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Southwest Airlines flight 182 from Phoenix to Sacramento put down safely at a military air base in Arizona.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-12945453
N.
Southwest Airlines flight 182 from Phoenix to Sacramento put down safely at a military air base in Arizona.
Today's planes are built like plastic toys. The Boeing 787 takes that quite literally.
According to the wiki article for this accident( [ame="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southwest_Airlines_Flight_812"]Southwest Airlines Flight 812 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia[/ame] ), the aircraft was made in 1996. Hardly one of "today's planes," but thanks for trying. This sort of thing can happen just as easily on planes made using traditional techniques as on planes using modern techniques.Today's planes are built like plastic toys. The Boeing 787 takes that quite literally.
If this would have happened on a 787, we would not be talking about a successful landing. If one fiber of a carbonfiber structure breaks, the rest will follow quickly.
Is this sort of thing likely with a carbon fiber plane?
The plane descended from 36000 ft to 11000 feet in just 3 minutes. Sounds like a "fun" ride...
The plane descended from 36000 ft to 11000 feet in just 3 minutes. Sounds like a "fun" ride...
Sounds like that was not adhered to here, does it?If structural integrity is in doubt, limit speed as much as possible and avoid high maneuvering loads.
Cairan, the 737 uses hydraulics to actuate the control surfaces, not control wires. Perhaps you're confusing it with the 707, which had control "cables"?
But how is the control command translated? The 737 does not use fly-by-wire and recently I have seen in an aviation video where the steering cables of a brand new 747-400 are located in the fuselage.
The "manual" bit means through cables here, too, but that is not the primary way of operating the surfaces. We did that manual reversion thingy on the simulator, and it is HEAVY, man!Introduction
The primary flight control system uses conventional control wheel, column, and pedals linked mechanically to hydraulic power control units which command the primary flight control surfaces; ailerons, elevators and rudder. The flight controls are powered by redundant hydraulic sources, System A and System B. Either hydraulic system can operate all primary flight controls. The ailerons and elevators may be operated manually, if required. The rudder may be operated by the Standby Hydraulic System if System A and System B pressure is not available.
It applies to ANY carbon fiber structure - even a formula one car monocoque can fail that way, though much later as other structures of the same mass.
Not on the -300. From the FCOM, Vol 2, Chapter 9, Section 20...
The Captain's control wheel is connected by cables to the aileron power control units (PCUs)...
Cables connect the pilots' control columns to elevator power control units (PCUs) which are powered by hydraulic system A and B.