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To: Swordmaker; B4Ranch
How else do you explain the loss of the vertical stabilizer and then both engines??

1. Easily;

2, Separately;

3. Consecutively.

4. The vertical fin and rudder, at the most critical stage of flight, failed due [Probably] to the acculmination of a series of small errors, break downs and failures which may or may not eventually include such contributing factors as bad design, material failure, fatigued components, previous maintenance damage -- etceteras;

When the Vertical fin failed at that potentially most unstable stage of flight -- and especially when bearing in mind that it did not leave cleanly and most certainly caused the aircraft to yaw violently -- all "yaw-damping" control was lost.

Once the aircraft began yawing under take-off and then increased to the "maximum power" setting the pilot [It was the F/O's leg, he handled the controls] called for, the potential that an assemetric thrust condition existed and/or was caused increased.

Once that happened it was only milliseconds before the gyroscopic effect of violent yawing on turbine rotors spinning in excess of 10,000 RPM caused the engines to be ripped from mounts not designed to handle such incredible forces applied to them at 90 degrees around the engines plane of rotation.

The forces were such it was as iff a giant hand had grabbed hold of the engines on a childs model an simply twisted them off.

37 posted on 11/24/2001 7:47:21 PM PST by Brian Allen
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To: Brian Allen
Now that's an explanation that even with my limited hours I understand ! Brian, Thanks much.
40 posted on 11/24/2001 8:08:40 PM PST by B4Ranch
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