Dav8or
Final Approach
Things have changed in the airline industry in the last 10-15 years. I just got back from Mexico tonight on a commercial airliner and it made me think, I can't remember the last time I flew on an airliner that wasn't packed all the way full in every seat, or very near it. They seem to have figured out how to pack every plane to max gross, every time. This is quite in contrast to the 50-75% full planes I used to ride on in the past.
This made me think about aircraft fatigue. I know that aircraft engineers design planes so that they can fly at max gross with a good safety margin. I know the plane and the pilots are up to the task of flying heavy on every flight, but it seems to me that that our knowledge of service limits on airframes and aircraft parts are based in part by actual time in service, not just calculations. If a lot of those calculations and declared life limits are based on data observed back when planes were running maybe an average of 75% capacity, what does that mean moving forward?
Are we in uncharted territory? Will we see more structural and mechanical failures we didn't anticipate? I used to run a fleet of trucks and I can tell you that if you run them at max weight everyday, they will fail faster and not last as long as trucks lightly loaded. Just the way it is.
This made me think about aircraft fatigue. I know that aircraft engineers design planes so that they can fly at max gross with a good safety margin. I know the plane and the pilots are up to the task of flying heavy on every flight, but it seems to me that that our knowledge of service limits on airframes and aircraft parts are based in part by actual time in service, not just calculations. If a lot of those calculations and declared life limits are based on data observed back when planes were running maybe an average of 75% capacity, what does that mean moving forward?
Are we in uncharted territory? Will we see more structural and mechanical failures we didn't anticipate? I used to run a fleet of trucks and I can tell you that if you run them at max weight everyday, they will fail faster and not last as long as trucks lightly loaded. Just the way it is.