Avi8tor2000
Big Papa
- Joined
- May 10, 2002
- Posts
- 190
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All American pilots are trained to fly with one engine, Smith said.
glad everyone is okay....if your on here...nice job boys!
I dont know if it is a feature of the Eagle brand of the Allison, or if all of them will do that, but yes technically since one engine is a problem it would stand to reason that the other engine should go to idle as well.Since losing one engine is a problem, does that mean the other will go to idle at American?
Reporters' brains designed to go to idle when...well, when they wake up in the morning.
My car has Idle Engine Technology, or I.E.T as well. When I release the gas pedal, the engine idles. It's a revolutionary technology thats sweeping the nation.
glad everyone is okay....if your on here...nice job boys!
And that is where you are wrong. A good outcome in any type of emergency is where no one is injured and no metal got bent. I am sure that you are the best twin cessna driver in the world, but this is a little different.I wasnt there so I hate to be too critical, but going off the runway is not a good ending. I have had two engine failures on twin engine aircraft, and was able to keep the planes on the runway on both occasions.
Question.....Did they land on the longest available runway? I am not sure, but I would think that Louisville has a long runway (8000 feet maybe). That should be plenty long.
Other than that, thank goodness nobody got hurt.
And that is where you are wrong. A good outcome in any type of emergency is where no one is injured and no metal got bent. I am sure that you are the best twin cessna driver in the world, but this is a little different.
Dude, when you get some flight time and experience, then come back and we will talk.
I GUARANTEE you, that if he went off the runway on a checkride, the instructor would have hime do it again.....or in other words, UNSAT.
-5 for SP and -10 for DUDE!
you are a dork
The EMB-140s engines are designed to go to idle in the event of a problem???? That is news to me.
Don't beat the guys up yet.. Embraer jets (at least 140/145's) have had a long history of going off the end of wet runways for no particular reason. I think it's a problem with the anti-skid system... I personally have had some experience with this.. Let me set it up for you....
You've just sent it down nice and soft on a wet runway and apply brakes. All wheels lock up because all the a/c weight is not on the pavement. You arent slowing so instinctively you press harder on brakes which still are locked up. You're worried about a single engine go around so aren't thinking about all the other systems the wheel lock proctection and anti skid are now all off because the airplane thinks it's stopped (the ADC Airspeed isn't in the loop for the Anti-Skid and wheel lock) since all wheel speed transducers are all showing 0MPH the airplane has already disengaged the wheel lock and anti-skid and there you are sliding down the runway. If you wern't thinking so heavly about the engine out you would probably let go of the brakes, let the wheels spin back up and re-apply the brakes. That's the best case senerio but who in here would think of that while they are skidding down the runway at 110Kts. This should be addressed in training but currently isn't (at least not at my airline) It's one of those things... It is what it is...
Point of this rant?
The crew did a good job with a bad situation (yes, in the sim is a totally different world and they would have to do it again) but in real life GREAT JOB
no-one got hurt.
This made my day!Yeah, there is a an Idle Retard Unit. The system is redundant; Retard Unit #1 sits in the left seat, Retard Unit #2 sits in the right seat. If Retard Unit #1 fails then Retard Unit #2 takes over, and vice versa.
The EMB-140s engines are designed to go to idle in the event of a problem???? That is news to me.
And that is where you are wrong. A good outcome in any type of emergency is where no one is injured and no metal got bent.
I have had two engine failures on twin engine aircraft, and was able to keep the planes on the runway on both occasions.