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Kayoh@190
Side question... does the MD-80 have anti-skid brakes?
Yes.
(filler)
Side question... does the MD-80 have anti-skid brakes?
Interesting, looks like it slid along the fence long rather than punching though straight on as it appeared in the first photos. ...
Agree.
Side question... does the MD-80 have anti-skid brakes?
Supposedly landed with 9kt tailwind.
Not good.
That would be one BIG assed chute...The CBS article has this quote:
The Port Authority said that the plane's chutes did not deploy. Scott Brenner, a former FAA assistant administrator, told CBSN that the fact that chutes did not deploy on the plane is "absolutely shocking."
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/plane-skids-off-runway-at-new-yorks-laguardia-airport/
I assume they mean the slides? Maybe Cirrus has sold their chutes design to Delta for the MD-80s?
Breaking action reports are a joke anyway. You can have 2 of the same airplane land one right after another and get totally different reports. Guess we will find out when the report comes out what happened.
other side of the fence isn't good....
http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnnnext/dam/assets/150305132624-04-ny-plane-exlarge-169.jpg
I'm guessing pilot error.
I am sure it does, however, all having antiskid brakes means is if the braking action is zero, the brakes won't turn on. They don't magically make you stop. When you have ice, all you have is inertia and aerodynamics to work with.
Flight 1086 from Atlanta, now arriving Gate 23...Gate 24....Gate 25.....
Breaking action is always great until you start to slide...
Yes just like on my car.
Heck, tires wouldn't matter, we saw on the news how Atlanta people drive in the snow.
That's why I don't like them on known ice surfaces. The only way I can start, or modify a slide, is by adding energy and hitting the throttle. Without anti lock brakes I can do it by using the brakes to modify the friction.
ATL attorney:Just watch...... Some law firm will sue Delta for not putting tire chains on knowing it was going to land in the snow.........
ATL attorney:
Ken Nugent, "one call is all"
The accident happened while landing on Rwy 13 at 11:10am or 1610Z. Here are the metars I found.Not sure if these were the exact conditions at the time of the accident, but this would have been tight. At my airline, we're not allowed to land with more than 15 knots of crosswind when the vis is less than 3/4 or 4000RVR. If the braking action sucks, it's even less.
The accident happened while landing on Rwy 13 at 11:10am or 1610Z. Here are the metars I found.
KLGA 051551Z 01008KT 1/4SM R04/2800V3500FT SN FZFG VV009 M03/M05 A3012
KLGA 051622Z 01008KT 1/4SM R04/3000VP6000FT SN FZFG VV011 M03/M05 A3012
That's what the emergency brake is for, and why all non-US carmakers have them as a hand brake to easily pull and release instead of "step to set, step again to release" like in my truck.
That's why I don't like them on known ice surfaces. The only way I can start, or modify a slide, is by adding energy and hitting the throttle. Without anti lock brakes I can do it by using the brakes to modify the friction.
So can someone more experienced than me speculate on possible reasons the flight crew did not notify the tower or this incident? It seems that if a fire had started, etc. that rescue crews getting there in a timely matter would be critical.
I guess there is the possibility that they shut the master switch off (I don't have any experience in jets, but am guessing they have a master switch) so as to cut off electrical power that could spark a fire?
That's what traction control does, wheel by wheel. If a wheel slips with an open diff or even LSD (to a somewhat lesser degree) then the other wheel receives equal torque and thus gets nothing. But with trac control it modulates the brake on the slipping wheel individually to provide some torque in order to allow the other wheel to turn. Sophisticated systems also monitor yaw rates and individual wheel speeds and so it detects when I'm trying to whip a ****ty into my own driveway. Lame.
For braking it keeps the wheels from locking up which is an attempt to keep from switching over into sliding mode. The coefficient of sliding friction being less than that of static friction.
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So can someone more experienced than me speculate on possible reasons the flight crew did not notify the tower or this incident? It seems that if a fire had started, etc. that rescue crews getting there in a timely matter would be critical.
I guess there is the possibility that they shut the master switch off (I don't have any experience in jets, but am guessing they have a master switch) so as to cut off electrical power that could spark a fire?
So can someone more experienced than me speculate on possible reasons the flight crew did not notify the tower or this incident? It seems that if a fire had started, etc. that rescue crews getting there in a timely matter would be critical.
I guess there is the possibility that they shut the master switch off (I don't have any experience in jets, but am guessing they have a master switch) so as to cut off electrical power that could spark a fire?