PannickAtTheDisco
Well-Known Member
who wins, if one pushes all the way down and the other pulls all the way up?Of course, but usually the other pilot doesn’t want to die, too!
I doubt very much this is intentional.
who wins, if one pushes all the way down and the other pulls all the way up?Of course, but usually the other pilot doesn’t want to die, too!
I doubt very much this is intentional.
Whoever’s stronger. The sticks are mechanically linked.who wins, if one pushes all the way down and the other pulls all the way up?
If you knew what a couple of people actually did for a living you’d realise your sarcasm is misplaced.Didn't realise that bluemoon had so many qualified aircraft crash investigators , should have know better as it also has so many pandemic and military strategy experts
One wonders what level of G the flight recorders can take given that aircraft seemed to be impacting the ground at about 85 degrees and likely around 500 knots.The sort of thing that caused that JAL crash in 1985 could well have caused this one. Explosive decompression critically damaging flight controls caused by a shoddy repair and poor maintenance. We should find out fairly quickly assuming they find the flight recorders.
I do !If you knew what a couple of people actually did for a living you’d realise your sarcasm is misplaced.
Not everyone works at Maccie D’s here.
Why shouldn't it? Out of 75,000 members there's bound to be experts in pretty much everything. As someone who has worked in the Aviation industry for over 30 years and been involved in a couple of crash investigations during that time, I feel like I'm reasonably qualified to have an opinion based on the evidence available and the aircraft type involved.
The certification requirement is 3400g for 6.5 milliseconds. They are required to be installed at the rear of the aircraft so that the front part acts as a crumple zone to reduce the deceleration experienced by the flight recorders.One wonders what level of G the flight recorders can take given that aircraft seemed to be impacting the ground at about 85 degrees and likely around 500 knots.
The Chinese authorities not exactly sounding full of confidence that they’ll even locate the flight recorders right now.The certification requirement is 3400g for 6.5 milliseconds. They are required to be installed at the rear of the aircraft so that the front part acts as a crumple zone to reduce the deceleration experienced by the flight recorders.
How any stars have you got ? I’m working on my third.I do !
You lost me after the word The..The certification requirement is 3400g for 6.5 milliseconds. They are required to be installed at the rear of the aircraft so that the front part acts as a crumple zone to reduce the deceleration experienced by the flight recorders.
I thought they’d been involved in a high altitude stall, but I was conflating my carriers. My apologies.Was there a second JAL 747 that crashed?
If one pilot is pushing all the way down, I wouldn’t pull all the way up, I’d beat him to death…or at least until he releases the pressure!who wins, if one pushes all the way down and the other pulls all the way up?
If one pilot is pushing all the way down, I wouldn’t pull all the way up, I’d beat him to death…or at least until he releases the pressure!
Indeed!Jesus imagine that scenario and they knock you out.
Surely you'd be pinned by the G forces?If one pilot is pushing all the way down, I wouldn’t pull all the way up, I’d beat him to death…or at least until he releases the pressure!
I have been repeplatedly subjected to +6.5g for a little over 10s at a time and it is quite 'taxing' to say the least.Surely you'd be pinned by the G forces?
Well a departed tailplane would probably cause a catastrophic shift in the centre of gravity and turn the thing into a dart pointing directly down. All limit speeds would be exceeded causing bits to break / snap off, increasing the speed down in all probability.The only thing that can really cause a nosedive like this is the horizontal stabiliser. There's not many things that can cause the stabiliser to go full nose-down... complete hydraulics failure (highly unlikely - although has happened in the past), software failure or deliberate input from the pilot.
If you are pinned by G forces, what about the other guy?Surely you'd be pinned by the G forces?
If you had a “loss of the ‘tail plane’” (if I understand what you mean by that), the least of your problems would be any minor shift in CG!!!Well a departed tailplane would probably cause a catastrophic shift in the centre of gravity and turn the thing into a dart pointing directly down. All limit speeds would be exceeded causing bits to break / snap off, increasing the speed down in all probability.
Tailplanes don’t just snap off though and I’m not sure even full nose down elevator would necessarily give a truly vertical dive as is being speculated. I won’t be holding my breath for an open and transparent investigation so who knows if we’ll ever find out…