could really care less whether a pilot violated company policy. A pilot will not have enforcement action from the FAA for a violation, but will probably receive disciplinary action and/or termination in extreme cases, by the company.
So, when a pilot violated some portion of the Flight Operating Handbook/Policy/Manual, they are not "deviating from airline policies and can be considered "completely illegal". This is not a true statement. It really depends on which part of the Flight Ops Handbook/Policy/Manual they are deviating from, according to the 3 above mentioned parts.
CAPFlyer wrote:
One of the major items is that all wind drift corrections are supposed to be made PRIOR to the flare, not after or during it and it is to be done in a smooth and predictable manner. With the Airbus, the AP "kicks out" the drift during the flare, and in a fairly firm manner, causing the aircraft to become uncoordinated, and thus unstable.
I don't know where you got this from, unless you are specifically referring ONLY to criteria for auto-land situations. I am not familiar with auto-land criteria. If you are referring to manual landings by the pilot and not auto-pilot landings, then there are absolutely no restrictions whatsoever regarding crab with respect to the FAR's, unless it is further limited by the aircraft manufacturer and it's operating limits, such as landing at or near crosswind landing limits, etc. Unless the crosswinds and/or design limits of the airplane are a factor, the pilot can land however they choose, whether in a crab or no crab, based on the conditions at the airport.
CAPFlyer wrote:
The Airbus training for the maneuver is similar in that the crab is to be removed within 100 feet AGL, requiring it to be done in a manner which can (and as the A380 landing shows) often does destabilize the aircraft.
The only reason the A380 became "destabilized", as you put it, is simply because the pilot landed the aircraft in a crab, when he should have kicked out the drift at the end and landed with the longitudinal axis aligned with the landing runway with zero crab. I'm not familiar with the A380 Pilot Operating Handbook, but I would be very, very surprised if the pilot was supposed to land that way. It may exist, but I don't know of any large, commercial airliners that are supposed to be landed in a crab during day, dry, VFR conditions, with the pilot manually landing the aircraft unless at or exceeding the crosswind limitations of the aircraft.
CAPFlyer wrote:
Flight Safety has a document on the Stabilized Approach that is generally in line with what most airlines have -
http://www.flightsafety.org/alar/alar_b ... edappr.pdf
While that link is a good source of information it has absolutely no relevance to the A380 video or what we are talking about.