Aviation disaster --a pilot's view
A pilot/writer posted this at another site.

I live in Lexington and have thirty years of airline experience flying in and 
out of LEX. I was also the station liaison for Lexington for ten years.

Here is what I think happened:

The two runways in question share the same common run-up area. The extended 
taxiway to the correct runway, runway 28 was closed due to construction.
It has always been difficult to tell between the two runways when you are 
taxiing out. The natural thing to do is to take the wrong one. It is just there 
and you are always tempted to take it. When I flew out of LEX we always checked 
each other at least three times to make sure we were taking the correct 
runway. We checked the chart, we checked to make sure the correct runway number 
was 
at the end and we always double checked the FMS generated moving map. Most 
FMS systems will have a warning called "runway dissimilarity" pop up in magenta 
when your position at takeoff doesn't match the runway you programmed into the 
computer. This would not happen at LEX since you are virtually in the same 
spot when you take either runway. It was also raining at the time of takeoff 
and 
dark. The control tower
opens at 6am (because we are, after all, all about saving money) and only has 
one controller on duty at that time. He or she has to: run ground control, 
clearance delivery, approach control and departure control. The one controller 
also has to program the ATIS and make the coffee. He or she probably cleared 
Comair to take off and then put their head back down to a chore or work another 
airplane. Taking the runway, the Comair guy would put the power up and 
wouldn't realize they were on the wrong runway until they were about 70% down 
the 
pike. Too late to safely abort so he probably decided to try and continue the 
takeoff. This is when the eye witnesses heard a series of explosions and though 
the plane blew up in the air. Didn't happen -- what they heard and saw were 
compressor stalls of probably both engines. The pilot no doubt pushed the 
throttles all the way up and that demand to the engines combined with the steep 
pitch 
attitude cut off enough air to the intakes to cause the compressor stalls -- 
which, by the way, made them even more doomed. Less power. They stalled or 
simply hit one of the large hills to the west of the airport and came to a 
stop. 
Everybody on board was probably injured but alive. Then, a second or two later 
the post-crash fire began. With the darkness and the fact that most of them 
had broken legs, pelvises and backs they literally burned alive. Not smoke 
inhalation. They really actually burned to death. In my role as station liaison 
I 
wrote most of the post crash safety procedure for Delta at that field. Too bad 
there weren't enough survivors to use them. BTW, Comair and the press will 
tell you what a great plane the RJ is. This is a total lie. The Canadair RJ was 
designed to be an executive barge, not an airliner. They were designed to fly 
about ten times a month, not ten times a day. They have a long history of 
mechanical design shortfalls. I've flown on it and have piloted it. It is a 
steaming, underpowered piece of shit. It never had enough power to get out of 
its 
own way and this situation is exactly what everybody who flies it was afraid 
of. 
The senior member of the crew had about five and a half years of total jet 
experience. The copilot less. They had minimum training (to save money --enjoy 
that discount ticket)! And were flying a minimally equipped POS on very short 
rest. The layover gets in about 10pm the night before. They report for pickup 
at 4:30am.

I'm sorry if I sound bitter but this is exactly the direction the entire 
airline industry is going. Expect to see bigger more colorful crashes in the 
future. 
For the record, I have 20,000 flight hours of heavy jet flying time and am 
type rated in the 727, 757, 767, 777, DC-8, DC-9 and L-1011.

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