this post was submitted on 11 Mar 2024
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Article doesn't seem to agree with you:
All that says is they're investigating.
At this time, unless something new comes to light, there's little reason to believe it's anything but an unusual episode of turbulence.
Edit: and according to a different article, there is at least one passenger who claims the pilot said their controls "blanked out" which would qualify as "something new".
The part I'm disagreeing with is your idea that this should be written off as something that just happens. Authorities don't appear to share your view.
Normally pilots warn crew and passengers when approaching possible turbulence. In this case the crew got hurt.
Random turbulence that maims the flight crew just wouldn't be practical as a "thing that just happens" on regular longhaul flights.
There's an outside chance it's a freak accident, but it's far more likely that it's some kind of malfunction (of pilot or more likely of the plane).
I never said it happens often but it absolutely does happen. Here was a particularly spectacular example that happened to folks a few years back on their way to Australia (and note, if you want more examples, the article lists a couple of other past incidents that also resulted in crew and passenger injuries):
https://apnews.com/article/49db2788d04d4e11bcbb1a63dbae4199
One passenger on that flight noted:
So again, I cannot emphasize this enough: wear your damn seatbelts, people.
Thanks, interesting read.
I still think it's too early to tell if this was that or computer failure, though.
Interestingly New Zealand is now demanding the black box from LATAM...