Air France flight disappears over Atlantic

Status
Not open for further replies.
@blr_p: Thanks mate... that was a really insightful article. Not to mention one of the best reasons I've seen for bumping up an old thread. :)
 
It has to be said that article is based on conjecture because there is no black box to definitively back up the assertions made.

What confuses me is they say they will mount another search for it.

They had 2 months to get it after the crash but failed ot locate it. Would have been easier to find it then because it gives out a beacon that gets weaker after two months.

The thought of those helpless pilots trying to reboot the flight computer after the plane went into a stall because the computer thinks the speed has dropped and then takes over when in reality it had not. They had 4 minutes to freefall, not enough time :(
 
For several years now, Airbus has offered its customers a special safety program - called "Buss" -- at a cost of €300,000 per aircraft. If the airspeed indicator fails, this software shows pilots the angle at which they must point the plane.

Up to now, Air France has chosen not to invest in this optional extra for its fleet.

From the article

How convenient for both airbus and air france, one deciding to make profit by leaving out an important safety feature and giving it as an add-on and the other deciding not to go for it as not many such cases happen.
 
Nice article. Makes me feel sad when I imagine the plight of the pilots who were helpless. On the other hand, the fact that the turbulence was so severe that the passengers and the hostesses hardly noticed that they were freefalling means that they were spared a harrowing 4 minutes of impending doom and disaster.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.