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dennis@home dennis@home is offline
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Default Volcanic fallout?



"Dave" wrote in message
...
Steve Walker wrote:
On Mon, 19 Apr 2010 16:32:48 +0100, Dave wrote:

Nightjar "cpb"@ insertmysurnamehere wrote:
Chris J Dixon wrote:
"Nightjar \"cpb\"@" "insertmysurnamehere wrote:

It was not a fall, but a deliberate fast descent to a level where
oxygen was not needed - one of the crew's oxygen masks was broken -
and where engine restart procedures might be expected to work, which
they did.

It's a pretty steep glide angle isn't it? I reckon it would feel
close enough to a fall for the passengers
The glide angle is 15:1, but he had to go down a lot faster than that
because of the oxygen mask problem.
The angle of attack would also be beneficial to re staring the engines
as well, by using the ram air to turn the compressor fan blades

Dave


Apparently they had to keep varying their angle, as the engines require a
specific range of airspeed to re-ignite,


I never went into this in any depth, so I have to accept what you say, but
I have my doubts. I dabbled in spin trials many years ago, but didn't get
to meet the aircrew till many years later to ask them.

but they'd lost their airspeed
indication.


I can't see that happening. There is a pitot static system on aircraft
that doesn't require power.
Pitot reads the air speed from probes that point forward and this air is
transferred to a simple gauge that measures and displays the speed.
Usually duplicated so that the co pilot gets a reading from a separate
probe from the pilots source.


The probes fill up with ash.
the same happens with the engine sensors and various other bits.