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On Feb 14, 9:12*pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
K l e i n wrote : On Feb 13, 3:36*pm, "Robert M. Gary" wrote: On Feb 13, 1:44*pm, "Robert11" wrote: Hello, I guess de-icing is going to be a popular subject. Question, please: *On commercial jet airliners like, e.g., a 767 or 7 57, is there any in-flight deicing system for the wing and tail surfaces, othe r than a leading edge pneumatic boot ? What about the "main," large upper surfaces ? How in general is wing de-icing accomplished on these new, modern jets ? Thanks, Bob Jets don't typically have boots. Most use hot air stollen from the engines to heat the leading edges. Some use a "leak" system to drip anti-freeze like solution on the tail surfaces to avoid having to plumb the hot air to the rear, although this is less common. I'm not sure that I woudl call the type of plane that crashed less modern than a 767 considering by-pass jet engines (the type in a 767) have been around longer than turbo prop engines that were involed in this recent crash. -Robert The more I hear about this, the more it sounds like tailplane icing. Take a look at http://video.google.com/videoplay?do...60735779946for a NASA produced video on the subject. Note that this flight started its plunge right at or after the outer marker. *The outer marker is where you normally lower gear and flaps. Lowering flaps is the thing that causes the tailplane stall if the tailplane is iced up. Rubbish. Bertie- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - The NASA study on tail stall notwithstanding? |
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