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Shame I missed it, maybe I'll see it on the 394th rerun.
But anyway I DID see Goldfinger the other night so I know this is all wrong. If you shoot a bullet through the window of an airplane, first the whole window explodes. Then everything is sucked through the window, including people who are considerably larger than the window aperture (except James Bond of course). This continues indefinitely. Also the plane goes into an uncontrollable dive and ends up spiralling into the ground, despite the combined efforts of two people on the flight deck. I think I prefer the James Bond version. John ( :-), for the irony challenged) "C J Campbell" wrote in message ... Now, that was cool! Mythbusters pressurized an old DC-9 and fired a bullet through the wall to see if it would cause an explosive decompression. It didn't. Then they fired a bullet through the window to see if the window would shatter and cause an explosive decompression. The bullet only made a small hole in the window because the windows are made of shatter-proof plastic. No explosive decompression. Then Mythbusters put explosive all around the window to blow it out and deliberately cause an explosive decompression. The crash test dummy, "Buster," was damaged but was not sucked out the window. If he had been a real person he would have been injured but probably lived. His arm was badly damaged enough that a human arm might have been lost. So Mythbusters patched everything up and used a shaped charge to blow out the whole wall. The explosive decompression ripped the entire top off the fuselage and much of the wall out, but the seats and the crash test dummy remained in the airplane. I would guess that if the "Buster" had been a live human he would have been seriously injured and possibly killed. Mythbusters then talked about how strong these airplanes really are and closed with photos of the Hawaiian Airlines plane that suffered an explosive decompression similar to the one that the show created with a shaped charge. The only person killed was a flight attendant who was pulled from the plane by the airstream, but the passengers all survived. I thought the show was fascinating. It really demonstrated the engineering that goes into an airliner. Besides, I like watching things blow up. It must appeal to my inner 12 year old. -- Christopher J. Campbell World Famous Flight Instructor Port Orchard, WA If you go around beating the Bush, don't complain if you rile the animals. |
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![]() "John Harper" wrote in message news:1073933174.414447@sj-nntpcache-5... | Shame I missed it, maybe I'll see it on the 394th rerun. | | But anyway I DID see Goldfinger the other night so I know | this is all wrong. If you shoot a bullet through the window of | an airplane, first the whole window explodes. Then everything | is sucked through the window, including people who are | considerably larger than the window aperture (except James | Bond of course). This continues indefinitely. Also the plane | goes into an uncontrollable dive and ends up spiralling into | the ground, despite the combined efforts of two people on | the flight deck. | | I think I prefer the James Bond version. | | John | | ( :-), for the irony challenged) Mythbusters seemed to prefer the "U.S. Marshals" version, complete with shackled prisoners and guards being sucked out the airplane. The James Bond "Die Another Day" version is just not as good as the "Goldfinger" scene. I think I know the origin of all of this -- it is none other than Dr. Wernher von Braun and Walt Disney. Disney made a film about the Dyna Soar space project ("Man and Space" -1957) that was narrated by Braun. That film shows a cartoon of the occupants being sucked out of the spacecraft after a meteor pierces a tiny hole in the structure. |
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