Pilot Fighter
Well-Known Member
...other than providing everything the French asked for.the US hardly lifted a finger to help find that aircraft.
...other than providing everything the French asked for.the US hardly lifted a finger to help find that aircraft.
If nothing else, it will escape through the windows. I'm pretty sure every one of those has a built in pinhole leak.Yes, but air can't escape from the bottom of a vessel to allow water to displace it. If you tell me that the overall system does leak air from all the seams, I'll believe it... that just wasn't my understanding.
Again, academic, silly sidebar... mostly just me wondering how long an airplane would float if unopened.
-Fox
Unfortunately, I'm old enough. We were instructed to use that phraseology in cases where an aircraft's transponder was overwhelming our secondary. When that happened you'd get a secondary "ring" that would encompass the entire main bang at a distance equal to the actual target. Never actually saw it, nor had to use the phraseology, though.I'm not old school enough, but I found it.
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Unfortunately, I'm old enough. We were instructed to use that phraseology in cases where an aircraft's transponder was overwhelming our secondary. When that happened you'd get a secondary "ring" that would encompass the entire main bang at a distance equal to the actual target. Never actually saw it, nor had to use the phraseology, though.
Paul Weeks who has disappeared with the Malaysia Flight is a Mechanical Engineer... he gave his wife a wedding ring & watch before boarding as if he knew something was wrong....
I think that we would need to do some calculations to see if the amount of initial buoyancy can offset the weight of the aircraft which is the only way that it would stay at or near the surface. I'm too lazy to dig, but you would need to know the total weight of the aircraft and the total volume, then compare the overall density (weight per unit volume) to the density of seawater. Higher density, it sinks. Lower density it floats.So, you think that the compressibility of air would allow more than a trivial volume of additional water to enter at depths close to the surface?
On searching Google, I found another Paul Weeks who is a Mechanical Engineer and guess what, works for Boeing....
He specifically works on guess what plane?? Yep, Boeing 777 like the one that disappeared.
....
Not the same Paul Weeks.On searching Google, I found another Paul Weeks who is a Mechanical Engineer and guess what, works for Boeing....
He specifically works on guess what plane?? Yep, Boeing 777 like the one that disappeared.
And this means what exactly? So what? It's a different person with the same common name.His specific role:
Product Review Engineer II - 777 Wing & Final Body Join Integration at Boeing.
Stop, just stop. At least look into what you're suggesting more than seeing a LinkedIn profile with the same name before posting this garbage. The Boeing employee's LinkedIn https://touch.www.linkedin.com/?se...//www.linkedin.com/pub/paul-weeks/33/6b8/b31The plane that disappeared had it's wing clipped by another plane and had to be repaired....
That happened two years ago and was rather minor. It was the tip of one wing. Have you seen the photos? It was repaired by Boeing.The plane that disappeared had it's wing clipped by another plane and had to be repaired....
Can't we apply Archimedes principle and ignore density. Damn I'm getting old. Did I forget or did I never know this stuff. Do they still make those big engineering handbooks that have every calculation you could think of?Higher density, it sinks. Lower density it floats.