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Fact Finder wrote:Rick wrote:Wow.
Did you watch till the end, looks like they just missed some fuel trucks?
slucero wrote:Apparently the pilot radioed the load had shifted..
Fact Finder wrote:Unreal footage. It was a cargo plane headed to Dubai and they think a Tank or some heavy equipment broke loose and shifted the load on takeoff. They hardly got up in the air. Wow, what a big plane. Sad for the families.![]()
WARNING!!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uIjO0sKBDDw
steveo777 wrote:Trading air speed for altitude will bring most planes out of a stall, unless there is not enough altitude.....then you're fucked. At best you can attempt a "belly land", but not if you can't get the nose up a few degrees above the cordline.
The Sushi Hunter wrote:steveo777 wrote:Trading air speed for altitude will bring most planes out of a stall, unless there is not enough altitude.....then you're fucked. At best you can attempt a "belly land", but not if you can't get the nose up a few degrees above the cordline.
You need air speed for a "belly land" unless it's a flat spin but that would then be a "belly flop". That's exactly what this jet was experiencing up until the time of impact, a flat spin.
Not being of the engineering type of mindset, I didn't know a load shifting once the plane was airborne could affect the aircraft like that. I assumed it followed the same principle as a fly buzzing around in your car while you're going 65 mph. If you hit the brakes real fast, the fly doesn't slam into the windshield just like if you accelerate real quick it doesn't hit the back window.Don wrote:Yeah, the load shifted, forcing the nose up and putting the plane in a stall.
JRNYMAN wrote:Not being of the engineering type of mindset, I didn't know a load shifting once the plane was airborne could affect the aircraft like that. I assumed it followed the same principle as a fly buzzing around in your car while you're going 65 mph. If you hit the brakes real fast, the fly doesn't slam into the windshield just like if you accelerate real quick it doesn't hit the back window.Don wrote:Yeah, the load shifted, forcing the nose up and putting the plane in a stall.
Okay... that makes sense. Thanks. Watching the video several times now and slowing it down, you can see right at the instant that the plane comes into view the tail drops significantly which stands the plane straight up vertically. The thing I noticed which I thought was strange was that the landing gear was still extended. From everything I've learned and seen regarding aircraft takeoff, they pull the gear up as soon as logistically and physically possible to reduce the tremendous amount of drag they create. Just thought it was odd and wonder if that might have also played into them not being able to produce enough or at least more thrust to compensate.Don wrote:JRNYMAN wrote:Not being of the engineering type of mindset, I didn't know a load shifting once the plane was airborne could affect the aircraft like that. I assumed it followed the same principle as a fly buzzing around in your car while you're going 65 mph. If you hit the brakes real fast, the fly doesn't slam into the windshield just like if you accelerate real quick it doesn't hit the back window.Don wrote:Yeah, the load shifted, forcing the nose up and putting the plane in a stall.
The plane is like a seesaw when it's in the air. When the load broke free, the nose of the plane was up just enough for it to roll backwards putting too much weight in the back. With the tail now down and the front up, there is more mass moving forward, turbulence is hitting the flat bottom of the plane instead of being a like a mattress under it. It's like a wave of water rising in front of the plane; you can dive into a wave but you can't let it hit you right in the chest and not get knocked back by it. The engines need the air striking them to convert into thrust which they need more of now to compensate for the plane flying with unbalanced weight in the rear but now they are pointing upwards so much they are being starved, thus causing a stall.
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