
January 1st 04, 07:34 AM
|
|
Ralph Nesbitt wrote in message
news 
"Robert Moore" wrote in message
...
"Ralph Nesbitt" wrote
Hopefully all realize when referring to "Air Pressure" at altitude
this
is
an "absolute" pressure value inside the fuselage irrespective of
ambient.
When referring to air pressures at ground level the pressure reading
is
above unadjusted ambient barometric pressure.
In the Boeing aircraft that I flew (B-727,B-707,B-720) there were two
gages on the FE's panel. One was a simple altimeter that indicated the
cabin altitude at all times and the other, a differential pressure gage
that indicated the difference in pressure between outside and inside.
The maximum differential for those aircraft was around 8.6 psi. The
only
way to determine the absolute pressure inside the aircraft would be to
use
a graph to convert the altimeter indication to pressure.
Bob Moore
The protocols you reiterate above will translate to a ~ constant pressure
of
12 PSI Gauge inside the cabin as the A/C moves through it's flight profile
above ~ 11,000'.
Ralph Nesbitt
Professional FD/CFR/ARFF Type
http://books.nap.edu/books/030908289...6.html#pagetop
http://print.nap.edu/pdf/0309082897/pdf_image/36.pdf
Paul Nixon
|