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Posted on 1/23/24 at 10:51 am to When in Rome
What was he inspecting with a flashlight? Either the screws are there or they aren't, did he think they fell in the screw whole? Lol
Posted on 1/23/24 at 10:54 am to RollTide1987
It’s just the wing - an airplane has two.
Posted on 1/23/24 at 10:56 am to When in Rome
quote:
When in Rome
If you didn't catch the sarcasm, then i can't help you.
Posted on 1/23/24 at 10:59 am to BugAC
I did sit there for a second going “this has to be a lampoon”
Posted on 1/23/24 at 11:02 am to When in Rome
Funny how in this thread nobody mentions the aircraft type. Since it was an Airbus it doesn’t fit the current anti-Boeing agenda.
Posted on 1/23/24 at 11:03 am to When in Rome
quote:
I did sit there for a second going “this has to be a lampoon”
The episode about the bolt thread did exist, though i may have missed a few details.
Posted on 1/23/24 at 11:12 am to RollTide1987
The maintenance union is negotiating.
Posted on 1/23/24 at 11:15 am to redstick13
Posted on 1/23/24 at 11:39 am to When in Rome
quote:
PPRUNE
Some of those threads and posts can be quite entertaining well.
Posted on 1/23/24 at 11:47 am to Traveler
Oh yeah I love that forum, especially during high profile commercial crash news cycles
Posted on 1/23/24 at 11:49 am to When in Rome
I want to read their thread on TnFlygirl. I can’t imagine anyone taking up for that idiot.
Posted on 1/23/24 at 11:56 am to RollTide1987
Those wings are never fully bolted
Posted on 1/23/24 at 12:15 pm to tigersbsbfan23
In addition to the 4 missing bolts in question is the stress fracture / lifting of a weak point in the wing support.
(and this stuff is what can be seen; imagine the regular scheduled maint-work ignored & unseen -- yet desperately needed.)
How long has Virgin's Air's DEI policy been more of a priority than its fleet maintenance?
(and this stuff is what can be seen; imagine the regular scheduled maint-work ignored & unseen -- yet desperately needed.)
How long has Virgin's Air's DEI policy been more of a priority than its fleet maintenance?
Posted on 1/23/24 at 12:22 pm to GetCocky11
quote:
Don’t pilots walk around the plane before take off to check for this stuff?
When’s the last time you saw your pilot on top of the wing?
Posted on 1/23/24 at 12:54 pm to RollTide1987
Reminds me of a recent Air Disasters episode I watched, a passenger saw a short crack along a row a rivets next to door as they were getting on a Aloha Airlines 737. She didn't speak up, about 30 minutes later a whole top section of the fuselage ripped off the plane at 24,000' and sucked a flight attendant right of the plane never to be seen again. How the pilots managed to get that plane on the ground in the state it was in is one of the bigger miracles I've ever seen in aviation.
Posted on 1/23/24 at 1:35 pm to RollTide1987
Every airplane maintenance manual has some limitation for how many fasteners can be missing, generally predicated on Leading/trailing edge, how many in sequence, how close to a corner, total number or %-age.
There are also a bunch of drain holes, etc on an airframe that look like a fastener is missing, but it's not.
On my walk-arounds, I'm generally not looking for things that can't be seen from the ground. Because I'm on the ground and by definition I can't see it. From the other thread there were apparently 32 million flights where the walkaround inspection was good enough (Southwest excluded) that the flight went fine. I'm unaware of any issues that brought the plane down that would have been caught by getting a look at the parts I can't see from the ground. Generally the only time I go back and take a look at the wing from the cabin is if I'm concerned about Ice on the upper surface of the wing and deciding if we need to be de-iced or not.
The wings of modern airliners are typically made up of multiple different materials. Aluminum, fiberglass, carbon fiber, etc. You can't tell if the "epoxy" is cracking or delaminating from looking at those pics. If in doubt or during major inspections they will bring out the special equipment to check.
Each airliner has a Configuration Deviation List that allows you to fly revenue flights with parts missing. I flew one two weeks ago with the entire door missing from the lavatory service panel where they dump the blue juice. Fairings and non-structural panels are missing all the time. There is typically an adjustment required for fuel burn due to increased drag or a limitation on how many flights or flying days you can go before it has to be replaced.
Each of these airplanes gets a good maintenance inspection every 100 hrs, so every 4 or so days for major airlines. A pilot is doing a walk-around between each flight to check for major issues (unless you're flying Southwest). If you want to freak out about every dent, paint scrape, sealant crack, drip, you can find a reason not to fly.
There are also a bunch of drain holes, etc on an airframe that look like a fastener is missing, but it's not.
On my walk-arounds, I'm generally not looking for things that can't be seen from the ground. Because I'm on the ground and by definition I can't see it. From the other thread there were apparently 32 million flights where the walkaround inspection was good enough (Southwest excluded) that the flight went fine. I'm unaware of any issues that brought the plane down that would have been caught by getting a look at the parts I can't see from the ground. Generally the only time I go back and take a look at the wing from the cabin is if I'm concerned about Ice on the upper surface of the wing and deciding if we need to be de-iced or not.
The wings of modern airliners are typically made up of multiple different materials. Aluminum, fiberglass, carbon fiber, etc. You can't tell if the "epoxy" is cracking or delaminating from looking at those pics. If in doubt or during major inspections they will bring out the special equipment to check.
Each airliner has a Configuration Deviation List that allows you to fly revenue flights with parts missing. I flew one two weeks ago with the entire door missing from the lavatory service panel where they dump the blue juice. Fairings and non-structural panels are missing all the time. There is typically an adjustment required for fuel burn due to increased drag or a limitation on how many flights or flying days you can go before it has to be replaced.
Each of these airplanes gets a good maintenance inspection every 100 hrs, so every 4 or so days for major airlines. A pilot is doing a walk-around between each flight to check for major issues (unless you're flying Southwest). If you want to freak out about every dent, paint scrape, sealant crack, drip, you can find a reason not to fly.
Posted on 1/23/24 at 1:43 pm to RollTide1987
Meh, those are called "pocket parts". After you finish a project, any extra parts left over just put 'em in your pocket.
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