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#51
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#53
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![]() Emmanuel.Gustin wrote: M. J. Powell wrote: : There has been a bit of a furore over here concerning the new US : requirement to airlines to supply air marshals when requested. The : concern is mainly over the possible puncture of a pressure cabin. : What do readers think is the result of decompression via a bullet hole? A bullet hole would not in itself cause for much concern. The loss of a cabin window would be more serious, not because the pressurisation system would be unable to cope, but because the strong air current could move (in the worst case, blow out through the window) or wound passengers. In extreme cases, rapid pressure loss (or perhaps more accurately, an internal pressure differential) can lead to major structural failures, especially around bulkheads that are insufficiently vented -- the pressure differential is enough to make these collapse -- or in fuselages that are already 'tired'. Apart from the Comet disasters, I know of no loss of aircraft caused by the loss of windows (although some passengers have been lost) but a number of aircraft have been lost when doors failed. There is also the risk of bullets bouncing around inside the plane and doing damage to power lines, fuel systems, etc. Historically, fire has been the major killer of aircraft following projectile damage. Seems to me that although loss of cabin pressure is serious concern (IIRC military aircraft were designed to maintain lower cabin pressure than airliners, to limit the damage amplification following a hit) but not the most serious one. The worst problem is the prospect of a gun battle in a cabin packed with people. Almost every stray bullet is going to hit someone; even if the sky marshall hits the right man (or woman) the bullet seems likely to hit others as well. This is going to require very fine judgment by the sky marshall. He or she also has to distinguish between a conventional hijack best dealt with by negotiation (are sky marshalls trained to conduct hostage-release negotiations?) which are the vast majority of cases, and a rare attempt to use an airliner as a suicide bomb. This seems to be a job requiring very extensive training, a very cool head, and fine judgment. I am not convinced that the large number of sky marshalls rapidly trained and deployed now have the right capabilities, and I don't think it is wise at all to give guns to pilots after minimal training. You have touched a sore spot here on this last point. You seem to be under the impression that there might be "conventional" highjackings. These are a thing of the past. The minute that passengers and cabin crew subdued Richard Reid, it was clear that "conventional" highjackings, were no longer. There is no negotiation skill required. Kill anyone that is attempting to commandeer an aircraft. Time has to be divided into pre 9/11 and post 9/11. Your statement applies to pre 9/11 highjackings only. The judgement required of the sky marshal--- Is this person an unruly/drunk passenger, or is he intent on mischief. If he is a drunk, or unruly passenger, subdue, and restrain him. If he (or she) is intent on mischief, deadly force is mandatory. KenG |
#54
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Thanks, you said what I should have.
B2431 wrote: From: "Pete" Date: 1/1/2004 10:12 AM Central Standard Time Message-id: "Cub Driver" wrote in message . .. Dan, you are forgetting that there was indeed documented evidence of a passenger being sucked out of a blown window brought out during that discussion--a TAM Fokker F28 turboprop somwhere over Brazil I'd rather give up the guy in the window seat than go down with the airplane onto Times Square. Put fat people in the window seats. Maybe they can serve as a plug, and save the rest of us. Pete Pete, I happen to be fat and I do sit near the windows. If you were sitting near me and the window blew I'd seriously consider plugging it with your rude body. Dan, U. S. Air Force, retired |
#55
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"Emmanuel Gustin" wrote...
Probably not. I would be more worried about bullets striking cabling and causing short-circuits. They're all protected by circuit breakers. Any fire would be short lived. The vast majority of hijacks have not ended in crashes, but in safe landings, and were resolved on the ground by negotiation if possible, and in the worst case by security forces storming the plane. Sorry, but the past is no indicator of the future in this case. The events of 9-11 have proven beyond ANY doubt that NO airborne hijacker can be allowed into ANY cockpit for ANY reason EVER AGAIN! There is NO reason to believe ANY hijacker will have ANY purpose but similar acts of mass destruction! The presence of sky marshalls can have a certain deterrent effect, but I doubt their effectiveness in a real incident. They have already proven effective in several incidents. Considering the layout of most large airliners, it would be difficult enough for the officer to remain aware of what is happening (the pilot can signal that there is an attempt to take control of the aircraft, but probably little else) If a sky marshall is so "out of it" that he is not aware that a hijacker has passed him and is at the cockpit door, attempting entry, he is probably already dead. In that case, the pilots DO have options to try to prevent entry. If those fail, their weapons may be the only alternative. It's sound like a promising theoretical concept, but I think the money and resources would be far better spent on measures to prevent terrorists getting on board. So far, all of them have failed. It is, as far as I know, only one week. Far too little to deal with a complex and psychologically very demanding situation, in which pilots would be dealing with pressure exerted on them from the other side of a closed door, while the terrorists hold the passengers hostage. The notion that the pilots could defend the cockpit as a kind of fortress seems far too simplistic to me. Well, I guess you aren't an airline pilot, then... |
#56
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On Thu, 01 Jan 2004 15:15:30 -0500, Cub Driver
wrote: I don't think it is wise at all to give guns to pilots after minimal training. First, the training is NOT "minimal"! It is intense and specialized. Most American pilots now flying were trained in the military. I think you're still safe if you say "many" or "over half", but not "most". The demographics have changed markedly, with new hires being about 70% civil only for the last decade or so. Furthermore, most American men have used firearms at one time or another. Are you sure about this? And what about women pilots? Mary -- Mary Shafer Retired aerospace research engineer |
#57
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"Cub Driver" wrote...
