TonyC,
I read the accident summaries and the excerpt from 90-1 you posted with great interest. I'm almost convinced that the official explanation for this incident makes sense, except for one major issue...but I'll come back to that in a second.
One thing I noticed in 90-1 is that the main issue they seem to have been concerned about was heat, not arcing.
US Air Force said:
POTENTIAL EXISTS FOR HEAT BUILD-UP IN -135 AIR REFUELING/BODY PUMPS WHEN THE PUMPS ARE RUN DRY. THIS HEAT BUILD-UP MAY CAUSE CONDITIONS OF AN EXPLOSIVE NATURE IN THE BODY TANKS.
Does anyone know whether or not the center tank pumps on N93119 were running as it climbed out on July 17th?
In any case, it's my understanding that for a given quantity of Jet-A to ignite, it must be heated and misted. I didn't think "fumes" were enough to cause an explosion, regardless of what the ignition source is. But when you read about all those lost Stratotankers...perhaps I'm mistaken.
Now, back to the major problem I have with the official explanation: if TWA 800 was brought down by an accidental explosion in the center tank, then what exactly did all those witnesses see?
I don't buy the CIA's "zoom climb" story. The aerodynamics and radar data don't support that. And the Agency's story about people being misled by the differing speed of sound and light doesn't apply to those who were looking up at 800
before the explosion.
As I said, eyewitness accounts are notoriously misleading, particularly when it comes to aircraft accident investigation. But are we really supposed to believe that
two hundred people--including a handful of military pilots--all got it wrong?