Dave Arata
Pre-takeoff checklist
The Coffin Corner would be a great name for a smoke shop. Or a discount funeral parlor. Or a motorcycle shop. Probably not a good name for a successful flight school.
Or a motorcycle shop.
The Coffin Corner would be a great name for a smoke shop. Or a discount funeral parlor. Or a motorcycle shop. Probably not a good name for a successful flight school.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coffin_corner_(aerodynamics)
It's not a factor at FL291 in a 737-800.
There is no boom. There is a constant pressure wave moving along with the supersonic airplane formed by the transition between sub-sonic and super-sonic flow--the shockwave. As this pressure wave passes those outside the airplane, they perceive the rapid change in pressure as a sonic boom.
The high-speed or mach stall is when the shockwave disrupts airflow above the wing in a manner very similar to a low-speed stall. The result is the same. Loss of airflow causes the wing to stall.
Coffin corner is when your low-speed, and high-speed stall speeds converge. Going faster, or slower, results in a stall. The only way out of it is to descend.
The 737 is thrust-limited so it doesn't have the power to climb to an altitude where it becomes an issue. Or, at least, it would be very difficult to get to such an altitude.
When the airplane reaches an altitude, based on prevailing weight, where it does not have enough thrust to maintain a specific rate of climb (especially when banking) It is said to be at it's thrust limited altitude.can you you/anyone explain what you mean by thrust-limited?
https://nypost.com/2022/03/21/the-moment-china-eastern-boeing-737-nosedives-before-fiery-crash/
"was en route to Guangzhou when it crashed at about 2:30 p.m. local time"
"Contact with the plane was lost at about 2:15 p.m."
It still looks like somebody wasn't talking on the radio for a while before the drop. Like everyone else I am just guessing and speculating, but it does look unusual to have no communication for 15 minutes. I apologize if it doesn't make sense to people with much more experience than me, and I would be very curious to hear the opinion of someone with solid knowledge of 737s.
Having only a few hundred hours on the 737, 31,000 fpm seems pretty steep. During a rapid de pressurization I think we saw 10000fpm, with full speed brakes, autopilot on and at the barber pole in the sim. I don’t remember the descent rate being much more than that. Couldn’t tell you exactly though. Could be wrong though.Dan already solved this one. I think were done here. He indicated that there is no way for that 737 to fly like that without pilot inputs. Ok now from actual 737/jet drivers is that true?
DG has no more knowledge or insight than the average POA member. Actually, he probably has less.
You max altitude can be limited by the wing, if it's incapable of producing the lift it needs to go higher, or the thrust.can you you/anyone explain what you mean by thrust-limited?
I have no idea what that means.Dan already solved this one. I think were done here. He indicated that there is no way for that 737 to fly like that without pilot inputs. Ok now from actual 737/jet drivers is that true?
FYI: according to the latest they found a piece of wreckage 6 miles from the impact crater but don't know if was from prior to or after the inflight "upset." Plus they started to listen to the CVR today.The question we have to answer is, what caused the upset?
According to Dan Gryder, it was the pilot or F/O, acting intentionally....
The question we have to answer is, what caused the upset?
Your airplane doesn't know if it's in a dive or not. All it knows is velocity is increasing and it will try to return to it's last trimmed airspeed - it can accomplish this only if the wings are somewhere close to level.The airplane has a tendency to just pull out of a dive. Don't jets do that too?
Brainiac, as the speed increases so does the lift off the wings. It therefore has an inherent tendency to pull out of a dive, unless I keep the stick full forward which can get difficult as airspeed increases. If I let the stick go the airplane will pull itself out of a dive. It doesn't have to "know" anything, it's pretty simple physics. I would assume jets to the same thing.Your airplane doesn't know if it's in a dive or not. All it knows is velocity is increasing and it will try to return to it's last trimmed airspeed - it can accomplish this only if the wings are somewhere close to level.
