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![]() Mike Lindsay wrote: In article , John A. Weeks III writes In article op.tcfi56vzj9nxpm@clive, Clive wrote: But, The concorde crash was caused by something outside the control of the concorde crew i.e. debris from another aircraft (also the same for the Lockerbie 747), So had it not been for that it's record would have been 100%. That is a totally unrealistic line of thought. There will be FOD on the ramp or runway as some point in an airplane's operating life. Had that small piece of metal not been on the runway the day that the Concorde crashed, it would have been on some other runway some other day. An airplane that is designed to crash, burn, and kill over 100 people when it its a small piece of FOD is an aircraft that is both flawed and an accident waiting to happen. The only curious thing is why it took so long. In fact, a previous time that a Concorde hit debris and punctured the fuel tanks, the aircraft managed to survive without crashing. That is probably the true wonderment. -john- SMALL piece of FOD? Or a big chunk? Whatever, it shouldn't have been there. It shouldn't have been there in the sense that even in the real world airplanes aren't supposed to shed small pieces of themselves, or in the sense that this is just a bad thing? In the first case, the idea that a piece of metal might have been on the ground was not only wrong, but unforseeable. I've yet to hear anybody say that this is the case, and that there's no realistic way that such bits of metal would find their way onto a runway - therefore, regardless of the misconduct (if it was misconduct) of the flight that left the offending piece of scrap, the possibility of such scrap would appear in a spot that would threaten Concorde was forseeable and should have been a design consideration. |
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