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AUTOPILOT
-- The people think the Constitution protects their rights; But government sees it as an obstacle to be overcome. some support http://www.usdoj.gov/olc/secondamendment2.htm See http://www.fija.org/ more about your rights and duties. "TRUTH" wrote in message ... | http://physics911.net/sagadevan.htm | | | | The Impossibility of Flying Heavy Aircraft Without Training | by Nila Sagadevan | | Nila Sagadevan is an aeronautical engineer and a qualified pilot of heavy | aircraft. | | There are some who maintain that the mythical 9/11 hijackers, although | proven to be too incompetent to fly a little Cessna 172, had acquired the | impressive skills that enabled them to fly airliners by training in | flight simulators. | | What follows is an attempt to bury this myth once and for all, because | I've heard this ludicrous explanation bandied about, ad nauseam, on the | Internet and the TV networks-invariably by people who know nothing | substantive about flight simulators, flying, or even airplanes. | | A common misconception non-pilots have about simulators is how "easy" it | is to operate them. They are indeed relatively easy to operate if the | objective is to make a few lazy turns and frolic about in the "open sky". | But if the intent is to execute any kind of a maneuver with even the | least bit of precision, the task immediately becomes quite daunting. And | if the aim is to navigate to a specific geographic location hundreds of | miles away while flying at over 500 MPH, 30,000 feet above the ground the | challenges become virtually impossible for an untrained pilot. | | And this, precisely, is what the four hijacker pilots who could not fly a | Cessna around an airport are alleged to have accomplished in multi-ton, | high-speed commercial jets on 9/11. | | For a person not conversant with the practical complexities of pilotage, | a modern flight simulator could present a terribly confusing and | disorienting experience. These complex training devices are not even | remotely similar to the video games one sees in amusement arcades, or | even the software versions available for home computers. | | In order to operate a modern flight simulator with any level of skill, | one has to not only be a decent pilot to begin with, but also a skilled | instrument-rated one to boot - and be thoroughly familiar with the actual | aircraft type the simulator represents, since the cockpit layouts vary | between aircraft. | | The only flight domains where an arcade/PC-type game would even begin to | approach the degree of visual realism of a modern professional flight | simulator would be during the take-off and landing phases. During these | phases, of course, one clearly sees the bright runway lights stretched | out ahead, and even peripherally sees images of buildings, etc. moving | past. Take-offs-even landings, to a certain degree-are relatively "easy", | because the pilot has visual reference cues that exist "outside" the | cockpit. | | But once you've rotated, climbed out, and reached cruising altitude in a | simulator (or real airplane), and find yourself en route to some distant | destination (using sophisticated electronic navigation techniques), the | situation changes drastically: the pilot loses virtually all external | visual reference cues. S/he is left entirely at the mercy of an array of | complex flight and navigation instruments to provide situational cues | (altitude, heading, speed, attitude, etc.) | | In the case of a Boeing 757 or 767, the pilot would be faced with an EFIS | (Electronic Flight Instrumentation System) panel comprised of six large | multi-mode LCDs interspersed with clusters of assorted "hard" | instruments. These displays process the raw aircraft system and flight | data into an integrated picture of the aircraft situation, position and | progress, not only in horizontal and vertical dimensions, but also with | regard to time and speed as well. When flying "blind", I.e., with no | ground reference cues, it takes a highly skilled pilot to interpret, and | then apply, this data intelligently. If one cannot translate this | information quickly, precisely and accurately (and it takes an | instrument-rated pilot to do so), one would have ZERO SITUATIONAL | AWARENESS. I.e., the pilot wouldn't have a clue where s/he was in | relation to the earth. Flight under such conditions is referred to as | "IFR", or Instrument Flight Rules. | | And IFR Rule #1: Never take your eyes off your instruments, because | that's all you have! | | The corollary to Rule #1: If you can't read the instruments in a quick, | smooth, disciplined, scan, you're as good as dead. Accident records from | around the world are replete with reports of any number of good pilots - | I.e., professional instrument-rated pilots - who 'bought the farm' | because they screwed up while flying in IFR conditions. | | Let me place this in the context of the 9/11 hijacker-pilots. These men | were repeatedly deemed incompetent to solo a simple Cessna-172 - an | elementary exercise that involves flying this little trainer once around | the patch on a sunny day. A student's first solo flight involves a simple | circuit: take-off, followed by four gentle left turns ending with a | landing back on the runway. This is as basic as flying can possibly get. | | Not one of the hijackers was deemed fit to perform this most elementary | exercise by himself. | | In fact, here's what their flight instructors had to say about the | aptitude of these budding aviators: | | Mohammed Atta: "His attention span was zero." | | Khalid Al-Mihdhar: "We didn't kick him out, but he didn't live up to our | standards." | | Marwan Al-Shehhi: "He was dropped because of his limited English and | incompetence at the controls." | | Salem Al-Hazmi: "We advised him to quit after two lessons." | | Hani Hanjour: "His English was horrible, and his mechanical skills were | even worse. It was like he had hardly even ever driven a car. I'm still | to this day amazed that he could have flown into the Pentagon. He could | not fly at all." | | Now let's take a look at American Airlines Flight 77. Passenger/hijacker | Hani Hanjour rises from his seat midway through the flight, viciously | fights his way into the cockpit with his cohorts, overpowers Captain | Charles F. Burlingame and First Officer David Charlebois, and somehow | manages to toss them out of the cockpit (for starters, very difficult to | achieve in a cramped environment without inadvertently impacting the yoke | and thereby disengaging the autopilot). One would correctly presume that | this would present considerable difficulties to a little guy with a box | cutter-Burlingame was a tough, burly, ex-Vietnam F4 fighter jock who had | flown over 100 combat missions. Every pilot who knows him says that | rather than politely hand over the controls, Burlingame would have | instantly rolled the plane on its back so that Hanjour would have broken | his neck when he hit the floor. But let's ignore this almost natural | reaction expected of a fighter pilot and proceed with this charade. | | Nonetheless, imagine that Hanjour overpowers the flight deck crew, | removes them from the cockpit and takes his position in the captain's | seat. Although weather reports state this was not the case, let's say | Hanjour was lucky enough to experience a perfect CAVU day (Ceiling And | Visibility Unlimited). If Hanjour looked straight ahead through the | windshield, or off to his left at the ground, at best he would see, | 35,000 feet -- 7 miles -- below him, a murky brownish-grey-green | landscape, virtually devoid of surface detail, while the aircraft he was | now piloting was moving along, almost imperceptibly and in eerie silence, | at around 500 MPH (about 750 feet every second). | | In a real-world scenario (and given the reported weather conditions that | day), he would likely have seen clouds below him completely obscuring the | ground he was traversing. With this kind of "situational non-awareness", | Hanjour might as well have been flying over Argentina, Russia, or | Japan-he wouldn't have had a clue as to where, precisely, he was. | | After a few seconds (at 750 ft/sec), Hanjour would figure out there's | little point in looking outside-there's nothing there to give him any | real visual cues. For a man who had previously wrestled with little | Cessnas, following freeways and railroad tracks (and always in the | comforting presence of an instructor), this would have been a strange, | eerily unsettling environment indeed. | | Seeing nothing outside, Mr. Hanjour would be forced to divert his | attention to his instrument panel, where he'd be faced with a bewildering | array of instruments. He would then have to very quickly interpret his | heading, ground track, altitude, and airspeed information on the displays | before he could even figure out where in the world he was, much less | where the Pentagon was located in relation to his position! | | After all, before he can crash into a target, he has to first find the | target. | | It is very difficult to explain this scenario, of an utter lack of ground | reference, to non-pilots; but let it suffice to say that for these | incompetent hijacker non-pilots to even consider grappling with such a | daunting task would have been utterly overwhelming. They wouldn't have | known where to begin. | | But, for the sake of discussion let's stretch things beyond all | plausibility and say that Hanjour-whose flight instructor claimed | "couldn't fly at all"-somehow managed to figure out their exact position | on the American landscape in relation to their intended target as they | traversed the earth at a speed five times faster than they had ever flown | by themselves before. | | Once he had determined exactly where he was, he would need to figure out | where the Pentagon was located in relation to his rapidly-changing | position. He would then need to plot a course to his target (one he | cannot see with his eyes-remember, our ace is flying solely on | instruments). | | In order to perform this bit of electronic navigation, he would have to | be very familiar with IFR procedures. None of these chaps even knew what | a navigational chart looked like, much less how to how to plug | information into flight management computers (FMC) and engage LNAV | (lateral navigation automated mode). If one is to believe the official | story, all of this was supposedly accomplished by raw student pilots | while flying blind at 500 MPH over unfamiliar (and practically invisible) | terrain, using complex methodologies and employing sophisticated | instruments. | | To get around this little problem, the official storyline suggests these | men manually flew their aircraft to their respective targets (NB: This | still wouldn't relieve them of the burden of navigation). But let's | assume Hanjour disengaged the autopilot and auto-throttle and hand-flew | the aircraft to its intended-and invisible-target on instruments alone | until such time as he could get a visual fix. This would have | necessitated him to fly back across West Virginia and Virginia to | Washington DC. (This portion of Flight 77's flight path cannot be | corroborated by any radar evidence that exists, because the aircraft is | said to have suddenly disappeared from radar screens over Ohio, but let's | not mull over that little point.) | | According to FAA radar controllers, "Flight 77" then suddenly pops up | over Washington DC and executes an incredibly precise diving turn at a | rate of 360 degrees/minute while descending at 3,500 ft/min, at the end | of which "Hanjour" allegedly levels out at ground level. Oh, I almost | forgot: He also had the presence of mind to turn off the