Brainiac, as the speed increases so does the lift off the wings. It therefore has an inherent tendency to pull out of a dive, unless I keep the stick full forward which can get difficult as airspeed increases. If I let the stick go the airplane will pull itself out of a dive. It doesn't have to "know" anything, it's pretty simple physics. I would assume jets to the same thing.
Yep. Zebras.According to Dan Gryder, it was the pilot or F/O, acting intentionally.
Yes. I doubt you could fly an un-stalled 737 nearly vertically down like that.Don't jets do that too?
The theory that one of the pilots was in the bathroom and the other went mad is a tempting explanation
They served you biscuits? All I got was 4oz of sprite and a crushed bag of pretzels!f you drive a Jet: Please go to the bathroom before the flight, for the safety of the passengers. This way I can watch my movie and eat stale biscuits without worry.
They served you biscuits? All I got was 4oz of sprite and a crushed bag of pretzels!
The Coffin Corner would be a great name for a smoke shop. Or a discount funeral parlor. Or a motorcycle shop. Probably not a good name for a successful flight school.
But no one will be able to find it...If I ever start an aerobatic flight school, I'm calling it The G Spot.
Chinese airlines fly with three pilots in the cockpit.f you drive a Jet: Please go to the bathroom before the flight, for the safety of the passengers. This way I can watch my movie and eat stale biscuits without worry.
Is one of them a Party "chaperone", as they did in the Soviet era?Chinese airlines fly with three pilots in the cockpit.
and if the resultant lift vector is pointing in an undesirable direction it may exacerbate, not resolve the situation.Brainiac, as the speed increases so does the lift off the wings.
Lift vector is usually roughly perpendicular to the wings. All things being equal that in and of itself should pick up the nose.and if the resultant lift vector is pointing in an undesirable direction it may exacerbate, not resolve the situation.
unless it's inverted in which case "up" has a new meaning.Lift vector is usually roughly perpendicular to the wings. All things being equal that in and of itself should pick up the nose.
Sixty feet is an almost impossible number, unless the ground is swampy.Seen on another forum where someone said debris is being found buried as far down as 60' in the dirt.
Hey, some of us have to pee as soon as the wheels leave the runway, regardless of our last trip.f you drive a Jet: Please go to the bathroom before the flight, for the safety of the passengers. This way I can watch my movie and eat stale biscuits without worry.
The third "pilot" is a language translator? lol.Chinese airlines fly with three pilots in the cockpit.
Sixty feet is an almost impossible number, unless the ground is swampy.
You sure about that? Is that a fact or urban legend? I'm see Chinese crews all the time, and although I haven't been keeping an eye on it, I think I'm sure I've seen 2-pilot crews. I'll have to keep a look out next week.Chinese airlines fly with three pilots in the cockpit.
They do things differently than we do. The second F/O is normal for them.The third pilot was probably a newby getting some sort of IOE.
There may be nuances that I don't know. If it's not universal, it's very common.You sure about that? Is that a fact or urban legend?
Well let's hope that history does not have a morbid way of repeating itself because prior to the TWO 737-MAX crashes there were TWO identical crashes of 737-200's - United flight 585 in Colorado (1991) and USAir flight 427 in Pennsylvania (1994) caused by faulty rudder PCU's. FWIW they both had lawn-dart trajectories to the crash site.
Lift vector is usually roughly perpendicular to the wings. All things being equal that in and of itself should pick up the nose.
That sounds like Asiana 214 into SFO. Asiana is a *Korean* carrier.What was that Chinese plane crash in California a few years back, where it hit a berm on takeoff or landing? I don't recall all the details, but IIRC one of the pilots was relatively inexperienced and there was a check pilot or something like that in the cockpit and there was some talk of an Asian reluctance of a junior to contradict a senior pilot even when that senior pilot was wrong?
That was down low where there's not much time to react, though, here there should have been time to fix things unless it was mechanical failure or deliberate action.