exhaustgases wrote:
airnutz wrote:
GarryW wrote:
...that have to meet the spec of the original part using modern metallurgy and machining techniques. Machining has come a long way from the 40's. Tolerances that were at that time almost impossible to meet are commonplace today. The replacement parts being made today either meet or far exceed anything made in the 40's. But hey, lets make it sound like some hillbilly is hacking together some sub-standard parts out in his woodshed instead. ...I know which aviation lawyer I'm NOT calling if I ever need one. Idiot.
THIS..ditto. Not to mention from a maintenance aspect these machines are fawned over by their crews and they have the benefit of decades of hindsight in care practices.
A sad loss of people and a wonderful bird, hopefully cooler heads will prevail...
As for the fuel, yes initially revealed as proper fuel further tests were to be conducted.
And with a machinist back ground, machining modern aircraft parts, yes, with the now time much more modern metallurgy and the instrumentation to check that those materials for proper chemical or metals content, as well as many more years of proven heat treating and stress relieving techniques, the "fabricated" parts now will more than meet or exceed what was in the past. And to that fellow writing that, wasn't someone "fabricating" those original parts back in the 40's? That was a just wow comment, by someone that knows nothing about manufacturing. These newer made parts can be checked (inspected) with accuracy that was not available back in the day, it would have been very difficult to check areas with compound radius surfaces in those days, today there are computerized machines to do that, and most average shops have them. I do now see more of a problem with the people putting the parts together. I don't think the engine overhauls are what they were in the old days. In the war days the brand new engines were assembled then test run, then taken apart, all parts inspected, reassembled, and tested again then wrapped and boxed to be shipped. All we have to do is remember what Gary Austin said about Precision. Just saying.
I too am in the manufacturing field...started in general assembly, to machining, to welding and metal fabricating, and now engineering (hands on...not suit and tie). Reading that about made me want to strangle the guy.
Just relying on probability and without too much speculation...based on the publicly known facts (pilot radioed issue with #4 engine and plane touching down on the runway approach, hit a stanchion and veered off into a building),
something didn't allow the aircraft to generate enough thrust and allowed the plane to sink at an excessive rate. Everything else, including eyewitness accounts, is pure speculation. Whether it can be linked to fuel, a single component that caused a cascade effect, or something completely different will be uncovered by the NTSB investigation. It was foolish of this guy, especially as a lawyer and a pilot, to come out with this BS. All it does is fuel the fire certain politicians are already trying to fan the flames of...while being accelerated even more by the news media. There are just too many variables at play and this guy is trying to capture his 15 minutes of fame on the backs of 7 individuals who perished and 7 more who were injured. ...and lawyers wonder why they get a bad rap.