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I have two questions inspired by Hollywood movies.
In the movies (Goldfinger, Executive Decision and so on), when pressurized aircraft suffer catastrophic decompression at high (25000+ feet) altitude (usually when the bad guy shoots a bullet through a window) everything not tied down gets sucked out of the plane and the aircraft goes into an immediate, rapid nose dive and the pilots or the good guys have to struggle to level it off or prevent a crash. Is this an automatic "safety" feature of real, regular aircraft? On the one hand, passengers need to get denser air to breathe but large aircraft have oxygen masks that drop down. (I could do some rough estimates that the average fat slob can hold their breath for less than a minute so, without masks, the jet would have to go from let's say 30000 feet to 5000 feet in 30-45 seconds. My ears would explode.) I would think that a crash dive to a lower altitude could be even more dangerous such as if it occurred in a crowded air corridor. Maybe there are other dangers. What REALLY happens (or is supposed to happen) in the event of sudden decompression of real high flying aircraft? The second Hollywood inspired question comes from Executive Decision (1996). The main character is taking flying lessons in a single prop 2-seater plane and lands. The plane is still running (on the ground) and his instructor says, 'I think you're ready to solo' and gets out. The main character starts to taxi and then other non-flying plot developments happen. I was wondering if taking your FIRST solo flight is that simple. The location in the film in Washington, DC but I figure all US flying is FAA regulated. Wouldn't the first time soloist have to fill out some forms, file a flight plan with the airport and maybe even do a complete pre-flight check on the aircraft? Is the simplified movie solo flight completely bogus or could it happen that way? THANK YOU VERY MUCH. -- Sent by xanadoof from yahoo element from com This is a spam protected message. Please answer with reference header. Posted via http://www.usenet-replayer.com |
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