I'm pretty sure I wouldn't want to to spend any money watching the forthcoming film at the cinema. Kind of know the ending already.
I wonder if any credit, or even passing mention of it, will be given in the film to the Airbus A320 that at the end of the day performed so well under such circumstances. Given the bitter commercial rivalry between Airbus and Boeing, I suspect any intention to pay praise Airbus by the filmmakers would have been fiercely lobbied against.
The crash is at the start of the film, the film is about the investigation and the fact that they found that the plane could have got back to the airport and landed safely and there was no need to land in Hudson!
Still sounds rather dull.
The wonder of hindsight. A NTSB/BEA/US Airways/Airbus team conducted a number of test simulations on the manufacturer's high fidelity, full motion, A320 engineering simulator in Toulouse as part of the crash investigation. There were 15 runs from engines out - they successfully made it to LaGuardia 7 times in 13 attempts and to Teterboro airport 1 time in 2 attempts. A 53% success rate - and only if they turned immediately at loss of engine thrust without time to assess the situation. Adding another half minute (as was the case in this event) to provide for (a realistic) assessment and decision making time (eg run through engine dual failure checklist) never resulted in a runway landing. Furthermore, gliding to either airport would entail placing additional lives at risk in crossing some of the most densely populated urban landscape in the world in a partially functioning aircraft.the fact that they found that the plane could have got back to the airport and landed safely and there was no need to land in Hudson!
The thing that still impresses the hell out of me is the flight crew's presence of mind to start the Auxiliary Power Unit when they did. It wasn't part of a written procedure. That's good, old-fashioned pilot instinct.
Well, true. The ditch button closes a number of apertures and valves, with the aim of keeping water out and the plane afloat.The instinct that didn't see them press the "ditch" button. Some designer at Airbus went to all that trouble of creating a functional ditch button for exactly this scenario and the one time ever in the history of Airbus craft that it was of any use it wasn't even pressed! Bet they're well pissed off.
The crash is at the start of the film, the film is about the investigation and the fact that they found that the plane could have got back to the airport and landed safely and there was no need to land in Hudson!
yeh. but everyone knew what happened to the titanic but that didn't stop them going to see the filmI'm pretty sure I wouldn't want to to spend any money watching the forthcoming film at the cinema. Kind of know the ending already.
Hanks was good and actory innit.
Or growing a beard, or learning how to fly a real jumbo jet...tiskDoesn't go to the trouble of losing any weight for the role I see
Still sounds rather dull.
Or growing a beard, or learning how to fly a real jumbo jet...tisk
It's an airbus A320 in the film/incident. It's an entirely different kind of flying, altogether.
(IT'S AN ENTIRELY... etc)