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On Feb 13, 4:44*pm, "Robert11" wrote:
Hello, I guess de-icing is going to be a popular subject. Question, please: *On commercial jet airliners like, e.g., a 767 or 757, is there any in-flight deicing system for the wing and tail surfaces, other than a leading edge pneumatic boot ? What about the "main," large upper surfaces ? How in general is wing de-icing accomplished on these new, modern jets ? Thanks, Bob There's a very good chance the Boston crash might have been tailplane icing. DH |
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On Sun, 15 Feb 2009 06:00:13 -0800 (PST), Dudley Henriques wrote:
On Feb 13, 4:44*pm, "Robert11" wrote: Hello, I guess de-icing is going to be a popular subject. Question, please: *On commercial jet airliners like, e.g., a 767 or 757, is there any in-flight deicing system for the wing and tail surfaces, other than a leading edge pneumatic boot ? What about the "main," large upper surfaces ? How in general is wing de-icing accomplished on these new, modern jets ? Thanks, Bob There's a very good chance the Boston crash might have been tailplane icing. DH To explain the erratic flight behavior? |
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On Feb 15, 11:59*am, Gezellig wrote:
On Sun, 15 Feb 2009 06:00:13 -0800 (PST), Dudley Henriques wrote: On Feb 13, 4:44*pm, "Robert11" wrote: Hello, I guess de-icing is going to be a popular subject. Question, please: *On commercial jet airliners like, e.g., a 767 or 757, is there any in-flight deicing system for the wing and tail surfaces, other than a leading edge pneumatic boot ? What about the "main," large upper surfaces ? How in general is wing de-icing accomplished on these new, modern jets ? Thanks, Bob There's a very good chance the Boston crash might have been tailplane icing. DH To explain the erratic flight behavior? It's just a guess, but yes. I viewed a NASA film only this morning on this issue. The key if correct would be that whatever happened happened immediately after they went to 15 degrees of flaps. That would have increased the aoa on the tail surface leading edge. That leading edge is sharper than the wing leading edge and very susceptible to icing. Assuming the boundary layer sep point was moving aft on the stabilizer already, when they lowered the flaps they could have easily exceeded the CLmax for the tail. Even if this theory is correct, I'd be looking for additional factors related to icing coupling to cause the autorotation they seemed to have entered prior to impact. It's all theory anyway. The NTSB will come up with something as they progress with the investigation. DH |
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On Feb 15, 4:23*pm, Dudley Henriques wrote:
On Feb 15, 11:59*am, Gezellig wrote: On Sun, 15 Feb 2009 06:00:13 -0800 (PST), Dudley Henriques wrote: On Feb 13, 4:44*pm, "Robert11" wrote: Hello, I guess de-icing is going to be a popular subject. Question, please: *On commercial jet airliners like, e.g., a 767 or 757, is there any in-flight deicing system for the wing and tail surfaces, other than a leading edge pneumatic boot ? What about the "main," large upper surfaces ? How in general is wing de-icing accomplished on these new, modern jets ? Thanks, Bob There's a very good chance the Boston crash might have been tailplane icing. DH To explain the erratic flight behavior? It's just a guess, but yes. I viewed a NASA film only this morning on this issue. The key if correct would be that whatever happened happened immediately after they went to 15 degrees of flaps. That would have increased the aoa on the tail surface leading edge. That leading edge is sharper than the wing leading edge and very susceptible to icing. Assuming the boundary layer sep point was moving aft on the stabilizer already, when they lowered the flaps they could have easily exceeded the CLmax for the tail. Even if this theory is correct, I'd be looking for additional factors related to icing coupling to cause the autorotation they seemed to have entered prior to impact. It's all theory anyway. The NTSB will come up with something as they progress with the investigation. DH Maybe a silly notion/question buuuut...if this (pitching/roll -this from new reports as of 2/16) had occurred at a higher altitude, 7000 ft say, would the plane have entered a 'flat' spin? Was the impact indicative of such? |
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![]() wrote in message ... On Feb 15, 4:23 pm, Dudley Henriques wrote: Cool! Let's speculate on speculation. |
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On Feb 16, 8:01*am, wrote:
