...so, not Bruce Lee?I am an aerodynamicist for a major airplane manufacturer. I know more about this issue than all but perhaps a few dozen people. It's a far more complex issue than you'll ever read about in the news and than most non-engineers could understand.
Obviously this poll is tongue-in-cheek, but the first option shows your complete lack of understanding of basic airplane characteristics. More thrust increases nose-up pitch and excaberbates stall - the condition trying to be avoided in the first place.
Very few people have the ability to design such complicated vehicles that fly 600 mph 40,000 feet up and are flown on by 4 billion passengers a year. Those that do take it very seriously.
Everyone else likes to play armchair aerospace engineer.
That's all I'm going to say.
I am an aerodynamicist for a major airplane manufacturer. I know more about this issue than all but perhaps a few dozen people. It's a far more complex issue than you'll ever read about in the news and than most non-engineers could understand.
Obviously this poll is tongue-in-cheek, but the first option shows your complete lack of understanding of basic airplane characteristics. More thrust increases nose-up pitch and excaberbates stall - the condition trying to be avoided in the first place.
Very few people have the ability to design such complicated vehicles that fly 600 mph 40,000 feet up and are flown on by 4 billion passengers a year. Those that do take it very seriously.
Everyone else likes to play armchair aerospace engineer.
That's all I'm going to say.
I am an aerodynamicist for a major airplane manufacturer. I know more about this issue than all but perhaps a few dozen people. It's a far more complex issue than you'll ever read about in the news and than most non-engineers could understand.
Obviously this poll is tongue-in-cheek, but the first option shows your complete lack of understanding of basic airplane characteristics. More thrust increases nose-up pitch and excaberbates stall - the condition trying to be avoided in the first place.
Very few people have the ability to design such complicated vehicles that fly 600 mph 40,000 feet up and are flown on by 4 billion passengers a year. Those that do take it very seriously.
Everyone else likes to play armchair aerospace engineer.
That's all I'm going to say.
They installed the engines backward! Fuckin' Chinese manufacture...More engines is always the answer.
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I am an aerodynamicist for a major airplane manufacturer. I know more about this issue than all but perhaps a few dozen people. It's a far more complex issue than you'll ever read about in the news and than most non-engineers could understand.
Obviously this poll is tongue-in-cheek, but the first option shows your complete lack of understanding of basic airplane characteristics. More thrust increases nose-up pitch and excaberbates stall - the condition trying to be avoided in the first place.
Very few people have the ability to design such complicated vehicles that fly 600 mph 40,000 feet up and are flown on by 4 billion passengers a year. Those that do take it very seriously.
Everyone else likes to play armchair aerospace engineer.
That's all I'm going to say.
Since we're all family here, give us your take on the issue so us laymen can understand more clearly.
I'm thinking ejection seats for the passengers. Then we'll see who was paying attention to the seatbelt notice.Planes should always have redundancies so that if any 1 thing breaks or goes haywire, you have a plan B. Ideally, you will have double redundancies so that you get a good plan C if plan B fails.
From an entirely non-aerospace background and just reading the reports I'd say:
MCAS itself is not inherently bad.
Not including more redundancy for the AOA input was a mistake.
Not including the disagree light for the AOA sensors and a warning when MCAS is active on the base aircraft was a mistake.
Not extensively explaining howMCAS works and the procedure to disengage it fully (or that it existed) to 737 pilots was a mistake.
Wouldnt it make sense to have 3 redundant airspeed sensors to detect potential stalls?
If 1 sensor does not agree with other 2, then, flag an error with the 1 sensor, and use the other 2
If all 3 disagree, then disable MCAS?
Furthermore, shouldnt all planes carrying more than like 10 people simply be required as start of standard equipment to have a working angle of attack indicato.
Also, the gyro should have shown that the plane was pointed to the ground right? And pilots should read their damn gyro, no?
Planes should always have redundancies so that if any 1 thing breaks or goes haywire, you have a plan B. Ideally, you will have double redundancies so that you get a good plan C if plan B fails.
I'm enjoying the mental imagery of a hundred ejection seats going off, and then the subsequent chaos as they bounce off each other.I'm thinking ejection seats for the passengers. Then we'll see who was paying attention to the seatbelt notice.
It's not speed or angle itself on these. It is the difference in angle of travel and angle of air movement. Take a look at Angle of Attack As KillerCharlie said that is not the most intuitive concept, and they have some relationships, as controls to change one thing, can effect other flight parameters, but that is what was the system in question was designed for.
I am an aerodynamicist for a major airplane manufacturer. I know more about this issue than all but perhaps a few dozen people. It's a far more complex issue than you'll ever read about in the news and than most non-engineers could understand.
Obviously this poll is tongue-in-cheek, but the first option shows your complete lack of understanding of basic airplane characteristics. More thrust increases nose-up pitch and excaberbates stall - the condition trying to be avoided in the first place.
Very few people have the ability to design such complicated vehicles that fly 600 mph 40,000 feet up and are flown on by 4 billion passengers a year. Those that do take it very seriously.
Everyone else likes to play armchair aerospace engineer.
That's all I'm going to say.
I am an aerodynamicist for a major airplane manufacturer. I know more about this issue than all but perhaps a few dozen people. It's a far more complex issue than you'll ever read about in the news and than most non-engineers could understand.
Obviously this poll is tongue-in-cheek, but the first option shows your complete lack of understanding of basic airplane characteristics. More thrust increases nose-up pitch and excaberbates stall - the condition trying to be avoided in the first place.
Very few people have the ability to design such complicated vehicles that fly 600 mph 40,000 feet up and are flown on by 4 billion passengers a year. Those that do take it very seriously.
Everyone else likes to play armchair aerospace engineer.
That's all I'm going to say.
