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Strange place to have a failure.
Yeah that was pretty crazy, the pilot didn't even know he was missing a wing until he landed.
I don't even know why the hell they needed Mythbusters to test the "hole in an aircraft" theory.
Just look at the classic case of airliner fatigue: Aloha 243. The damn thing landed without half the damn fuselage (entire roof ripped off). Only ONE person, a flight attendant, was lost due to the wind blast blowing her out. Everyone else was seated and virtually unharmed and all survived.
The relative suction power from a hole in an airliner's pressure seal is hardly enough to make anything more than a piece of paper move. Lots of wind? Yes. Moving a human being around? No, not unless they are expose to the windstream (a la 243).
Well done to the crew of Quantas who seemed to handle it professionally.
Goes to show that CRM is important these days. With a lot of the salty flight deck nazi's going away. (not to say they don't still exist) United 232, Aloha 243 being great examples of "doing it right". A good crew goes a long way, there are so many potential accidents that could have been front page air disasters that were averted because of excellent crewmanship.
Goes to show that CRM is important these days.
With a lot of the salty flight deck nazi's going away. (not to say they don't still exist) United 232, Aloha 243 being great examples of "doing it right".
Goes to show that CRM is important these days. With a lot of the salty flight deck nazi's going away. (not to say they don't still exist) United 232, Aloha 243 being great examples of "doing it right". A good crew goes a long way, there are so many potential accidents that could have been front page air disasters that were averted because of excellent crewmanship.
"These days?" As opposed to when? It wasn't before?
What do you mean, "going away?" Is there some impending vacuum of experience in the airline industry?