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I had no idea it was that cold at that height...
Two expert witnesses testified at a Court of Appeals trial on the issue of pre-death pain and suffering. Captain James McIntyre, an experienced Boeing 747 pilot and aircraft accident investigator, testified that shrapnel from the missile caused rapid decompression of the cabin, but left the passengers sufficient time to don oxygen masks: "McIntyre testified that, based upon his estimate of the extent of damage the aircraft sustained, all passengers survived the initial impact of the shrapnel from the missile explosion. In McIntyre's expert opinion, at least 12 minutes elapsed between the impact of the shrapnel and the crash of the plane, and the passengers remained conscious throughout."
The United Airlines Flight 811 was also a victim of an explosive decompression, and while 9 people were killed by the decompression...
Airbus "broke apart" in mid-air
The absence of any traces of an explosion, such as burn marks or inhaled smoke, supports the view of investigators that the disaster was caused by a combination of factors, possibly beginning with the blockage of speed sensors. The sensors, called pitot tubes, are prone to getting clogged with ice and insects. One theory is that the "inconsistent" speed readings caused the automatic pilot to disengage, leaving the crew trying to fly manually -- a difficult task at high altitude without knowing the plane's speed.
It has emerged that the same sequence of events occurred in six emergencies reported by Airbus pilots over a year beginning in February 2008. Air France advised pilots on November 6 last year about the "significant number of incidents" in which false speed readings had confused the automated flight system. As early as 2001 an airworthiness directive from the US Federal Aviation Administration noted problems with pitot tubes on the Airbus A330. With no indication of how fast the plane is flying, the pilot risks applying too much jet thrust or too little. At high altitude -- in circumstances known as "coffin corner" -- too much thrust will put a plane into a nosedive and too little will make it stall.
Without the ability to read their speed, the crew of Flight 447 may have mistakenly believed there was a danger of stalling. If they applied extra thrust, it could have tipped the plane out of control, tearing it apart in the turbulence. The recovery of the "vertical stabiliser" from the tail of the aircraft has strengthened suspicions among experts that the plane went out of control and broke up as a result of flying either too slowly or too quickly in turbulence.
Faulty Pitot Tubes Probably Would Have Made Doomed Air France A330 Fly too Fast
One might assume a plane as sophisticated as the A330-200 which I flew across the Atlantic a week before the May 31st crash would be smart enough to compensate for faulty airspeed readings. After all, the principal under which Pitot tubes measures airspeed is stunningly simple - the same as “sticking your hand out the car window,” according to MIT professor of aeronautics and astronautics John Hansman.
. . . .
“Pitot tubes tend to collect ice and are heated which apparently was not sufficient to deal with very severe icing conditions. If the tubes were blocked, the airspeed would indicate low,” he explained. Those readings would tell the computers running the plane to throttle up the engines.
. . . .
“It would be impossible to tell until they were going way too fast. When the computer increases the engines, they don’t [physically] move the [cockpit] throttles. They were in the vicinity of thunderstorms and were expecting to get bounced around. There’s also not a lot of noise from the engines or mechanical feel from the controls,” he said.
. . . .
“If you’re going too fast, you start get shock waves on the wings which can cause the airplane to go nose down. That was significant hazard with the first generation of swept-wing jets. It’s a condition known as Mach tuck.
Airbus Cited Sensor Concerns Before A330 Jet Crash
Airbus SAS advised airlines more than a year ago to replace airspeed sensors on its A330 jet, the model that crashed into the Atlantic Ocean on an Air France flight to Paris, two people with knowledge of the matter said.
The service bulletin about the Thales SA parts was a recommendation, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the memo was confidential. Officials are said to be studying whether flawed data from ice-damaged sensors could have confused the flight computer or pilots on the June 1 flight.
“Recommendations are frequent and not issued in cases where there’s a truly pressing concern,” said Richard Aboulafia, vice president at consultant Teal Group in Fairfax, Virginia. In cases deemed critical, regulators put out binding directives.
Air France Received Speed Sensors Days Before Crash
Air France received a delivery of new speed sensors for its Airbus SAS A330 planes just days before 228 people died in a crash that may have been triggered by unreliable readings on the aircraft’s velocity.
