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Originally posted by ANOK
You guys are complete idiots if you think a plane can hit a 'breakaway' light pole and not receive damage, or even be moved off course enough for a novice pilot to not be able to handle it.
Find a pic of an object that hit a breakaway light pole that did not receive damage itself. Remember Newtons 3rd law, it applies here. Breakaway or not, there will be damage.
For example, the caption on this pic says, 'Twised 3 lumbar Vertebraes at 65 MPH hitting a breakaway light pole. I can still hear the glass shattering.' Please notice the car is damaged, and it hit sideways not straight on. Now imagine the force of a plane at 500mph, and don't forget Newtons 3rd law.
www.flickr.com...
edit on 1/11/2012 by ANOK because: typo
Originally posted by Alfie1
reply to post by snowcrash911
You can't leave it there. What do you say is the reason she picked it up ?
Originally posted by Reheat
Your problem is very typical for someone not very well educated trying to analyze a physics problem.
You have to apply ALL of Newton's Physics Laws, not just concentrating on the ones you think you understand. You have done this repeatedly demonstrating profound ignorance as a consequence.
Of course, there was damage to the leading edges of the wings, but not enough to cause control problems particularly considering that he crashed in seconds after hitting those poles. I'll even go so far as to speculate that the aircraft could have been recovered for landing had it not crashed. He didn't have to worry about that, did he?
It is confounding why you keep embarrassing yourself with these ignorant pronouncements. Are you trying to become the poster boy for why some people are "truthers"? If so, you're succeeding.
If a bird hitting a wing can cause a huge hole then I would sumise that a light pole would do more.
Originally posted by ProudBird
A bird is more akin to a "projectile" in the sense that it's mass (all of it) can be considered to be concentrated on a trajectory that is parallel to the impact direction.
Hitting a light pole only reacts with that portion of the pole's mass that is in contact with the surface (wing leading edge) that strikes it.
BTW......there is a possibility that had this been a different airplane, with a differently designed wing, and at a slower velocity, (slower velocity, the momentum of motion is lesser, and the pole's own inertia would have greater effect .....more time for the object being struck to "interact" and inflict more damage)....the pole could have possibly caused more damage...to the wing, perhaps to even shear off a few feet of the outer portion, had the impact occurred that far out. The 757 wing leading edge, though, is quite robust.
And in any case, even a few feet off the tip would be controllable, especially given that it was only a second (two at most) from impact with the Pentagon.
ALSO......your first two images (above) of bird strike examples are on light airplanes......not built as strongly as Transport Category jets.
Originally posted by Alfie1
reply to post by ANOK
You quote Newton a lot but there still seem to be fundamental problems with your physics.
You say that " the relative damage to each object is dictated by mass " but common sense must tell you this isn't true. I can shoot an armour piercing bullet through a steel plate 1m by 1m and the damage to the bullet will be just the same if the plate is 10m by 10m or 100m by 100m
Originally posted by Alfie1
reply to post by ANOK
You quote Newton a lot but there still seem to be fundamental problems with your physics.
You say that " the relative damage to each object is dictated by mass " but common sense must tell you this isn't true. I can shoot an armour piercing bullet through a steel plate 1m by 1m and the damage to the bullet will be just the same if the plate is 10m by 10m or 100m by 100m
Originally posted by ANOK
Really. The problem isn't what I am saying it is your interpenetration of it. It is confounding that all you can do is try to belittle people, instead of participating in a meaningful discussion.
Originally posted by Reheat
Originally posted by ANOK
Really. The problem isn't what I am saying it is your interpenetration of it. It is confounding that all you can do is try to belittle people, instead of participating in a meaningful discussion.
Really?
Translation of the above - You don't participate in meaningful discussion because I don't like or agree with what you say.
------------------------------------
There have been numerous people already tell you that you don't have a clue of what you're talking about. How many more is it going to take for you to realize that you don't have a clue of what you're talking about?
Originally posted by ANOK
The problem is the OSers want to make it appear to be a more complicated problem than it is, in order to confuse people, and make it appear no one but the government 'experts' could possibly understand.
There is nothing complicated about two colliding objects, it's about as simple as you can get when it comes to physics. What other factors are involved with a wing hitting a light pole? I have shown that regardless of whether it is a 'brake away' light pole, anything hitting it is still damaged. An object moving faster will have more damage, an object hitting more than one pole will have multiple damage. An objects basically floating on air will move when it hits something. Factors that seem to be ignored imo. Factors that are relevant.
I'm just saying that was one lucky amateur pilot. He must have had a boatload of luck with him that morning, maybe government issue eh?
edit on 1/12/2012 by ANOK because: typo
“Everything should be made as simple as possible, but no simpler.”
I'm just saying that was one lucky amateur pilot. He must have had a boatload of luck with him that morning, maybe government issue eh?
Originally posted by ANOK
Originally posted by ProudBird
A bird is more akin to a "projectile" in the sense that it's mass (all of it) can be considered to be concentrated on a trajectory that is parallel to the impact direction.
Rubbish. How is a bird a projectile, and what difference does it make? You need to go back and re-read Newtons third law.
Hitting a light pole only reacts with that portion of the pole's mass that is in contact with the surface (wing leading edge) that strikes it.
So what? There is still more mass in the part of the pole hitting the wing than a bird.
BTW......there is a possibility that had this been a different airplane, with a differently designed wing, and at a slower velocity, (slower velocity, the momentum of motion is lesser, and the pole's own inertia would have greater effect .....more time for the object being struck to "interact" and inflict more damage)....the pole could have possibly caused more damage...to the wing, perhaps to even shear off a few feet of the outer portion, had the impact occurred that far out. The 757 wing leading edge, though, is quite robust.
Rubbish, I told you not to forget Newtons third law, and yet you have just proved you fail to understand that law.
No matter the speed of the objects, the relative damage to each object is dictated by mass. Velocity effects both objects equally, less velocity means less damage to BOTH objects. Equal opposite reaction law never changes.
And in any case, even a few feet off the tip would be controllable, especially given that it was only a second (two at most) from impact with the Pentagon.
Oh, so now you know where the wings were struck?
ALSO......your first two images (above) of bird strike examples are on light airplanes......not built as strongly as Transport Category jets.
Again so what? You just keep making excuses to ignore known laws of physics. I am just pointing out the plane could not have hit multiple light poles, knock them down, and not received damage that could have caused an amateur pilot to panic, or try to overcompensate for the fact that the plane would have moved when it struck the poles. Planes don't fly on rails you know. There is a big difference to a bird strike at altitude where the pilot has lots of room, to an amateur hitting light poles at ground level doing over the max speed of the plane.
It is just one of many extremely lucky incidences for an amateur pilot to have pulled off. I don't buy it for a second, if you pay attention to the other points, such as witnesses seeing the plane SOS, the official story just falls apart. You obvioulsy have a reason to not see the obvious.
edit on 1/12/2012 by ANOK because: typo