Bagram airfield crash

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mark st1

Plastic Manc
Location
Leafy Berkshire
I get the impression someone is an airplane boffin :eek: Horrid video ive often wondered what it would be like passing under them on the M25 if something like that happened ! shocking.
 

green1

Über Member
Not sure about this but do not tanks in aircraft wings have baffles to prevent unwanted and unexpected movement of fuel ?
They do, but they reduce it not eliminate it.
 

Arch

Married to Night Train
Location
Salford, UK
[QUOTE 2434116, member: 76"]



It happened in Southampton a while ago, a plane didn't quite make the runway and landed on the M27[/quote]

Not to mention the M1/East Midlands airport in 19.. whenever. Same year as Lockerbie I think, that was a bad year for flying. One of those where you heard the news and thought "Oh, not again..."

We passed the spot on a coach a couple of weeks later, and there was just a terribly bare spot in the trees on the embankment.
 

TVC

Guest
Not to mention the M1/East Midlands airport in 19.. whenever. Same year as Lockerbie I think, that was a bad year for flying. One of those where you heard the news and thought "Oh, not again..."

We passed the spot on a coach a couple of weeks later, and there was just a terribly bare spot in the trees on the embankment.

It flew over central Leicester (I was living near the LRI then). We were used to aircraft coming in to East Midlands 20 miles away and ignore them, but I remember it made a terrible noise and we went outside to see what was happening, the sound of an engine on full power but also buzzing. Anyway, 10 minutes later everything with lights and sirens on was heading away from town and there was a constant stream of sirens and a few helicopters all night.
 

ianrauk

Tattooed Beat Messiah
Location
Rides Ti2
Airplane crashes are such awful things.
A private jet plane came down half a mile from where I live. BBC News.
I was in the garden and could hear the screaming engines then the loud 'plop' as it crashed. The smell of aviation fuel lasted for days.
 

pplpilot

Guru
Location
Knowle
I stalled a 747-400 at the BA sim training centre Heathrow a few years ago just for fun, it takes in the region of 5k ft to recover an aircraft as big as a 747 from a deep stall. As a rule in a military zone they would depart on a higher angle of atack than normal to get the fark out of there, this really wouldn't have helped IF a load did shift, which seems the most plausible explanation. There is no way they could have saved this from this altitude.
 

green1

Über Member
I stalled a 747-400 at the BA sim training centre Heathrow a few years ago just for fun, it takes in the region of 5k ft to recover an aircraft as big as a 747 from a deep stall. As a rule in a military zone they would depart on a higher angle of atack than normal to get the f*** out of there, this really wouldn't have helped IF a load did shift, which seems the most plausible explanation. There is no way they could have saved this from this altitude.
Indeed you wouldn't do a conventional departure from Bagram. You'd climb hard and fast to be as high as possible by the time you reach the perimeter fence to reduce the MANPADS threat.
 
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