Peanut butter and HONEY!
Why aren't they meeting with Captain STEEEEEEEVEVE?AAIB to meet with NTSB in DC next week.
Let’s see what happens
Who are these “aviation experts…?”
Idiots
The second major fault surfaced on June 10, 2025. The NGS failure was marked as “high-risk”, or CAT A MEL, by the maintenance engineers. This fire inerter’s job is to prevent fuel-tank fires by injecting nitrogen-rich air into them to prevent a vapour build-up of the flammable gas oxygen. When the NGS is offline, oxygen levels can rise inside the fuel tanks.
As the NGS did not function in flight AI171, it meant that there was nothing to immediately slow down or suppress the fuel fire that erupted when the aircraft hit the ground. If the inerting system had done its job, the initial fire could have been smaller, and there might have been more than one survivor, say aviation experts.
I’ll never forget after the Asiana crash, one of those top news networks brought this “aviation expert” on who had 0 days in the airline industry. A military pilot entire career speaking and ripping on airlines (foreign ones at that). That’s when I realized the term “aviation expert” is meaningless.Who are these “aviation experts…?”
Idiots
The second major fault surfaced on June 10, 2025. The NGS failure was marked as “high-risk”, or CAT A MEL, by the maintenance engineers. This fire inerter’s job is to prevent fuel-tank fires by injecting nitrogen-rich air into them to prevent a vapour build-up of the flammable gas oxygen. When the NGS is offline, oxygen levels can rise inside the fuel tanks.
As the NGS did not function in flight AI171, it meant that there was nothing to immediately slow down or suppress the fuel fire that erupted when the aircraft hit the ground. If the inerting system had done its job, the initial fire could have been smaller, and there might have been more than one survivor, say aviation experts.
I’ll never forget after the Asiana crash, one of those top news networks brought this “aviation expert” on who had 0 days in the airline industry. A military pilot entire career speaking and ripping on airlines (foreign ones at that). That’s when I realized the term “aviation expert” is meaningless.
I’ll never forget after the Asiana crash, one of those top news networks brought this “aviation expert” on who had 0 days in the airline industry. A military pilot entire career speaking and ripping on airlines (foreign ones at that). That’s when I realized the term “aviation expert” is meaningless.
AvHerald has a blurb about a Ryanair 737MAX IFSD occurring when, reportedly, a sunscreen impacted a start lever. I have difficulty both with the idea of the lightweight hardware of a Boeing-installed sunscreen doing that, as well as the spatial separation allowing that kind of interaction without some additional aggravating circumstance.
I can’t remember but I feel like they put a Molly-guard of some sort over them after that.There is a story that @Richman may or may not be able to share about a SouthernJets 717, an iPad (being used for company approved purposes of course), and the auto throttles moving back at the top of climb.
There is a story that @Richman may or may not be able to share about a SouthernJets 717, an iPad (being used for company approved purposes of course), and the auto throttles moving back at the top of climb.
So I'm out at the airport today doing a repo flight, and one of our mechanics tells us an interesting story that he says he heard from a Delta guy. According to him, a Delta 717 crew was flying and watching a movie on an iPad, and they had set the iPad up on the center pedestal resting against the throttles so they could both see it. They start an idle clamp descent and the autothrottles come all the way back knocking the iPad down and hitting the fuel switches, causing a dual engine failure. They restart the engines and everything is fine afterwards.
Any truth to this? I tried setting an...
- SlumTodd_Millionaire
- Replies: 91
- Forum: Airline Pilots
came here for this & was not disappointedWould anyone even notice if a 717 lost its engines?
This is why cable news needs to dieAnd that’s just in the airline industry, and we know they’re wrong because it’s our field. Imagine what they and their experts get wrong in other fields, and portray that as reportable news.