transponder in | the middle of this incredibly difficult maneuver (one of his instructors | later commented the hapless fellow couldn't have spelt the word if his | life depended on it). | | The maneuver was in fact so precisely executed that the air traffic | controllers at Dulles refused to believe the blip on their screen was a | commercial airliner. Danielle O'Brian, one of the air traffic controllers | at Dulles who reported seeing the aircraft at 9:25 said, "The speed, the | maneuverability, the way that he turned, we all thought in the radar | room, all of us experienced air traffic controllers, that that was a | military plane." | | And then, all of a sudden we have magic. Voila! Hanjour finds the | Pentagon sitting squarely in his sights right before him. | | But even that wasn't good enough for this fanatic Muslim kamikaze pilot. | You see, he found that his "missile" was heading towards one of the most | densely populated wings of the Pentagon-and one occupied by top military | brass, including the Secretary of Defense, Rumsfeld. Presumably in order | to save these men's lives, he then executes a sweeping 270-degree turn | and approaches the building from the opposite direction and aligns | himself with the only wing of the Pentagon that was virtually uninhabited | due to extensive renovations that were underway (there were some 120 | civilians construction workers in that wing who were killed; their work | included blast-proofing the outside wall of that wing). | | I shan't get into the aerodynamic impossibility of flying a large | commercial jetliner 20 feet above the ground at over 400 MPH. A | discussion on ground effect energy, tip vortex compression, downwash | sheet reaction, wake turbulence, and jetblast effects are beyond the | scope of this article (the 100,000-lb jetblast alone would have blown | whole semi-trucks off the roads.) | | Let it suffice to say that it is physically impossible to fly a 200,000- | lb airliner 20 feet above the ground at 400 MPH. | | The author, a pilot and aeronautical engineer, challenges any pilot in | the world to do so in any large high-speed aircraft that has a relatively | low wing-loading (such as a commercial jet). I.e., to fly the craft at | 400 MPH, 20 feet above ground in a flat trajectory over a distance of one | mile. | | Why the stipulation of 20 feet and a mile? There were several street | light poles located up to a mile away from the Pentagon that were | snapped-off by the incoming aircraft; this suggests a low, flat | trajectory during the final pre-impact approach phase. Further, it is | known that the craft impacted the Pentagon's ground floor. For purposes | of reference: If a 757 were placed on the ground on its engine nacelles | (I.e., gear retracted as in flight profile), its nose would be almost 20 | above the ground! Ergo, for the aircraft to impact the ground floor of | the Pentagon, Hanjour would have needed to have flown in with the engines | buried 10-feet deep in the Pentagon lawn. Some pilot. | | At any rate, why is such ultra-low-level flight aerodynamically | impossible? Because the reactive force of the hugely powerful downwash | sheet, coupled with the compressibility effects of the tip vortices, | simply will not allow the aircraft to get any lower to the ground than | approximately one half the distance of its wingspan-until speed is | drastically reduced, which, of course, is what happens during normal | landings. | | In other words, if this were a Boeing 757 as reported, the plane could | not have been flown below about 60 feet above ground at 400 MPH. (Such a | maneuver is entirely within the performance envelope of aircraft with | high wing-loadings, such as ground-attack fighters, the B1-B bomber, and | Cruise missiles-and the Global Hawk.) | | The very same navigational challenges mentioned above would have faced | the pilots who flew the two 767s into the Twin Towers, in that they, too, | would have had to have first found their targets. Again, these chaps, | too, miraculously found themselves spot on course. And again, their | "final approach" maneuvers at over 500 MPH are simply far too incredible | to have been executed by pilots who could not solo basic training | aircraft. | | Conclusion | The writers of the official storyline expect us to believe, that once the | flight deck crews had been overpowered, and the hijackers "took control" | of the various aircraft, their intended targets suddenly popped up in | their windshields as they would have in some arcade game, and all that | these fellows would have had to do was simply aim their airplanes at the | buildings and fly into them. Most people who have been exposed only to | the official storyline have never been on the flight deck of an airliner | at altitude and looked at the outside world; if they had, they'd realize | the absurdity of this kind of reasoning. | | In reality, a clueless non-pilot would encounter almost insurmountable | difficulties in attempting to navigate and fly a 200,000-lb airliner into | a building located on the ground, 7 miles below and hundreds of miles | away and out of sight, and in an unknown direction, while flying at over | 500 MPH - and all this under extremely stressful circumstances. |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Aeronautical Engineer says Official 9/11 Story Not Possible | Robert M. Gary | Piloting | 1 | March 14th 06 12:44 AM |
Aeronautical Engineer says Official 9/11 Story Not Possible | sfb | Piloting | 121 | February 25th 06 03:07 AM |
Aeronautical Engineer says Official 9/11 Story Not Possible | Miss L. Toe | Piloting | 11 | February 23rd 06 02:25 PM |
Aeronautical Engineer says Official 9/11 Story Not Possible | Bob Gardner | Piloting | 18 | February 22nd 06 08:25 PM |
Hey! What fun!! Let's let them kill ourselves!!! | [email protected] | Naval Aviation | 2 | December 17th 04 09:45 PM |