PhantomWolf
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Mar 6, 2007
- Messages
- 21,203
Umm, PW- the cause of the flight 587 crash was that the vertical stabilizer tore off, apparently as a result of the co-pilot using the rudder too violently in trying to cope with wake turbulence from a 747 that had taken off ahead of them. The engines were apparently broken loose as the now-uncontrollable plane gyrated through the air.
If you re-check my post I never stated the cause of the crash, merely that the plane had lost an engine in flight. The vertical stabilier was also found north of the crash site, but since we were dealing with engines....
An example of an accident where the cause was the separation of an engine is AA flight 191, which crashed in Chicago in 1979. Simulator work during the accident investigation indicated that the pilots should have been able to keep flying and make an emergency landing if they had immediately understood their predicament and taken the appropriate measures. However, due to the loss of electrical power to the captain's instruments, some of which had no duplicates on the co-pilot's side, they didn't realize their true situation and were unable to recover.
Which you'll see was the second incident I linked too...
Incidentally, when flight 191's engine broke away during takeoff, it flipped back and over the wing and landed on the runway behind the plane.
Which is why I noted it found behind the plane.