Pretty sure the second pic was a fake, or at least the flamethrower coming out of the tail is
IIRC, most tail strike plates are made of titanium. That seems about right to me.
Pretty sure the second pic was a fake, or at least the flamethrower coming out of the tail is
Maybe I'm a witch in church on this one, but it seems to me that barring major extenuating circumstances like mechanical failure or the other crew member wrestling over the controls a la swa in New York, striking a wingtip on a calm wind landing in a modern-ish part 25 jet is a pretty big failure at one of the most foundational tasks in flying an airplane. To the extent that the individuals employers ought to seriously consider whether that individual ought to be entrusted with the controls of a multi million dollar machine.
Since that's fake, here's a NTSB report of an AA 737-800 tail drag: http://www.ntsb.gov/_layouts/ntsb.aviation/brief2.aspx?ev_id=20110502X93814&ntsbno=DCA11FA050&akey=1
Dibs! Need to find me an engineer for my new-found CRJ STC...Yeah, but the wingtips typically have wheels...
Both points of view are correct.Maybe I'm a witch in church on this one, but it seems to me that barring major extenuating circumstances like mechanical failure or the other crew member wrestling over the controls a la swa in New York, striking a wingtip on a calm wind landing in a modern-ish part 25 jet is a pretty big failure at one of the most foundational tasks in flying an airplane. To the extent that the individuals employers ought to seriously consider whether that individual ought to be entrusted with the controls of a multi million dollar machine. And examine what happened in training that led the individual involved to think that this was the way to land an airplane.
Maybe I'm a witch in church on this one, but it seems to me that barring major extenuating circumstances like mechanical failure or the other crew member wrestling over the controls a la swa in New York, striking a wingtip on a calm wind landing in a modern-ish part 25 jet is a pretty big failure at one of the most foundational tasks in flying an airplane. To the extent that the individuals employers ought to seriously consider whether that individual ought to be entrusted with the controls of a multi million dollar machine. And examine what happened in training that led the individual involved to think that this was the way to land an airplane.
Maybe I'm a witch in church on this one, but it seems to me that barring major extenuating circumstances like mechanical failure or the other crew member wrestling over the controls a la swa in New York, striking a wingtip on a calm wind landing in a modern-ish part 25 jet is a pretty big failure at one of the most foundational tasks in flying an airplane. To the extent that the individuals employers ought to seriously consider whether that individual ought to be entrusted with the controls of a multi million dollar machine. And examine what happened in training that led the individual involved to think that this was the way to land an airplane.
I guess my perspective is thousands of pilots manage to make it their whole careers without denting a swept wing even in crosswinds, it makes me wonder what's wrong with a guy that does it in calm wind. Chocking it up to bad training I'd buy off on, but calling it "bad luck" seems pretty weak.I'm fairly certain you haven't flown a heavy (well, more heavy than a GA plane) swept wing jet. Lateral instability, close to the ground, even in no wind conditions, isn't an unusual thing. Heat differential in the pavement is often enough to generate unequal lift when slow.
That said, yes, striking a wingtip is kind of frowned upon but you are sounding a bit like a resident of Salem in the late 1600s.
I guess my perspective is thousands of pilots manage to make it their whole careers without denting a swept wing even in crosswinds, it makes me wonder what's wrong with a guy that does it in calm wind. Chocking it up to bad training I'd buy off on, but calling it "bad luck" seems pretty weak.
I'm fairly certain you haven't flown a heavy (well, more heavy than a GA plane) swept wing jet. Lateral instability, close to the ground, even in no wind conditions, isn't an unusual thing. Heat differential in the pavement is often enough to generate unequal lift when slow.
That said, yes, striking a wingtip is kind of frowned upon but you are sounding a bit like a resident of Salem in the late 1600s.
I guess my perspective is thousands of pilots manage to make it their whole careers without denting a swept wing even in crosswinds, it makes me wonder what's wrong with a guy that does it in calm wind. Chocking it up to bad training I'd buy off on, but calling it "bad luck" seems pretty weak.
I guess my perspective is thousands of pilots manage to make it their whole careers without denting a swept wing even in crosswinds, it makes me wonder what's wrong with a guy that does it in calm wind. Chocking it up to bad training I'd buy off on, but calling it "bad luck" seems pretty weak.
I never experienced lateral instability too much
You mean in that straight-wing jet you flew? hehe
Is the F-117 considered a straight wing jet?You mean in that straight-wing jet you flew? hehe
You mean in that straight-wing jet you flew? hehe
That's what I was thinking as well...
Is the F-117 considered a straight wing jet?
Nah, the one with the permanent 68 degree wing sweep. Probably more than anyone here has flown.....
Shack.