(IIRC military aircraft were designed to maintain lower cabin pressure than airliners, to limit the damage amplification following a hit) I was pondering this possibility also, but then I remembered that the B-36 was supposed to be *depressurized* when the plane moved into a combat situation. For a couple data points, the A-4 and A-6 had cabin pressure differentials of about 4 and 5 psi (8,000' cockpit at about 23,000'). There was no depressurization procedure for combat. The 747-400 runs normally at 8.9 psi (6,700' cabin at about 43,000'). The B-36 was an early pressurized aircraft, developed during war time. I suspect engineers' knowledge of the aircraft reaction to combat damage and rapid depressurization was a lot less than now... |
#58
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![]() "B2431" wrote in message ... From: "Kevin Brooks" snip Dan, you are forgetting that there was indeed documented evidence of a passenger being sucked out of a blown window brought out during that discussion--a TAM Fokker F28 turboprop somwhere over Brazil (see: www.crashdatabase.com/cgi-bin/ webdata_crashdatabase.cgi?cgifunction=Search&Airl ine=%5ETAM%24 ). There was also a fatality during a 1989 Piedmont Airlines 737 rapid decompression (www.canard.com/ntsb/ATL/89A099.htm ). As to the non-fatal effexcts, the experience of an Aer Lingus 737 tends to point to some rather significant injuries during a 1999 depressurization accident, with lots of ruptured eardrums and severe nosebleeds, etc. I would not disagree that these potential problems are far outweighed by the threat of some whacko with a knife/bomb/etc., said whacko being dispatched by an air marshal, even with the remote potential of causing a rapid decompression being preferrable to the alternative. But the effect of such a decompression is likely going to a bit worse than cleaning your tray table off and causing a few earaches. Brooks Dan, U. S. Air Force, retired I was referring to the blown out window. The passenger you refer to was blown out a six foot hole according to your cite. Heh? "Pressurization was lost at an altitude of 33,000 feet when the right engine disintegrated, causing pieces of the engine to break two cabin windows." That does not a six foot hole equal. OK, mia culpa, I was reading the incident just below the flight to which you referred. In the incident you cite I wonder what he actually died of considering the only other injuries were "minor." Heart attack maybe? I think you are mixing up the *two* incidents I cited specifically. In the one you are discussing involving the windows blowing out (TAM F-28 over Brazil), the fatality left the aircraft rather abruptly via one of those windows, from what I gathered based upon looking at a few sources. The other fatality occured on a Piedmont 737, which underwent an unspecified rapid decompression with the one individual later dying at the hospital--I would imagine likely heart or respiratory failure, or a combination thereof. Brooks Dan, U. S. Air Force, retired |
#59
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![]() "B2431" wrote in message ... From: Cub Driver Date: 1/1/2004 2:00 PM Central Standard Time Message-id: FWIW, tomorrow (Friday) night on The Discovery Channel's "Myth Busters" program, one of their projects is rapid decomp of an airliner. Will somebody summarize the findings here, for the sake of us pathetic losers with antennas in the attic? all the best -- Dan Ford email: The urban myth in question was that a passenger heard a funny noise coming from the window. He summoned a stewardess who leaned forward to listen and was blown through the window when it blew. Supposedly she exited the window like "toothpaste from a tube." The show has experts, altitude chambers etc all of which proved it could never happen. I would take the TAM F-28 accident as a departure from that "could not happen". Unlikely, yes; impossible, no, as we have already seen. I keep racking my head for the info regarding an incident back in the 80's where a USAF C-130 (or maybe EC-130) was fired upon by a Columbian or Venezuelan fighter (mistaken identity case), and IIRC a crewmember of the Herky Bird was ejected from the aircraft...? Brooks Dan, U. S. Air Force, retired |
#60
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![]() "John R Weiss" wrote in message news:NJ1Jb.24583$I07.64369@attbi_s53... "Cub Driver" wrote... (IIRC military aircraft were designed to maintain lower cabin pressure than airliners, to limit the damage amplification following a hit) I was pondering this possibility also, but then I remembered that the B-36 was supposed to be *depressurized* when the plane moved into a combat situation. For a couple data points, the A-4 and A-6 had cabin pressure differentials of about 4 and 5 psi (8,000' cockpit at about 23,000'). There was no depressurization procedure for combat. The 747-400 runs normally at 8.9 psi (6,700' cabin at about 43,000'). The B-36 was an early pressurized aircraft, developed during war time. I suspect engineers' knowledge of the aircraft reaction to combat damage and rapid depressurization was a lot less than now... I wonder where this depressurization before entering combat thing came from? IIRC my father never mentioned any routine depressurization during the combat missions he pulled during WWII on the even earlier designed B-29. Brooks |
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