As for pilot hours - maybe he is ex-air force and the 8000 hours are just his commercial hours.
It’s not relevant at all, but just a little surprising to be mid 50s with so few.
…you are at 600 feet in a very big glider and the only runway is behind you.
It’s worse than that. The airfield elevation is about 200’, and the temperature correction reduces it even more. Someone who did the sums came up with about 280’ AGL. You’re not going anywhere with that.
Looking at the satellite view in Google Maps, the nearest piece of open space that you might have any hope of putting something like a 787 down on is the river about 7.5km from the runway - and given that they continued to fly runway heading then this may well have been where they were trying to get to.
I hope not. That’s miles beyond their potential. The best option (even though still horrendous) is short of the hospital. They had no real turn ability, with basically zero energy to manoeuvre.
I know eye witnesses can be totally unreliable, but the guy who escaped from seat 11A talked about flickering lights and a load bang. The loud bang might have been hitting the first building or other object, but ultimately will need to be explained.
I don’t know whether you’d be able to differentiate sounds from within the crash itself. I’ve never deployed one, but I’m told that there is a substantial bang when releasing a RAT, more than you’d expect. I’d have to admit that I’ve never thought about it.
The flickering light - could that be related to the RAT being deployed )power directed elsewhere as a priority?)?
There’d be load shedding and systems being dropped all over the place.
And Juan's talk about the RAT hum on the audio from an AU source also has to be explained given every one who has mentioned that the RAT is automatically deployed on engine failure. What about hydraulics failures, could that be part of the story?
I gather that the RAT deploys for dual engine or triple hydraulic failures. I guess the electrical side is handled by that big lithium battery. Detection of the engine failure is interesting. The systems catch it pretty quickly, but not instantly, and engines don’t normally just snuff themselves in a moment. So IF the RAT is out, what was the signal that caused it to deploy?
I wonder if the bang and the RAT can be directly linked to picking the flaps up instead of gear up - perhaps not?
Not sure I see what you mean here.
I am surprised there seems limited timeline discussion, just what happens on a major engine failure?
It’s quite slow. Crew action won’t take place until the aircraft is safely climbing away, and stable. 767/747 was a minimum of 1,000’ and Airbus used a minimum of 400’
Leads to how long for a rat to deploy, spin up and start emitting that noise..was there enough time ?
Seconds.
What kind of failure ( excluding a bird strike) would almost instantly reduce power from take off power to ?
Ah, the real question. Not much really.
I really don’t like bird strike. These engines could probably survive, and if they didn’t they’d compressor stall, and bang, fart and generally carry on.
Considering the amount of flights and years passed with the type in question, accident free, you would think that it’s unlikely to be a Boeing structural issue compared to say the fault being connected to the Air India Engineering department.
I doubt that it’s structural, and yes it could be suspect engineering. But, these things are software driven, and even after 11 years, there so few users, that I’m sure the OS world would consider it to be pre-Alpha.
I guess even if it’s an engine or engineering blue, next question is did Boeing not have enough protections in place to prevent this?
Do they cost anything? We don’t know, and can’t say, until the definitive reason comes out.
They have big orders with Air India so they need to be somewhat careful how this is handled. It sounds like a complex issue so I’m not expecting to hear too much anytime soon. Needless to say I’d expect Boeing to be firmly pushing the ‘blame’ in the other direction, especially with 777X and MAX7/10 attempting to get certification.
Boeing has very little credibility. The general reason will come out sooner rather than later. I’d expect it within days. Blaming poor pilots, especially dead ones, was their modus operandi when the MAX crashes happened….and look how that turned out. I’d really expect total silence from them in the interim.