Midair collision between Helicopter and CRJ (AA5342) at Washington (DCA)

(Assuming you meant visual separation not clearance
Thank you - edited.

What is the procedure for verifying (by ATC or by the pilots) that what they are seeing is what they are supposed to be seeing

If pilots can see a taxiway as a runway, i can imagine they can see something other than what they are supposed to see.
....

it’s a control zone under their control, not a pilot wish zone

Unless ATC wants the pilots to request visual separation at DCA?
What is the benefit to the pilot to request a visual separation and what is the benefit to the ATC to approve same?
Has DCA ATC ever refused "visual separation"?.
 
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Thank you - edited.

What is the procedure for verifying (by ATC or by the pilots) that what they are seeing is what they are supposed to be seeing

If pilots can see a taxiway as a runway, i can imagine they can see something other than what they are supposed to see.
....



Unless ATC wants the pilots to request visual separation at DCA?
What is the benefit to the pilot to request a visual separation and what is the benefit to the ATC to approve same?
Has DCA ATC ever refused "visual separation"?.
Visual separation helps with traffic flow put simply. At Bankstown which at times has been the busiest tower in the southern hemisphere it’s generally all visual, otherwise we would not get 1600 movements a day. Inbound traffic was given details of other inbound traffic but not details of departing or training circuit traffic. I would normally give an expected sequence number ie IEU, traffic is a MU2 reported at prospect before you joining downwind, expect to be no2 to that aircraft, report sighting.
 
2 seconds before collision :
CRJ Last recorded RA 313 feet, 9 deg pitch up, 11deg left bank. Descending at 448ft/min

1 Second before collision
CRJ pitched up 9deg with elevators at max deflection

At the time of collision:
BH RA 278 feet stable for previous 5 seconds
Pitch 0.5deg nose up, left roll 1.6deg

BH primary altimeters are barometric altimeters whose data are not recorded in the FDR. Barometric pressure adjustment is also not recorded by the FDR
The pressure altitude data in the FDR is corrupted/bad so unable to be used to derive the barometric altitude.
GPS data including altitude is not recorded .

BH can transmit ADS-B out but it was not transmitting

BH CVR does not include ATC message to "pass behind CRJ " - apparently the transmission was stepped on

Please advise if incorrect
 
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2 seconds before collision :
CRJ Last recorded RA 313 feet, 9 deg pitch up, 11deg left bank. Descending at 448ft/min

1 Second before collision
CRJ pitched up 9deg with elevators at max deflection
This needs context. What is the normal “on speed” pitch angle for the CRJ? Whilst 9º sounds like a lot, I’ve flown aircraft that used 12º on approach. The elevators at full deflection tells a story, but you’re not going to get much of a pitch rate at approach speed. The sink rate is somewhat less than a normal approach (call it 700 fpm).
BH primary altimeters are barometric altimeters whose data are not recorded in the FDR. Barometric pressure adjustment is also not recorded by the FDR
The pressure altitude data in the FDR is corrupted/bad so unable to be used to derive the barometric altitude.
GPS data including altitude is not recorded .
In large part, actual instrument readouts are irrelevant, as they were supposed to be “visual”.
 
Very insightful video here


Edit: listened the whole way through, lots of insight into the situation regarding NVG, visibility in general, routes, comms and the personnel flying that night.
 
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Very insightful video here


Edit: listened the whole way through, lots of insight into the situation regarding NVG, visibility in general, routes, comms and the personnel flying that night.
Many many thanks for posting that - it gives far more insight than pretty much everything else out there put together!

The really telling thing is at 49:30 - the guy being interviewed says "100% that could have been me - I don't think putting me in that situation changes anything".
 
Many many thanks for posting that - it gives far more insight than pretty much everything else out there put together!

The really telling thing is at 49:30 - the guy being interviewed says "100% that could have been me - I don't think putting me in that situation changes anything".
The only negative that stood out for me was the determination of the copter pilots to request visual separation. And the big take-out safety wise was ATC not holding them short as the ex-army pilot sais happened many times to him.
 

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