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Yes,
I agree, and as an undergrad of ERAU, and now grad student, along with 22 years active duty, the Payne Stewart accident has been gone over time and again, if I ever see another Power Point presentation on it, I'll puke. (that and the aloha air incident, concorde, TWA flight 800, swissair 111, etc.) but, with a failure (leak) in the pressurization/oxygen system at a lower level, it would have induced hypoxia, and in a lot of cases, unless you know it is happening, everyone that has ever experienced this or looked at test results know that the reactions to hypoxia are totally uncontrolled. Who is to say that anyone would have donned an O2 mask if they didn't know what was happening?? The crew then passed out, and the aircraft continued to climb and cruise until the leak resulted in internal freezing of the cabin. I agree there was no "explosive decompression". On Thu, 15 Jan 2004 03:36:28 GMT, Mike Marron wrote: (Rick Durden) wrote: Evidence examined thus far indicates that the Payne Stewart crash was decompression, but not explosive. The old Lears had some interesting systems and according to some reports the company had not maintained its airplanes all that well or worked off some of the squawks. Those who have flown the old Lears can give a number of different scenarios that would generate the gradual loss of cabin pressure that doomed the Stewart flight. Back in 1999 I happened to be renting hangar space from the pilot who trained the Capt. of the Learjet that Stewart was flying in when it crashed. Stewart's Capt. was a highly experienced ex-military type who flew tankers in the Air Force. My pilot friend whom I was renting hangar space from had also flown the exact same jet (47BA) to the Caribbean the previous week. According to him, the jet was well maintained and he was absolutely baffled by the whole Payne Stewart incident. A sudden decompression at FL 230 should still give a person more than enough time to don a mask and the only thing he knew was that the Learjet had just taken off from Orlando and was at FL 230 over Gainseville (Florida) and cleared to FL 390 when they lost radio contact with ATC. In any event, it must've been an eerie sight for the F-16 jocks who interecepted the Learjet and saw the bodies slumped over, frost on the windows from the frozen water vapor inside the cabin. |
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