The report from investigators released Thursday about the crash of an Ethiopian Airlines jet says pilots acted properly as they struggled to regain control of their Boeing 737 Max when an anti-stall system went awry. Bloomberg adds a caveat: Three pilots who reviewed the report tell the outlet that the pilots appear to have made a critical oversight in the chaos: "They left the engines set nearly to maximum," which made it harder to overcome the problems. Meanwhile, the AP follows up with details on what happened in the cockpit, and how the trouble began pretty much as the jet took off. Some snippets from the account by David Koenig:
- "For six minutes, the pilots were bombarded by alarms as they fought to fly the plane, at times pulling back in unison on their control columns in a desperate attempt to keep the huge jet aloft."
- A minute into the flight, the "anti-stall system kicked in and pushed the nose of the plane down for nine seconds. Instead of climbing, the plane descended slightly. Audible warnings—'Don't Sink'—sounded in the cockpit. The pilots fought to turn the nose of the plane up, and briefly they were able to resume climbing."