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I'm not sure you know all the facts of this crash. While it was found that moving the de-ice boots aft would help, the crew was the more to blame in this.
chperplt said:Wasn't the captain in the lav doing the FA during most of the hold?? I remember reading something about that in the final report.
3. The vertical stab/rudder assemblies on Air transport aircraft are certified for ONE full deflection of the rudder followed by a return to center. THAT is it!!! These airplanes are not certified for a rudder doublet and certainly not a triplet which is what occured on this airplane when the rudder finally departed the airframe. Engineering analysis has shown that almost any other air transport airplane out there, save maybe the 727, would have also lost the vertical stab/rudder assembly under the same conditions.
Just one question, was the aircraft below maneuvering speed? If so, then rudder inputs, as harsh as they are allleged to be really should not be an issue
mckpickle said:I'm not sure you know all the facts of this crash. While it was found that moving the de-ice boots aft would help, the crew was the more to blame in this. They were holding at a very slow speed in a 72 with flaps at 15 while in SEVERE icing. It was determined that no aircraft could have withstood that same icing. And they held in it for 30 minutes. I have seen sick amounts of ice on ATR's but only long enough to get out of it. In contrast the Emb-120 has had more icing related incidents than the ATR but prehaps since only 30 people can die instead of 70 the media doesnt care as much. But lets not forget one of the big reasons this gained so much attention was a book titled "Unheeded Warning" by Stephen A. Fredrick in which he provided the media with mass histeria about the ATR. Bottom line; the pilots did not understand the danger they were in and hence didnt avoid it.
Hey TJ, Dude...an A-300, last time I looked, is just as much an "Airbus" as an A-320.don't doubt that the AA Airbus pilot (although I'm sure you meant to say AA A-300 pilot...they don't operate A-320s)
While this may be true of the "fly by wire" Airbus' it is not true of the A-300 which is NOT fly by wire.The joystick does not move nor the thrust levers move when the aircraft is flying on it's own unlike Boeing products.
About a month ago, I had a conversation with an AA, A-300 pilot about the rudder deflection depicted in the reconstruction, and he said to me, that full deflection was what they were taught at AA, similar to military fighter a/c.