Posted on 11/13/2001 5:57:06 AM PST by Axion
Edited on 04/22/2004 11:45:41 PM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
Investigators examining one of the separated engines from American Airlines Flight 587 found foreign debris inside, indicating that the engine may have ingested a flock of birds and then caught on fire.
The engine burned internally, people close to the investigation said. But its parts appeared intact, except for the damage from what is known in aviation as ``foreign object debris,'' or ``FOD.'' That would suggest that the engine didn't suffer a catastrophic failure from some mechanical breakdown, but from sucking in birds, these people said.
(Excerpt) Read more at interactive3.wsj.com ...
It was the next day! They threw a bird at the plane???
OMG!, a MilSpec MIRF Chicken Chucking ClusterFlocker Mk. 1! Feinstein is sure to want to ban those! Man o' mighty, do I want one now :)
If a detached engine sliced off the rear stabilizer, doesn't that mean the engine was moving more slowly in the flight direction than the rest of the aircraft? With less forward speed, wouldn't it drop somewhat faster? Just wondering.
The cabin is pressurized with bleed air from the compressor section of the engine(s). So, the air intakes for the engines and the cabin air system are one and the same.
Tell you what. In a period of ten years, I participated in picking up around 15 aircraft crashes in Nevada. Some were fatalities, most weren't. None of them looked the same. Some were very centralized, all in one big smoking hole, others were scattered out over a square mile or so. All of them were fighters (with the exception of two Apaches that slammed a hilltop in formation, and an EA-6B that had a mid-air with another EA-6B). None of them had the long wings and high tail sections that an airliner has...items that can whip around and cause other damage to the rest of the aircraft. To be perfectly honest with you, I can't explain why the first aircraft crash doesn't look like the second doesn't look like the third, ad infinitum.
What we have in front of us with regards to the crash yesterday is a lot of evidence of catastrophic engine failure. I'm going by what I've seen here regarding pictures, as well as the pictures I've seen on various news sites, and what the eye-witnesses have been reporting.
Ahh..the eyewitnesses....flashes at the wing root, popping sounds, smoke and flame...some on this board are seeing terrorists in action, whether with a missile, a highpowered rifle, or a hidden monkey wrench. Personally, I haven't seen evidence of any of those things. What I did see though was a mechanical failure, something that unfortunately happens now and again.
I've read here on the board that it must be terrorist related, simply because the government said it wasn't. Well, following the logic that "the opposite of what the government says is the truth," then we discover that the WTC attack wasn't an attack, Bin Laden wasn't behind it, and it's really ok to eat all those fatty foods.
I think what most of us are reacting to is the constant, every half-hour news mantra "ALL EVIDENCE points to an accident" (emphasis THEIRS) that we listend to continuously yesterday on ABC radio and NBC TV. Then we got the "reasoning" from the NTSB spokesbabe that since their was no one shouting "Allah Akhbar" in the cockpit, it was probably not a bomb or sabotage. (Bizarre logic, to say the least)---makes you wonder what panic was gripping them.
"f you think that the people who are able to see through this concocted BS gov't story are in the minority here, perhaps you need to find a different forum. The fact is, the vast majority of the folks here KNOW what didn't happen. Happenstance, or birds if you like, call it what you want, was not a party to this event."
Yeah ...okay ex-spurt why don't you tell me exactly what brought down that plane. And then I guess we'll have to revise aviation aircraft accident history to say that all accidents involving any aircraft as far back as, and including any that happened at Kitty Hawk in 1903 were terrorist related.
It will be funny to watch when you catch a whiff of reality.
it wouldn't hurt to have an unbiased person taking another look at those records!
Actually, this did happen in the case of AA flt#191 out of ORD in 1979. At takeoff, the DC-10's engine broke loose from the pylon, ran ahead of the wing, then went up over the wing after which it tumbled to the ground. Note, though, that the engine hit the ground LONG before the rest of the debris field (redirected forward momentum). It was thought that the disintegrating attachment of the pylon acted to "swing" the engine upward. This flt#587 situation has a different set of "speculations," with the engine exploding first, so that swinging on the pylon trick might not work.
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