Looking bad at this stage. Flight from Brazil to Paris with 228 onboard disappeared off radar, no radio contact and now over three hours overdue.
http://www.rte.ie/news/2009/0601/airfrance.html
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Looking bad at this stage. Flight from Brazil to Paris with 228 onboard disappeared off radar, no radio contact and now over three hours overdue.
http://www.rte.ie/news/2009/0601/airfrance.html
The sad thing is, it's probably run out of fuel at this stage. Hope answers come out soon, dread to think what might have happened. It's stories like this that make you nervous about long haul flights.
From what I've read, they reported heavy turbulence ten minutes before contact was lost. There was also an automatic signal indicating an electrical fault.
The BBC are suggesting that it may have been struck by lightning, though I've not seen their reasoning yet (and planes are routinely hit by lighting, I thought).
EDIT: For those with a morbid sense of humour, http://www.theonion.com/content/node/42594 (Sorry, but you click at your own peril).
I've read speculation that positive lightning might do the trick.
A couple of informative images.
http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/image...e_crash466.gif
http://wwwghcc.msfc.nasa.gov/GOES/IFG12-02452009152.jpg
it appears there are 3 irish on board also
Two according to Folha.
http://www1.folha.uol.com.br/folha/c...5u574807.shtml
irish times article says 3 irish confirmed...
horrible way to go it has to be said. I can barely watch a plane crash scene on tv without getting a sick feeling in my stomach. My thoughts go out to the passengers and their families.
I read that one of them was an Irish citizen from Belfast, which might be the source of the confusion.
Yep, one from Belfast, one Tipp and one Dub.
I think it is always a concern when plane from major airliner goes down as these would be perceived as having the best maintenance & newest planes. When a plane goes in the third world I feel there is a perception the plane was old or not maintained properly.
I'll not get too caught up in morbid details and it's little or no consolation to all who've lost loved ones anyway that the end may have been very, very quick.
We may never know what actually happened but the Brazilian Air Force as opposed to Brazilian Air Traffic Control are saying they picked up the automatically generated signals from the plane that indicated multiple electrical short circuits and loss of cabin pressure.
When you add to that info that there was no mayday (that we know of as yet and likely won't now until the black box is retrieved) it may point to a catastrophic cabin failure. In that scenario the end for all those misfortunes will have been about as close to instantaneous as it gets.
Not quick enough that they couldn't send a few text messages home, according to wiki (quoting a couple of sources).
Cabin pressure sounds the most likely reason alright. Would explain why the pilots didn't radio in. Although if passengers could turn their phones on and send texts, you'd have thought the pilots would have had time to send some manner of radio signal.
Odd. I'd have thought they were too far from a base station to do that. Unless this is one of the planes where they allow phones and have equipment to connect them to a network (at least, I think some of them do that now; never been on one that did).
Anyway, it only takes some people a few seconds to send a message as short as the examples given in that link, "I love you" and "I'm afraid", and the pilots may have been busy with the whole plane crashing thing.
A sick in the head friend of mine said "its like in Lost where the plane goes missing".
Not loooking good,there is some archipelico's(spellings) off the Brazilian coast but they would have hit the water too hard to survive anyway.A sad day.
True, but I'd have thought that the first thing you'd do when the plane was crashing was to radio in saying that the plane was crashing. There were three pilots/co-pilots, so (and I don't profess to be a pilot expert or anything) I would have thought two could try stop the plane crashing and one could radio in. Even if, hypothetically, they'd brought the plane to a safe landing in the middle of the Atlantic, that's still worthless without backup help.
Sky News reporting that debris has been found, although it's undetermined what it's from.
Could the short circuit they are blaming have knocked out the radios ?
Or what i think may have happened was the cabin pressure in the **** pit is different to the rest of the plane new security feature after 9/11 so maybe that went the pilots would nod off no one could get in because of the new security doors and the plane crashed.
Either way its pretty horrible
Hee hee - **** pit.
I wouldn't have added a safety feature designed to knock the pilots out first, to be honest. Radio being shorted out is a possibility.
Do black boxed float? Good luck finding it otherwise.
Probably the first thing they're supposed to do in theory, but if you have only seconds and the plane is suddenly pointed in a worryingly vertical direction... I suspect the practice is that you're not going to get anything off.
I haven't seen any specifics on the short circuit, so perhaps. Not the transmitter itself - the automated signal got through - but perhaps somewhere nearer the cockpit. Still, a modern aeroplane has a lot of redundancy built in.