On Feb 15, 4:23*pm, Dudley Henriques wrote: On Feb 15, 11:59*am, Gezellig wrote: On Sun, 15 Feb 2009 06:00:13 -0800 (PST), Dudley Henriques wrote: On Feb 13, 4:44*pm, "Robert11" wrote: Hello, I guess de-icing is going to be a popular subject. Question, please: *On commercial jet airliners like, e.g., a 767 or 757, is there any in-flight deicing system for the wing and tail surfaces, other than a leading edge pneumatic boot ? What about the "main," large upper surfaces ? How in general is wing de-icing accomplished on these new, modern jets ? Thanks, Bob There's a very good chance the Boston crash might have been tailplane icing. DH To explain the erratic flight behavior? It's just a guess, but yes. I viewed a NASA film only this morning on this issue. The key if correct would be that whatever happened happened immediately after they went to 15 degrees of flaps. That would have increased the aoa on the tail surface leading edge. That leading edge is sharper than the wing leading edge and very susceptible to icing. Assuming the boundary layer sep point was moving aft on the stabilizer already, when they lowered the flaps they could have easily exceeded the CLmax for the tail. Even if this theory is correct, I'd be looking for additional factors related to icing coupling to cause the autorotation they seemed to have entered prior to impact. It's all theory anyway. The NTSB will come up with something as they progress with the investigation. DH Maybe a silly notion/question buuuut...if this (pitching/roll -this from new reports as of 2/16) had occurred at a higher altitude, 7000 ft say, would the plane have entered a 'flat' spin? *Was the impact indicative of such? Difficult to say. I'm far from being the expert on transport aircraft. My understanding is that if, and that is still a big IF, tailplane icing was involved in the Buffalo accident, it was the lowering of the flaps and the cfg change to the wing increasing the aoa on the tail that was the factor actually taking them into stall. If that was the cause, the actual breaking of the stall caused by the ice on various leading edges could very well have taken them into uncontrolled auto rotation. For that to happen, yaw had to be present at the stall. The scenario above assumes low altitude due to the flap extension factor. At this stage in any accident investigation, it's always conjecture. Already however, the seldom discussed issue of tailplane icing is getting a lot of attention throughout the entire aviation community and that alone is good for flight safety. The NTSB investigation will provide the answer I'm sure. Dudley Henriques |
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On Sun, 15 Feb 2009 14:23:43 -0800 (PST), Dudley Henriques wrote:
On Feb 15, 11:59*am, Gezellig wrote: On Sun, 15 Feb 2009 06:00:13 -0800 (PST), Dudley Henriques wrote: On Feb 13, 4:44*pm, "Robert11" wrote: Hello, I guess de-icing is going to be a popular subject. Question, please: *On commercial jet airliners like, e.g., a 767 or 757, is there any in-flight deicing system for the wing and tail surfaces, other than a leading edge pneumatic boot ? What about the "main," large upper surfaces ? How in general is wing de-icing accomplished on these new, modern jets ? Thanks, Bob There's a very good chance the Boston crash might have been tailplane icing. DH To explain the erratic flight behavior? It's just a guess, but yes. I viewed a NASA film only this morning on this issue. The key if correct would be that whatever happened happened immediately after they went to 15 degrees of flaps. That would have increased the aoa on the tail surface leading edge. That leading edge is sharper than the wing leading edge and very susceptible to icing. Assuming the boundary layer sep point was moving aft on the stabilizer already, when they lowered the flaps they could have easily exceeded the CLmax for the tail. Even if this theory is correct, I'd be looking for additional factors related to icing coupling to cause the autorotation they seemed to have entered prior to impact. It's all theory anyway. The NTSB will come up with something as they progress with the investigation. DH Following the theory, for the sake of discussion, is this pilot error and is it avoidable? I realize they can't see the tail but icing on the windshield was reported. I have icing, weather, an aircraft with a history of tail icing (due to its design)....even if they had no stick inputs, do you go to flaps knowing that you could possibly cause a sever pitch down and the inevitable results? |
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On Mon, 16 Feb 2009 11:18:45 -0500, Gezellig wrote:
On Sun, 15 Feb 2009 14:23:43 -0800 (PST), Dudley Henriques wrote: On Feb 15, 11:59*am, Gezellig wrote: On Sun, 15 Feb 2009 06:00:13 -0800 (PST), Dudley Henriques wrote: On Feb 13, 4:44*pm, "Robert11" wrote: Hello, I guess de-icing is going to be a popular subject. Question, please: *On commercial jet airliners like, e.g., a 767 or 757, is there any in-flight deicing system for the wing and tail surfaces, other than a leading edge pneumatic boot ? What about the "main," large upper surfaces ? How in general is wing de-icing accomplished on these new, modern jets ? Thanks, Bob There's a very good chance the Boston crash might have been tailplane icing. DH To explain the erratic flight behavior? It's just a guess, but yes. I viewed a NASA film only this morning on this issue. The key if correct would be that whatever happened happened immediately after they went to 15 degrees of flaps. That would have increased the aoa on the tail surface leading edge. That leading edge is sharper than the wing leading edge and very susceptible to icing. Assuming the boundary layer sep point was moving