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A colleague of mine said he flew on a Saab 340 on a hop from Waco to
Dallas. It was a hot afternoon and was hot in the cabin. He said he was told be a flight attendant that the Saab 340 does not have air conditioning, only "air handling". That seems incredible to me! Would a/c even be optional on such an aircraft? If so, would an airline actually choose to equip without a/c? Could someone here shed any light on it? Maybe it was just broken and some misunderstanding or miscommunication occurred? ![]() -- Thanks, John Clonts Temple, Texas |
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![]() "John Clonts" wrote in message Maybe it was just broken and some misunderstanding or miscommunication occurred? ![]() I have no experience with the Saab 340, but with other tprops and a few jets. The cooling air provided on these craft does not come from a traditional "air conditioner" as you might be familiar with, in that there is no refrigerant. The units installed on most of these planes are referred to as "air handlers" or "air cycle machines", but they all essentially perform similar functions. Hot, compressed air is bled from the compressor section of an engine, allowed to expand, which cools it and extracts moisture, then is recompressed, manipulated through a couple of iterations like this to achieve certain ends with the air. At the end point, you often wind up with very cold, very dry air, which is then remixed with a controlled quantity of ambient air and funneled to the cabin eyeballs as the cool dry air we all know and love. In many turbo props at idle on the ground, there simply is not a high enough flow of bleed air coming from the idling engine to adequately feed the air cycle machine, and the net result is weak and inadequate air conditioning on the ground while taxiing. This, of course, usually occurs right after the pax have schlepped across a 90 degree ramp to get to the plane, so the inadequacy is felt all the more strongly. In most cases, once high power settings are achieved after t/o, the plane cools fairly quickly - which is small solace to the already drenched passengers. Years ago when I flew a Bandierante, we used to regularly see internal cabin temps of about 100 to 105 degrees while taxiing. |
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