Birgenair Flight 301 - Aftermath

Aftermath

While the crash was attributed to the failure of the crew to execute the procedures for recovery, there were a number of incidental lessons learned.

The pilot's choice to go against protocol and execute takeoff despite his ASI clearly disagreeing with the co-pilot's ASI has resulted in protocols and training being further reinforced following this incident.

After the flight voice recorder revealed that the co-pilot and a third pilot on the flight deck had made relatively subtle suggestions to the pilot — once the stick-shaker warning commenced — that he must deal with the fact that the plane was still in a speed-draining nose-up attitude, protocols and training were reinforced to establish a greater willingness of junior flight-deck staff to be more forceful in similar situations. (In the Birgenair crash, it had even been revealed that the co-pilot chose not to use his own, active, stick to counter the pilot and try to bring the nose down.)

Later the same year (1996), Aeroperú Flight 603, also involving a 757, suffered from a similar but far more difficult situation (static ports blocked by tape, rendering all airspeed indicators and pressure altimeters unusable) and crashed in the ocean off Peru.

In 1996 Birgenair went bankrupt.

Details of the crash have been revealed in the report of the Dominican Republic government's Dirección General de Aeronáutica Civil report and the Mayday television episode "Mixed Signals (The Plane That Wouldn't Talk)". The episode "Blaming the Pilot" of Survival in the Sky featured the accident.

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