Why do runway crashes often come from several small failures at once?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: Safety layers fail together
Safety layers fail together ✓ — Correct! Aviation safety is built in layers because no single layer is perfect. Tracking can miss something, a radio call can be delayed, staffing can be thin, and the final escape window can be tiny. A crash usually appears when several individually manageable problems line up so that no layer catches the conflict in time.
One mistake always closes airports — Wrong. A single mistake does not automatically produce a crash or even a shutdown. Airports are designed with backup layers precisely because humans and machines both make errors. The disaster comes when more than one layer is weakened together.
Runways give no warning signs — Wrong. Runways do have signs, rules, markings, radios, lights, and safety systems. The frightening part is not the absence of warnings; it is that warnings and protections can still be outpaced when several small breakdowns happen in sequence.
More Transportation questions
- Why can one runway crash cripple a whole airport?
- Why isn't a go-around always possible at the last moment?
- Why doesn't a radioed 'Stop!' mean instant braking?
- Why can one runway emergency make a second mistake more likely?
- Why doesn't a jet's anti-collision system simply stop a runway crash?
- Why can't a landing plane just swerve around a runway vehicle?
