?? For the uninitiated?
?? For the uninitiated?
"Ram air turbine (RAT) is a small wind turbine that is connected to a hydraulic pump, or electrical generator, installed in an aircraft and used as a power source. The RAT generates power from the airstream by ram pressure due to the speed of the aircraft."?? For the uninitiated?
?? For the uninitiated?
The airport elevation is just under 200', so it's really about 400 feet above the ground. The speed and altitude are quite reasonable for a normal departure. Worth noting that they've taken off from a mid-field taxiway, leaving only about 1,800 metres of runway. Looks like there's works affecting the taxiway to the full length. That's short but apparently doable.Looks to have only got to 625ft
You really can't pick the flaps. To me it looks like they have slats, and a small amount of trailing edge. That's quite normal.Doesn't look like flaps extended, gear still down.
Maybe, but I'm not so sure.Configuration is going to be interesting here.
Loss of both engines or all three hydraulic systems.Photos coming out of possible a deployed RAT. What sort of failures after rotation would cause this to be deployed?
Ram air turbine.?? For the uninitiated?
Again. Maybe. You can perhaps make out the blades, and perhaps an open door, but not enough resolution to say.
It doesn't work like that. In the BA case he retracted one stage (25 back to 20, I think), but the later stages of flap give a lot of drag, and not much extra lift. So, he was getting rid of some drag, without affecting the lift to any degree. Retracting flaps from a take off setting could well stall you.I wonder if some similarities with BA38 crash, pilot retracted flaps to increase glide distance.
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Reports around that they have somewhat maintained centreline right down to the impact, so dual failure seems like an option.Thinking it through it would seem that it would have to be a major loss of thrust that has caused this? It still looks to be very much under control in the video - just descending when it should have been climbing away.
The airport elevation is just under 200', so it's really about 400 feet above the ground. The speed and altitude are quite reasonable for a normal departure. Worth noting that they've taken off from a mid-field taxiway, leaving only about 1,800 metres of runway. Looks like there's works affecting the taxiway to the full length. That's short but apparently doable.
We are continuing to process data from receiver sources individually. Additional processing confirms #AI171 departed using the full length of Runway 23 at Ahmedabad. RWY 23 is 11,499 feet long. The aircraft backtracked to the end of the runway before beginning its take off roll.
Lost me when he said, eight seconds in “….[B787] deemed crashable”Good initial analysis and breakdown based on info so far.
It's a pity that small building masks some of the take off, but after it rotates and leaves the ground it seems to climbing under power until it just loses power without any visual indications of engine problems - other than the lack of thrust. No smoke, no flames - nothing.Apparent video from another angle
Makes more sense.FR24 are reporting a backtrack and then full length departure