Yeah, but there may have been a security person or two, plus those who can't stay away from work (which means someone like me.)Wow, hope no one was hurt. It says they were closed for the holidays.
Prayers for the injured.
I hope this won’t be the Bonanza’s “Hurricane Agnes” ...
is that the one took out the Comanche plant?
Given the small numbers, I'd almost think that Beechcraft would jump at the opportunity. But it does appear that, among other things, composite work and prototype work was done in the that plane, possibly delaying the new Cessna utility twin.Prayers for the injured.
I hope this won’t be the Bonanza’s “Hurricane Agnes” ...
I was thinking the same thing. I can't imagine why they'd bother to retool if there is actual damage to the tooling needed. the real concern for me is not that they'd stop new production (honestly, who cares?) but that they'd exit new airframe production and close the parts business at the same time. that's the real threat to the fleet. prayers for those injured.Prayers for the injured.
I hope this won’t be the Bonanza’s “Hurricane Agnes” ...
In another report, a liquid nitrogen line burst. If any sort of liquid is heated in advertently, you can have a BLEVE, and the amount of energy released can be enormous. A water heater can destroy your house.How does a Nitrogen tank explode? Rupture maybe, but I doubt it would cause that much damage. Shoddy reporting?
How does a Nitrogen tank explode? Rupture maybe, but I doubt it would cause that much damage. Shoddy reporting?
I’m wondering the same thing. Big violent rupture maybe but not technically an explosion.
How does a Nitrogen tank explode? Rupture maybe, but I doubt it would cause that much damage. Shoddy reporting?
I'm gonna go with 'explosion' by this definition: the rapid increase in volume and release of energy in an extreme manner. Stuff was flying, and with some pretty good speed. Look at the damage to the cars in the parking lot. We had an oil mist explosion at GE Aviation; it pushed the side of the building off. Nobody was injured, and it was much less violent than the Beech plant.I’m wondering the same thing. Big violent rupture maybe but not technically an explosion.
It's confusing. According to Piper Aircraft - The Development and History of Piper Designs by Roger Peperell, Aztecs and Pawnees continued to be built at Lock Haven after the 1972 flood through 1981, and Super Cubs through 1983. The first airplane built at Lock Haven after the flood was an Aztec in August 1972. Production of piston Navajos was moved to Lakeland in 1974, but PA-31T Cheyenne production remained at Lock Haven until 1985 (PA-42s were all built in Florida). The PA-36 Pawnee Brave was built at Vero in 1973-74, but then moved to Lock Haven through 1983. All production Tomahawks (1978-82) came from Lock Haven.Took out all of Piper's production of every model being built at its original Lock Haven, Pennsylvania manufacturing plant (the Cherokees were always built in Vero Beach). Production of the Aztec, Navajo and Cheyenne was moved to Florida. The Comanche production never resumed.
Just a guess but maybe some sort of metal treatment process?What does Beechcraft need that much liquid nitrogen for?
What does Beechcraft need that much liquid nitrogen for?