It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
In my opinion all Airbus products should be grounded, the entire world fleet with their composite Tails until engineers find out why this material failed during flight.
Zaphod58
reply to post by Mikeultra
If the rudder had come off, the vertical fin would not necessarily have. However, if the vertical fin failed, then the rudder could, and most likely would separate. You need to learn the difference between the parts before you start yelling conspiracy. The rudder is not attached to the fuselage, only the vertical fin, and only on the front portion of the rudder. So if the rudder separates, it puts limited stress on the vertical fin. If the vertical fin separates however, it takes the rudder with it, and the violence of the separation is going to shear the rudder most likely.
Look at these images carefully, and tell me what you see, still attached.
Air Transat
Not an Airbus or composite, but proves my point[/u
[url=http://www.aero-news.net/images/content/commair/2005/air-transat-airbus-a310-lost-rudder-0305-3a.jpg]More Air Transat
The vertical fin holds the rudder, not the other way around.edit on 10/26/2013 by Zaphod58 because: (no reason given)edit on 10/26/2013 by Zaphod58 because: (no reason given)
C0bzz
reply to post by Mikeultra
I've never heard of a composite made of a carbon fibre shell and honeycomb kevlar core being called "spongy".
Zaphod58
reply to post by Mikeultra
Exactly. The rudder on Air Transat failed, but the vertical fin didn't. But somehow on 587, the rudder failed and took the vertical fin with it?
The portion of the vertical fin that eventually failed, that led to the crash, btw, was aluminum, not composite. The structure in the tail, including the fuselage attachment points was all aircraft grade aluminum.
I flew only twice, once on a DC-10 and once on an Airbus A320. I'm done flying now.
I'm not sure which statement of mine you're referring to but, yes, I've been accused of this before. Fortunately, in the end, I prevailed and, surprise, surprise, it turned out to be a stranger than fiction solution.
“Composite materials are more difficult to analyze than simple homogenous metals,” says John Hansman, director of the International Center for Air Transportation, at MIT. “You generally don’t model every fiber in the structure, so you come up with models that have simplifications.”
waynos
reply to post by Mikeultra
No, the Concorde is missing the top half of its rudder, not its vertical fin. It failed, as I recall, when flying over Australia and it landed in some guys back garden, the rudder, not the plane
Wow, where did I say Boeing set the parameters. Maybe you should read more carefully.
The Boeing 787 pushes the technological envelope. The certification itself was an eight-year process. The 787’s lithium-ion batteries, like many of the aircraft’s design features, are a new and constantly evolving technology not specifically covered by existing FAA regulations.
We know the FAA worked with Boeing to develop Special Conditions that would ensure the safety of this new technology. The process for developing these Special Conditions was collaborative, rigorous and transparent. These conditions took over a year to develop, and were published in the Federal Register for public comment.
Nevertheless, we had two serious safety incidents involving Boeing 787 lithium-ion technology in roughly a week’s time. These incidents caused the FAA and other international regulators to ground the 787 for more than three months.
The grounding raises legitimate questions for the flying public about whether the certification process with the 787 worked as well as it should have.
Because the 787 is the first large commercial jet made from carbon-fiber-reinforced plastic composites, there's no precedent for the substantial damage to the Ethiopian jet's hull.
University of Washington professor Mark Tuttle, director of UW's Center of Excellence for Advanced Materials in Transport Aircraft Structures, said proving a bonded repair is sound can be difficult.
"One issue with adhesive bonding is you can inspect the bond with ultrasonic inspection and find no gaps or voids, but nevertheless the strength of the bond is lower than anticipated," he said.
ownbestenemy
reply to post by luxordelphi
Interesting is we are talking about the Boeing 787 and you have not gone on a tangent about Airbus and now V-22....how can anyone have a valid discussion regarding this when you keep throwing out irrelevant facts that have no bearing to the discussion of the topic at hand?
Last year, one of Boeing's top engineers, Vince Weldon, appeared on "Dan Rather Reports" to proclaim that Boeing's newest aircraft would prove unsafe. This 787 "Dreamliner" passenger jet will have an all composite (i.e. plastic) airframe to save weight. This material has been used successfully in fighter aircraft to reduce weight and improve performance. However, composite material is flammable and produces toxic fumes, but fighter pilots have ejection seats to instantly leave a burning aircraft. Weldon worries that a small fire on a passenger jet could ignite the airframe, and the fire would spread rapidly when fed by air flowing outside at hundreds of miles an hour. He said that sections of a composite aircraft will shatter during a crash landing, killing passengers and allowing outside air to rapidly feed a fire.
The V-22 also has a composite/plastic airframe, rather than the traditional aluminum and fiberglass materials, which are heavier and shatterproof. If Boeing's Weldon thinks composites are too dangerous for commercial passenger aircraft, he must think using them for military assault transport aircraft insane. The Navy Safety Center instructs crash-rescue teams not to attempt to extinguish burning composite aircraft since the smoke is toxic.