Go | New | Find | Notify | Tools | Reply |
AIR CRASH RESCUE NEWS: > > June 11, 2002 - New Interest in Taiwan Crash, May be similar to Flight 800 > > NEW YORK (USA) - It happened half a world away. A Boeing 747 exploded in > midair 20 minutes after taking off in Taipei, Taiwan, killing all 225 aboard. > In the United States, there was the usual flurry of news stories but little > sustained interest in a crash that did not involve U.S. passengers. > > But the aviation industry and federal safety officials are paying close > attention to the May 25 crash of China Airlines Flight 611. It's too early to > tell why the 23-year-old plane broke apart with no warning. The circumstances > have raised the possibility that the culprit could have been the same design > flaw that brought down TWA Flight 800 six years ago. > > "Everybody's watching this one," said Robert Clodfelter, an explosions expert > and consultant in Dayton, Ohio. > > It will be weeks or months before investigators will be able to tell if the > center fuel tank exploded on the China Airlines plane as it did on the TWA > plane, also a Boeing 747. All that is known of the China Airlines flight is > that the plane took off at 3:08 p.m., climbed to more than 30,000 feet and > disappeared from radar at 3:28. There were no distress calls. Military radar > recorded the aircraft breaking into four distinct pieces. > > The two black boxes that record flight data and cockpit conversations have > not yet been recovered. And most of the wreckage still lies beneath more than > 130 feet of water in the Taiwan Strait between Taiwan and mainland China. > Investigators won't know more until the boxes and the wreckage are retrieved. > > In addition to the fuel tank scenario, investigators will be looking into > several possibilities: a catastrophic structural failure, the failure of a > door locking mechanism, or a bomb. > > Authorities with the Taiwan government, which is leading the crash inves- > tigation, earlier made statements that atmospheric conditions at 30,000 feet > would make a fuel tank explosion impossible. But experts say that's not > correct. > > "I'm sitting here looking at the data," said Joe Shepherd, professor of > aeronautics at the California Institute of Technology, noting that the > federal government and the industry have known for more than 30 years that an > explosion could take place at high altitudes. Shepherd studied fuel-air > explosions for the National Transportation Safety Board after the Flight 800 > crash. > > On the ground, air conditioning packs beneath the fuel tanks of the 747 and > other Boeing jets can heat up the fuel vapors in a nearly empty center tank > to the flammable state. When the plane takes off and climbs, the pressure > decreases and with that the temperature range at which the vapors are > flammable decreases as well. At the same time, the tank is cooling as the > aircraft climbs into the colder air of the upper atmosphere. As the > temperature decreases, along with the pressure, the vapors can remain > flammable until sometime during the cruise portion of the flight when the > tank becomes too cold. > > Once the vapors ignite, an explosion of the tank is inevitable. And the tank, > located between the wings, is a major structural part of the aircraft. > > The Federal Aviation Administration has issued dozens of orders to airlines > to make fixes to prevent the ignition of the vapors. But the NTSB believes > that it's impossible to identify all the ignition sources and that the only > real fix will come with preventing the buildup of flammable vapors. > > The FAA and the aviation industry have predicted between two and three fuel > tank explosions in a 10-year period. Last year, the center fuel tank of a > Thai Airways Boeing 737 - which has a similar tank design to the 747 - > exploded while the plane was on the tarmac in Bangkok. > > The safety board sent a five-person team to aid the investigation. Boeing > sent three investigators to the scene and will send more when the wreckage is > retrieved. > > "We're holding back the main team until we know what we're looking at," said > Boeing spokeswoman Liz Verdier. "We need to find out the answer and see if > it's something that needs to be changed." > > In March, an industry group that advises the FAA told the agency that methods > to prevent flammable vapors in fuel tanks are effective but too expensive to > justify. The FAA is continuing to study ways to put nitrogen in fuel tanks to > keep the vapors from igniting. > > "With all the work the industry did ... we still don't know that anything > they've done will prevent another fuel tank explosion," said Kevin Darcy, a > former accident investigator for Boeing who worked on the Flight 800 probe. > "I'd be a little bit anxious if I were Boeing or the FAA." | |||
|
Barbara.... I hope that you do not object to my copying this and posting it on the other aviation board. There have been several questions raised over there regarding this, and I have been of the opinion that it would be an unlikely event..Evidently, I was incorrect. Thank you. | ||||
|
Hi Cecil! I don't mind at all. I've certainly gotten some valuable information from that site! Barbara | ||||
|
Powered by Social Strata |
Please Wait. Your request is being processed... |