Eh? That's some pretty wild speculation. It assumes that cabin pressure dropped in the cockpit but not the main cabin. I don't know if that's even possible.Quote:
Or what i think may have happened was the cabin pressure in the **** pit is different to the rest of the plane new security feature after 9/11 so maybe that went the pilots would nod off no one could get in because of the new security doors and the plane crashed.
That aside, if the cockpit door opened into the cabin (I think they do), a large pressure differential would have made it very tough to open the door, regardless of other security measures. Perhaps that's what you meant though - the security measures you're referring to being something like the cockpit being hermetically sealed?
And that aside, I suspect that a plane like that, in a storm, perhaps with no radio, was not going to be saved by a plucky air hostess and a theoretical passenger struggling to get over Macho Grande.
Dont think they intended it to work like that but with fears of gas attacks in the passenger section the c0ckpit would need to be on a seperate system. That system may have shorted out first.
Im just guessing of course i dont know what happened but they have started to find the wreckage and reports of another plane seeing the sea on fire along the same route.
http://www.rte.ie/news/2009/0602/airfrance.html
Possibly, but pilots are very well trained in things going very badly wrong (and I know being in the position itself is a different matter). Here's a link to radio correspondences of crashing planes (not all fatal); I don't know how representative that is, but it does note that pilots do make radio calls when in trouble. It's been suggested as strange that no radio contact came through, which leads me to believe it must be common enough that radio contact is made.
Just thinking actually - that has to be nonsense. Air hostesses go into the cockpit every now and again, and I've been on one flight where the door was left open. I've never noticed any rubber sealing around the door which would surely be necessary to keep two separate pressures. And the logic still doesn't make sense.Quote:
Originally Posted by anto1208
I would think it would definetly be a different pressure in the cockpit due to terrorist attacks if someone in the cabin released a gas smashed a window let off some small explosion that caused cabin pressure to drop the pilot has to be able to land , the door into the cockpit is not able to be opened from the cabin side again due to terrorist attacks.
But yea all wild speculation on what actually happened.
Well the pilot can let her in ;) Im 100% sure that the door can only be opened from the pilots side otherwise a terroist only has to open the door !!
From Wiki ( i know not the best source but )
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cockpit
cockpits on large airliners are also physically separated from the cabin.
anto - we need a certain pressure to be able to breathe and function normally. It makes no sense to say that the cockpit normally has a lower pressure than the rest of the aeroplane (as you imply noting that the pilots could nod off first and no-one else - obviously not having nodded off - could get into them); that would mean the pilots - the most important people - are normally on a lower oxygen than the rest of us. I've seen the cabin door opened from the main body of the plane in the last year, and I distinctly recall (admittedly almost 20 years ago) being led into the cockpit of a plane and noticing the same amount of oxygen there.
In accordance with the rules of the forum, can you please provide a link backing up your theory rather than propogating wild speculation?
Edit - link posted in the meantime, thanks. Mentions nothing about potential pressure differences, so I think we can put that theory to bed.
I think he means that, say, if a cockpit window blew out, the cockpit might be the only part of the plane to lose pressure because the cockpit is substantially separate from the rest of the plane for security reasons.
Anyway, this line of speculation is fairly pointless, and I'd suggest we return to commenting on news as the facts come in.
Which brings me back to the original point that it wasn't sudden enough that people didn't have time to realise that something was happening, take their phones out of their pockets, turn them on and send texts home.
Hmm. It's possible, although it's not exactly in line with what he was suggesting. I agree with this, though -
- although speculation and gossip is what we as a nation do best.Quote:
Originally Posted by john83
Stu will you please read what i post. ( ps i like the way you tell me to back up what im saying with links then make your own statements with out any links !!! genius )
1. The security features on the cockpit changed after 9/11 what happened 20 years ago has no bearing at all . The door is now locked from the inside.
http://www.allbusiness.com/transport...4133778-1.html
Requires cockpit doors to remain locked. The door will be designed to prevent passengers from opening it without the pilot's permission. An internal locking device will be designed so it can be unlocked only from inside the cockpit
2. i didnt say the pilots have lower pressure in the cockpit, i said it may be seperate and if the short circut or what ever happened had caused the pressure in the cockpit to drop the pilots would nod off this could explain the lack of any radio communication but people in the cabin could still send texts. This was only a reply to someone else's suggestion that text messages where sent.
And i did say that it was only my theory on what may have happened same as everyone else is just giving their thoughts on what may have happened as not one single person here knows what happened does that mean that no one can post in this thread ????????.
Now i think i have done enough googling for airplane/cockpit door security features to get me a visit from the FBI.