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Air France 447 - A Very Scary Crash
Air France Flight 447 is down. Sadly, it is expected that all 228 aboard are lost... [more]
 
Air France 447 Additional Details
As additional details about the crash of Air France 447 are released, we now know more information than was previously... [more]

Air France 447 Pitot Tube Modification
Speculation is that the Pitot Tubes, which were unmodified as recommended for better ice resistance, permitted erroneous... [more]

AF 447 - The Rush to Blame the Crew
Air France decided to wait and see and now we have seen over 200 dead... [more]
 
Hawker 800 Crash - Preliminary Thoughts
Witnesses describe a touchdown on a wet runway, a roll-out, then the application of power and a crash just beyond the end... [more]

Hawker 800 Crash Cockpit Transcript
The NTSB just released a transcript of the cockpit conversations of the captain and first officer of a crash that took... [more]

Madrid MD-82 Crash, Déjà Vu
The flight path of both the Northwest and Spanair aircraft are eerily similar, with the nose seen coming up to takeoff altitude... [more] 

NTSB Concludes Hearings On USAir 427
The NTSB wraps up three days of investigative hearings regarding the cause of the Pittsburgh crash of USAir Flight 427 on... [more]

NTSB Ignores Obvious In USAir 427 Crash
Why hasn't the NTSB yet reported its findings on the tail of USAir 427? It was one of the largest single components of... [more]

Crash Of Spanair MD-82 Preventable
It is inexplicable and horrendous that an aircraft such as this was cleared for service without an engine change when... [more]

Crash Of TWA Flight 800
"If you haven't found chemical residue by now, it's unlikely that a bomb downed TWA Flight 800," says Arthur Alan Wolk... [more]

TWA 800 Crash Exploding Fuel Tank
Ten years after TWA 800 exploded over Long Island killing all aboard and thirty two years after its sister ship exploded... [more]

US Air 427 Crash
In both accidents, the airplanes were described as rolling over onto their sides and diving straight into the ground... [more]

 
 

Commentaries :: Specific Commentaries

Additional Details Emerge On Air France 447 Crash

More information than previously reported was being transmitted in real time

As additional details about the crash of Air France 447 are released, we now know that more information than was previously reported was being transmitted in real time including speed and altitude excursions, g-forces and all system read-outs, including computer faults.

Prior to the crash, Airbus had issued a bulletin instructing all crews to be certain, by comparing to global positioning systems that their airspeeds were being properly read by the computers from the Pitot-static Tubes on the nose of the aircraft. The suggestion is that these tubes can ice up in severe weather in spite of being heated. Here’s the reality – the reason for the odd airspeed differences is that in situations of severe turbulence the airspeed variations can be large because the wind direction and velocity are rapidly changing as is the flight altitude of the aircraft. In short, severe wind shear causes rapid changes in wind direction and velocity.

The bulletin makes sense but as the information trickles in, it begins to appear that severe turbulence and a breakup is more likely the culprit – a very bad ride indeed. The aircraft must be found in order to determine just what broke first – the tail, parts of the tail or the main wing box, the wing or parts of the wing. Only then will we know if the testing to ultimate load required for transport category airplanes is both realistic and stringent enough.

This never should have happened.

Lastly, there are serious limitations on weather radar on-board, as well as on those people who must interpret it. With all of the computing power on the A-330, much weather data was available to be downloaded, not only from the on-board radar but also from ground and space-based facilities as well because the computers can make a better decision on whether and how to proceed in the face of severe weather. We need to go there.

- Arthur Alan Wolk


 
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