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To: lbryce

I don’t think these guys had a clue what their airspeed was.


3 posted on 07/31/2011 9:41:58 AM PDT by Phil Harmonic
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To: Phil Harmonic
I don’t think these guys had a clue what their airspeed was/

Doesn't seem like it...and

a wall of ice particles that blocked the aircraft speed sensors.

My Air Force instrument systems guess: Pitot tube heater failure led to eractic airspeed inputs that confused the hell out of the computers and the pilots.

40 posted on 07/31/2011 10:15:18 AM PDT by libertylover (The problem with Obama is not that his skin is too black, it's that his ideas are too RED.)
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To: Phil Harmonic
No, they didn't, thanks to the lousy flight data that was coming from the computerized flight-control/air-data system. However, they should have realized (and probably did?) that they were descending, since the altimeter is a simple and fairly reliable instrument. However, they faced a huge dilemma:
was the actual, real air-speed low or high? If low, they needed to lower the nose. However, if it was really high, lowering the nose could easily put them past not-to-exceed airspeed and the wings could break off. Certain death.
If they raised the nose, the speed would go down, accentuating the stall.

The computerized flight-control system certainly thought the plane was stalling, even if it wasn't, and it perhaps wasn't letting the pilots raise the nose to pull out of a dive, which they may have needed to do to maintain alitude.

66 posted on 07/31/2011 11:05:21 AM PDT by expatpat
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