The sensors, known as Pitot tubes, are meant to replace older versions from Thales SA that Airbus recommended should be upgraded as long ago as September 2007. Chief Executive Officer Pierre Henri Gourgeon told a press briefing he’s “not convinced” that the probes were the cause of the crash.
Air France planned to swap the components only when there was an indication that they needed replacing, Gourgeon said today at the briefing in Paris, where the carrier is based. He said the sensors were ordered April 27 and had arrived on May 29 -- three days before the June 1 crash.
Originally posted by Harlequin
as i said previously - my gut feeling is that air france , actually replaced the pitot probe on this aircraft to the thales type (not the older BF Goodrich type) which is why they`re not mentioning the probes anymore.
[edit on 14/6/09 by Harlequin]
Despite No Firm Link, Pitot Tubes Spotlighted
The speed sensor anomaly occurred at 2:10 UTC after other fault warnings had already appeared. But it has driven particular attention to a potential fault in the pitot tubes. Air France was upgrading the Thales sensor (Goodrich also provides A330 pitot tubes) but Flight 447's A330 had not yet been upgraded, says Paul-Louis Arslanian, head of the French air accident investigation office (BEA).
In a message to operators, Airbus states that the new Thales pitot tube "has been developed to enhance water drainage encountered during heavy rain conditions on takeoff or landing phases." But the aircraft maker insists that the old design can continue to be operated safely and points out that the new device is not entirely immune to icing either.
Well, should be two ADIRU, each supplying data to its respective pilots' side instruments. We should consider the possiblity of the inadequate pitot heat also...
holy **** - mach 0.86 is 586 mph , m 0.83 is 547 - thats a margin of 20 mph before you get `issues` - which if you suddenly drop, your over MMO (maximum mach operating number)
Air is compressed by the engines through bleed air.
Well, should be two ADIRU, each supplying data to its respective pilots' side instruments. We should consider the possiblity of the inadequate pitot heat also...
holy **** - mach 0.86 is 586 mph , m 0.83 is 547 - thats a margin of 20 mph before you get `issues` - which if you suddenly drop, your over MMO (maximum mach operating number)
Originally posted by weedwhacker
I'm going to defer to both you, Kailassa, and Harlequin on this.
I have mentioned, previously, about the Air/Ground sensing switches, and how most modern jets employ those to change the current to the pitot probes and static ports, so they don't overheat whilst energised during ground operations.
(I suppose we've all seen the discoloration of pitot tubes, from the excessive heat??)
SO...is there a definitive answer, yet? Do the product manufactured by Thale prove inadequate, in certain conditions?? Is it a matter of circuitry, and voltage? ARE we just going to see this become fodder for the Attorneys, for years to come???
In a message to operators, Airbus states that the new Thales pitot tube "has been developed to enhance water drainage encountered during heavy rain conditions on takeoff or landing phases." But the aircraft maker insists that the old design can continue to be operated safely and points out that the new device is not entirely immune to icing either.
If I'm wrong, I'd consider it an honour to be set right by you.
Brazil flies bodies to mainland; Pitot tubes eyed
An official with the Alter union, speaking on condition of anonymity because the memo was not publicly released, said there is a "strong presumption" among its pilot members that a Pitot problem precipitated the crash. The memo says the airline should have grounded all A330 and A340 jets pending the replacement, and warns of a "real risk of loss of control" due to Pitot problems.
Air France said it began replacing the Pitot tubes on the Airbus A330 model on April 27 after an improved version became available, and will finish the work in the "coming weeks." The monitors had not yet been replaced on the plane that crashed.
David Epstein, Qantas Airways General Manager for Government and Corporate Affairs, said two companies manufacture the Pitot monitors for the A330 planes — France's Thales Group and Charlotte, North Carolina-based Goodrich Corp.
The Air France plane uses sensors made by Thales while Qantas uses those by Goodrich for its 28 A330 planes, he said.
Eurocockpit UNION's open letter to pilots/colleagues:
ALTER Advice
Vitry, 08 June 2009
. . . .
- The A330 pitot tubes were not modified;
. . . .