I've got mixed feelings about this one. One one hand, a simple, proven for decades mechanical design just spells reliable. On the other hand, when electronics are everywhere nowadays (electronic fuel injection engines to electric flaps and trims) I'm not willing to write off every technological evolution because sh$t happens when something leaves the testbed and enters real life. Every new system will have that, whether mechanical or electronic, and we've learned that from countless years of failures.
I think for me, the guy had a stuck throttle (on both engines

) and managed it magnificently. What HAS to be done now is the manufacturers must focus on learning from the incident and make it safer. And they will, I'm sure. Still, FADECs haven't proven themselves yet and I'd hesitate a million times over if there's no manual override or something on that thing.

Question about a word now, how do you call that flexible wire thingy that for example goes from the throttle control to the engine? I wanted to make a point that I've had a couple of these fail in my car

and yet, it's as mechanical as it gets