aft on the stabilizer already, when they lowered the flaps they could have easily exceeded the CLmax for the tail. Even if this theory is correct, I'd be looking for additional factors related to icing coupling to cause the autorotation they seemed to have entered prior to impact. It's all theory anyway. The NTSB will come up with something as they progress with the investigation. DH Following the theory, for the sake of discussion, is this pilot error and is it avoidable? I realize they can't see the tail but icing on the windshield was reported. I have icing, weather, an aircraft with a history of tail icing (due to its design)....even if they had no stick inputs, do you go to flaps knowing that you could possibly cause a sever pitch down and the inevitable results? NTSB: Flight 3407 Was On Autopilot Before Accident Mon, 16 Feb '09 Practice Violated Company Policy For Icing Conditions A National Transportation Safety Board official confirmed Sunday that downed Continental Express flight 3407 was being flown on autopilot at the time of the crash, contrary to normal procedures. In conjuction with FAA recommendations, NTSB spokesman Steve Chealander said Colgan Air, the plane's operator, recommends that pilots manually fly during all conditions... and requires them to do so when there's evidence of severe icing. "You may be able in a manual mode to sense something sooner than the autopilot can sense it," Chealander told the Associated Press, emphasizing the need to hand-fly the airplane to better feel how it's really flying when conditions are critical. An autopilot will trim out an aircraft, within its capabilities, to compensate for changing conditions -- including airflow disturbances caused by icing -- without the flight crew necessarily becoming aware of any abnormalities. |
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On Feb 16, 9:18*am, Gezellig wrote:
On Sun, 15 Feb 2009 14:23:43 -0800 (PST), Dudley Henriques wrote: On Feb 15, 11:59 am, Gezellig wrote: On Sun, 15 Feb 2009 06:00:13 -0800 (PST), Dudley Henriques wrote: On Feb 13, 4:44 pm, "Robert11" wrote: Hello, I guess de-icing is going to be a popular subject. Question, please: On commercial jet airliners like, e.g., a 767 or 757, is there any in-flight deicing system for the wing and tail surfaces, other than a leading edge pneumatic boot ? What about the "main," large upper surfaces ? How in general is wing de-icing accomplished on these new, modern jets ? Thanks, Bob There's a very good chance the Boston crash might have been tailplane icing. DH To explain the erratic flight behavior? It's just a guess, but yes. I viewed a NASA film only this morning on this issue. The key if correct would be that whatever happened happened immediately after they went to 15 degrees of flaps. That would have increased the aoa on the tail surface leading edge. That leading edge is sharper than the wing leading edge and very susceptible to icing. Assuming the boundary layer sep point was moving aft on the stabilizer already, when they lowered the flaps they could have easily exceeded the CLmax for the tail. Even if this theory is correct, I'd be looking for additional factors related to icing coupling to cause the autorotation they seemed to have entered prior to impact. It's all theory anyway. The NTSB will come up with something as they progress with the investigation. DH Following the theory, for the sake of discussion, is this pilot error and is it avoidable? I realize they can't see the tail but icing on the windshield was reported. I have icing, weather, an aircraft with a history of tail icing (due to its design)....even if they had no stick inputs, do you go to flaps knowing that you could possibly cause a sever pitch down and the inevitable results? Now they're looking at the pilot's possibly having the autopilot on during the descent into and during the icing conditions, against company policy. Anyone who has flown an autopilot will know that it isn't the smartest beast and can cause problems. See http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/...BGCYgD96CNPN81 Dan |
#10
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This discussion is rapidly running in the wrong direction.
While I do not share the admonition of some that it is "taboo" to speculate about causes of an airplane accident before all of the factual information is in, it is certainly unhelpful and disrespectful to start crying "pilot error" and lamenting all of the things they should or should not have done, before any of the salient facts of the scenario are in place. Similarly, it is reckless to start decrying insufficiencies in any of the aircraft's systems or their use without a solid factual basis for these assumptions. It may be useful to discuss airframe icing and tailplane icing, and it is perhaps pertinent to speculate about its role in the current case, but to go much further can only foster misunderstanding and misinformation. Have instead some respect for the people who lost their lives, and for their families, as well as for the flight crew who just may have known a thing or two about how to fly their airplane. . . |
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