"Wow, this'll probably be my last flight! After all, I'm just three days away from retirement..."
Sorry, couldn't resist.
Sorry, couldn't resist.
"Wow, this'll probably be my last flight! After all, I'm just three days away from retirement..."
Sorry, couldn't resist.
"Wow, this'll probably be my last flight! After all, I'm just three days away from retirement..."
Sorry, couldn't resist.
"Wow, this'll probably be my last flight! After all, I'm just three days away from retirement..."
Sorry, couldn't resist.
Do you stand by that?
Too soon.
"Wow, this'll probably be my last flight! After all, I'm just three days away from retirement..."
Sorry, couldn't resist.
You should have resisted. That's beyond reprehensible.
Apparently, the message about the electrics was an automated one. I wonder what the last words of the pilot actually were?
"WHY THE $&$^$$!! IS THAT BLINKING?! WHAT THE *&@!@@!! GET A FLASHLIGHT WE BLEW A FUSE... $^&*^*!! WHAT DO YOU MEAN WE HAVE NO $&**!!! EXTENSION CORDS?!!!"
I deal with tragedy via humor. Bear with me.![]()
Per The FAB (Brazilian Air Force) More debris fields spotted..specualtion is that the aircraft broke up at high altitude..possibly due to explosive decompression..
http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSTRE5501PB20090603
Per The FAB (Brazilian Air Force) More debris fields spotted..specualtion is that the aircraft broke up at high altitude..possibly due to explosive decompression..
http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSTRE5501PB20090603
terrorist action not ruled out..and more likely per the following..
http://momento24.com/en/2009/06/03/...-threat-in-argentina-days-before-plane-crash/
this could be a coincidence but I'm glad to see that nothing is being ruled out..
Side note: If I am informed correctly, in all air companies, they are flying all the time with one of the two flight computers down and other things not working. As passengers, you have no idea how much mainenance is overlooked because a craft can fly without it. They usually don't need the backup...
Personally, I can live with what pilots and engineers can live with. I assume they know better.
Usually.
And in this particular case, perhaps it couldn't be helped?
A lightning flash that lasts 6 seconds? Going down vertically, very straight?It's starting to look more and more like pilot error is atleast a contributing factor. Either flying into storms they shouldn't have and/or flying at the incorrect speed in said storms.
The reported flash could've just been lightening in the distance. If you think about it, given the storms it would've been surprising to not see flashes.
Mr Awe
Lightning hitting one of these liners is harmless routine, I'm reading. It doesn't make them go down, neither do electrical failures alone, for that matter, it seems. Pilots don't go around storms to avoid lightning.I think if most people read the Aviation Herald (www.avherald.com) or the Professional Pilots Rumour Network, they'd never fly again.
In the past couple of days it reports that a 737 over Oakland took a lighting strike, an A320 in China had an RTO and 757 over Waterloo in the U.S has pressurization problems.
A lightning flash that lasts 6 seconds? Going down vertically, very straight?It's starting to look more and more like pilot error is atleast a contributing factor. Either flying into storms they shouldn't have and/or flying at the incorrect speed in said storms.
The reported flash could've just been lightening in the distance. If you think about it, given the storms it would've been surprising to not see flashes.
Mr Awe
I read up more about it and it looks like all electrical instruments stopped working over the course of 3 or 4 minutes, manual flying was very difficult at that altitude and in those conditions, and something happened that caused depressurization that blew the craft apart. Then it fell like a stone.
And, to reply to Mr Awe again, I think pilots can make the difference between lightning and an unusual kind of light. (It was 2 Brazilian pilots who saw it.)
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