Capt. ‘Sully’ makes CBS News debut
He compared the crash to his own emergency landing, saying he had the advantage of having daylight. His plane’s instrumentation was also not completely disabled, Sullenberger added.
“I could see the earth’s natural horizon,” he said. “I knew which way was up. All my speed sensors still worked. You have to realize how overwhelming and confusing this situation would have been for this Air France crew at night in the weather at the top of the storm. [It was] very turbulent, suddenly losing all their speed references, one of the most critical parameters [in] an airplane, and having to use only the aircraft’s pitch attitude and thrust setting to maintain a safe flight. It would have been a very difficult situation and, unfortunately, in this case they were not able to solve their problem in the time that they had.”
Sullenberger is new to being a television analyst, but he has been in the national spotlight since his daring 2009 emergency landing. He was invited to President Obama’s first address to Congress in February 2009, and this spring, he lobbied against an amendment to the House appropriations bill for the Federal Aviation Administration.
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