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The A320 even has a "bomb on board" checklist![]()
Does the A320 have a crying kid who didn't get a window seat checklist?
The A320 even has a "bomb on board" checklist![]()
The A320 even has a "bomb on board" checklist![]()
Now, that would be something I want to read. :lol:
The A320 can't dump fuel according to Wikipedia. In fact, I found that most smaller planes can't dump their fuel because their landing weights aren't more than 105% more than their takeoff weights.
Now, that would be something I want to read. :lol:
Agreed.
Imaginary excerpt from checklist:
-Step 1:Find the bomb
-Step2: Open the bomb casing
-Step3:Cut the blue wire
-Step4:If you haven't been blown to simthereens, cut the red wire.
:rofl:
In the jetliner ditchings I've seen video of, they roll over and the wings rip off. In this case that didn't happen, and it's possible that fuel mass in the wings may have helped.
I think the most important factor is the condition of the water surface. If the sea is rough and you don't touch the surface with wings aligned horizontally, like it was the case for the Ethiopian Airlines Flight 961 you obviously refer to (Boeing 767), you have almost no chance not to destroy the airplane. The Hudons river just was calm enough and I think that the A320 came in perfectly aligned, which the Ethiopian Airlines 767 did not.
What killed more people then, was the panic idea to blow up the life vests in flight, which trapped the people inside the cabin, unable to open the seat belts.
That bugs me. It seems the instinctual thing to do, I'd do it if I didn't know better.
This is why you should actually listen to the safety speech they give you, in which they specifically say to not blow up your life vest until you're just about to leave the aircraft.
That bugs me. It seems the instinctual thing to do, I'd do it if I didn't know better.
Yes, and that is a wrong instinct. And if you would have experimented with life vests you would know, that this just hinders you.
In case of flight 961, the roll was more the problem, also the pilot had the stupid idea to land parallel to the waves. if at all, you should land with the waves.
In case of flight 961, the roll was more the problem, also the pilot had the stupid idea to land parallel to the waves. if at all, you should land with the waves.
Also, the 961 landed more flat, which also helped in it's destruction.
What killed more people then, was the panic idea to blow up the life vests in flight, which trapped the people inside the cabin, unable to open the seat belts.
I think you can make a case for both options. In the Hudson river crash not wearing an inflated vest is the best way to go.
But if the plane breaks apart like EA 961, an inflated vest could save your life. I remember an interview with a passenger on EA 961 who said that he regained consciousness floating in the water.