Hm. Well, I mean, that's sounds feasible, since a plane has more control surfaces than a car. So it might be possible, but it's still not a problem I would want any flight crew to try and have to recover from. It would be like trying to steer a car with the steering whell locked all the way to one side. And an extreme rudder deflection could roll the plane in such a hurry the pilots would have very little time to analyze and react correctly.Ex Nihilo wrote:maybe i'm thinking of another problem.Hostrauser wrote:They devised a fix for it, but the fix doesn't help if the airline isn't performing the inspections to catch the potential problem in the first place.Ex Nihilo wrote:i thought the whole rudder thing had been solved years ago.
Not possible. That's why it's "uncommanded."Ex Nihilo wrote:...or maybe they just started training pilots to compensate
cuz i remember now i watched a discovery channel thing about it. they trained the pilots to compensate in the event that the rudder control went all screwy.
Southwest Airlines unsafe?
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- Hostrauser
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that's exactly what it was. i saw it again.Hostrauser wrote:Hm. Well, I mean, that's sounds feasible, since a plane has more control surfaces than a car. So it might be possible, but it's still not a problem I would want any flight crew to try and have to recover from. It would be like trying to steer a car with the steering whell locked all the way to one side. And an extreme rudder deflection could roll the plane in such a hurry the pilots would have very little time to analyze and react correctly.Ex Nihilo wrote:maybe i'm thinking of another problem.Hostrauser wrote: They devised a fix for it, but the fix doesn't help if the airline isn't performing the inspections to catch the potential problem in the first place.
Not possible. That's why it's "uncommanded."
cuz i remember now i watched a discovery channel thing about it. they trained the pilots to compensate in the event that the rudder control went all screwy.
there was something wrong to where the rudder would actually do the opposite of what the pilot was telling it to. so they had to be trained in emergency procedures.
- Hostrauser
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All sorts of not good:
Southwest grounds 44 planes
Southwest has a long PR-road ahead of it to recover from this scandal.
Southwest grounds 44 planes
One plane with fatigue cracks is very bad. SIX? That is the suck.CNN.com wrote:The FAA has said Southwest operated 46 Boeing 737s on nearly 60,000 flights between June 2006 and March 2007 while failing to comply with an FAA directive requiring repeated inspections of fuselage areas to detect fatigue cracking.
The FAA also alleges that after Southwest discovered it had failed to comply, it continued to operate the same planes on an additional 1,451 flights in March 2007. The airline later found that six of the 46 planes had fatigue cracks, the FAA said.
Southwest has a long PR-road ahead of it to recover from this scandal.
- The Aceman
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Well, I braved 4 separate Southwest planes this weekend. And I survived, phew. BTW, I don't think Southwest is the only airline trying to save money by cutting back on safety. It's pretty much all of them.
Go read "Ishmael" a novel by Daniel Quinn. It will literally change your life.
Corruptissima re publica plurimae leges.
Corruptissima re publica plurimae leges.