Air France A330-200 missing
As usual I have lots of questions.
I take note of the reports of severe weather as only of secondary interest at this time (may or may not be germain)
However the reports of multiple electrical system degradation is to me significant so hence my questions.
So far no reports of pilot communications of an event
1. Was the electrical system malfunctions associated over a time frame or only a single transmission?
2. Are these kind of transmissions altitude sensitive? (could they occur at very low altitudes during damage when striking the sea etc.)
the above are general questions and may not be applicable to this incident
I take note of the reports of severe weather as only of secondary interest at this time (may or may not be germain)
However the reports of multiple electrical system degradation is to me significant so hence my questions.
So far no reports of pilot communications of an event
1. Was the electrical system malfunctions associated over a time frame or only a single transmission?
2. Are these kind of transmissions altitude sensitive? (could they occur at very low altitudes during damage when striking the sea etc.)
the above are general questions and may not be applicable to this incident
I am very surprised by the statement "aircraft went through a thunderstorm". I thought most widebody Airbus pilots knew there were 'whispers' about the tailplane in turbulence.
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Somewhere in the Northern Hemisphere
Posts: 29
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
With reference to the report that the aircraft had sent a message about an electrical failure. There is nothing synister involved there.
All Airbus aircraft periodically send text messages back to the home maintenance base during a flight. These inflight messages regarding any systems faults or failures are collated and then printed out in the cockpit automatically after landing.
The engineering department will have received these messages while the aircraft was in flight, so that they can troubleshoot and fix the problem once the aircraft lands. This saves time and inevitably money for the company.
On nearly EVERY airbus flight there will be a report of some (usually very minor) fault reported to the company during a flight.
The cause of this accident will be known thoroughly upon full investigation.
In the meantime, there is a possibility, however slight, that these people may still be alive.
All Airbus aircraft periodically send text messages back to the home maintenance base during a flight. These inflight messages regarding any systems faults or failures are collated and then printed out in the cockpit automatically after landing.
The engineering department will have received these messages while the aircraft was in flight, so that they can troubleshoot and fix the problem once the aircraft lands. This saves time and inevitably money for the company.
On nearly EVERY airbus flight there will be a report of some (usually very minor) fault reported to the company during a flight.
The cause of this accident will be known thoroughly upon full investigation.
In the meantime, there is a possibility, however slight, that these people may still be alive.
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Under Class C
Posts: 106
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Just heard one mention of this on I think CNN, and have not heard it again in the past 15 minutes.
News person stated that they had just received information that after the message about the electrical short circuit, the plan continued for some hours more under autonomous control.
They did not say where this information came from, but I wonder if there is something to this and why the confusion around the time contact was reported as lost. Could it be voice communication was lost around 3 hours after takeoff, but the plan was then tracked for another couple of hours until it was closer to the African coast.
Just watching other news feeds now to see if anyone else mentions this.
News person stated that they had just received information that after the message about the electrical short circuit, the plan continued for some hours more under autonomous control.
They did not say where this information came from, but I wonder if there is something to this and why the confusion around the time contact was reported as lost. Could it be voice communication was lost around 3 hours after takeoff, but the plan was then tracked for another couple of hours until it was closer to the African coast.
Just watching other news feeds now to see if anyone else mentions this.
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Hotel Gypsy
Posts: 2,821
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Not jumping too far ahead, I'm wondering how the authorities will go about finding this particular needle in the haystack. Who has the capability and how much effort will be expended to find evidence if indeed the aircraft is now at the bottom of the Atlantic? I presume that there are very few countries who have the capability to scour the oceans.
Does the CF6 have rollback issues/history (engine icing near CBs?) - Double flame outs would cause electrical system load shedding which would I guess, cause a maintainance event on the ACARS.
Jotape - I'd say Toronto was a pretty major prang, and the Concorde crash was caused by more than just a piece of metal. Further back there was the airshow strimmer at Habsheim, the Strasbourg crash (Air Inter), the 744 off the runway into the drink in the S Pacific etc. (and thats just off the top of my head)!
Jotape - I'd say Toronto was a pretty major prang, and the Concorde crash was caused by more than just a piece of metal. Further back there was the airshow strimmer at Habsheim, the Strasbourg crash (Air Inter), the 744 off the runway into the drink in the S Pacific etc. (and thats just off the top of my head)!
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Thirty West
Posts: 47
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
@slingsby
If you review the earthquake data, you can see that this is just a co-incidence
1) It happend at 00:47Z, so way to early.
2) The quake was located 10km below the surface
ot = 00:47:04.33 +/- 0.60 CENTRAL MID-ATLANTIC RIDGE
lat = 4.971 +/- 15.0
lon = -32.615 +/- 5.6 MAGNITUDE 4.8 (GS)
dep = 10.0 (geophysicist)
If you review the earthquake data, you can see that this is just a co-incidence
1) It happend at 00:47Z, so way to early.
2) The quake was located 10km below the surface
ot = 00:47:04.33 +/- 0.60 CENTRAL MID-ATLANTIC RIDGE
lat = 4.971 +/- 15.0
lon = -32.615 +/- 5.6 MAGNITUDE 4.8 (GS)
dep = 10.0 (geophysicist)
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Oxford, UK
Posts: 1,546
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Lightning protection
Checkboard mentions in message 80 that "aircraft are highly protected against lightning......."
The UK air accident investigation board a number of years ago was able to measure the voltage of a lightning strike that melted the controls of a K21 glider over Dunstable, and came to the unsettling conclusion that it far exceeded the protection provided for airliners at that time.
Could this be relevant?
The UK air accident investigation board a number of years ago was able to measure the voltage of a lightning strike that melted the controls of a K21 glider over Dunstable, and came to the unsettling conclusion that it far exceeded the protection provided for airliners at that time.
Could this be relevant?
Coupla things, which may or may not be relevant.
Earlier, the Brazilians said they were basing their search round Fernando de Noronha (maybe because they had aircraft there) - but there were also reports that the incident was about 300km from Natal, which is in the same area.
That ties in roughly with something happening 4 hours into the flight, because that seems to be in the same area, rather than closer to Africa.
Finally, I don't think anyone has mentioned the ITCZ, which must be somewhere round this area at this time of year.
sean
airsound
Earlier, the Brazilians said they were basing their search round Fernando de Noronha (maybe because they had aircraft there) - but there were also reports that the incident was about 300km from Natal, which is in the same area.
That ties in roughly with something happening 4 hours into the flight, because that seems to be in the same area, rather than closer to Africa.
Finally, I don't think anyone has mentioned the ITCZ, which must be somewhere round this area at this time of year.
sean
airsound
Join Date: May 2009
Location: VHHH Ocean 2D
Posts: 726
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
The worst thing is that we may never know what happened. If indeed it was severe storms, then the a/c could be spread over a very large area. This would have been increased further due to the time it takes SAR to reach the possible area.
By then the most important equipment (Black Box for example) could be sitting at the bottom of the Atlantic.
Does anyone have any opinions on the viability of locating and scavenging the bottom of the ocean for wreckage and more importantly, the black box? What is the cut-off point when the authorities just give up?
By then the most important equipment (Black Box for example) could be sitting at the bottom of the Atlantic.
Does anyone have any opinions on the viability of locating and scavenging the bottom of the ocean for wreckage and more importantly, the black box? What is the cut-off point when the authorities just give up?