• EmmaGoldman [she/her, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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    9 months ago

    I’m normally the one voice explaining how that thing that looks scary is actually not that big of a deal.

    Nope, this shit is fucked. Airlines need to be much more tightly regulated and inspections need to be much more in-depth.

    • VILenin [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      9 months ago

      I’ll try to keep things calm. From a pilot’s POV:

      -Flight attendant says a passenger says the wing is falling apart.

      -What? Oh, the slats.

      -Parts coming off the airplane can damage other parts (I.e., be sucked into an engine, causing more immediate problems). Divert and execute a precautionary landing.

      The plane isn’t going to fall out of the sky (unless the wing really does start to come apart) The slat is a movable part that extends the wing’s surface area to produce more lift on takeoff and landing thereby reducing required runway length. When it comes down to it you don’t really need the flaps and slats to land. Just find a nice long runway you can haul ass into. I’ve had the slats go kaput on me once. Never had them fall off though

      There are guys flying these planes younger than the planes themselves. The only real thing we can learn from this is that airlines cling onto aging airplanes, which was already an open secret anyway. Nothing’s gonna change until someone dies, but the dying is not gonna be coming from the slats coming apart.

      My first job I flew planes older than my dad.

      • aaaaaaadjsf [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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        9 months ago

        There are guys flying these planes younger than the planes themselves. The only real thing we can learn from this is that airlines cling onto aging airplanes, which was already an open secret anyway. Nothing’s gonna change until someone dies, but the dying is not gonna be coming from the slats coming apart.

        My first job I flew planes older than my dad.

        Air Zimbabwe still uses the Boeing 737-200s with the Pratt & Whitney low bypass turbofan engines. The same engine that the Boeing 727 used, as well as various military aircraft from the 1960s. Everytime they fly close to where I live, I get a heart attack because the engines are so damn loud. It’s honestly a miracle they still fly, but the airline is forced to use them because Zimbabwe is broke, and because apparently the 737-200 has the ability to land on gravel runways with an “unpaved strip kit” you could get from Boeing. According to Wikipedia, the kit consists of a vortex generator in front of the engine, and a gravel deflector on the nose landing gear.

        • VILenin [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          9 months ago

          Ahh the -200s. These types of operations operate under the assumption (almost always correctly) that when an engine dies it will only be one of them.

          Honestly though the more pressing issue is the insane amount of pressurization cycles they’ve gone through over decades of usage on regularly scheduled commercial flights. Given enough time, probably another 2-3 decades of usage, eventually the pressure bulkhead is just gonna blow and take out part of the vertical stabilizer with it. And that will kill you. Well maybe not everyone but just about in that range.

          Incidentally this is why Cessnas have greater longevity than airliners. They aren’t pressurized so there is far less stress on the airframe.

          • aaaaaaadjsf [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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            9 months ago

            I remember going with a plane nerd to visit the airport to take photographs of it, after he saw it on flight radar. Seeing it on the runway and take off was like going back in time in a way. It’s a cool looking plane, I’ll give it that. And the sound is cool when you are watching it take off. Not so cool when it wakes you up though.