W.D.Clinger
Philosopher
I started out using PITCH ANGLE CAPT (DEG) and PITCH ANGLE F/O (DEG), but the results weren't consistent with changes in pressure altitude and radar heights. The FLT DIR - PITCH CAPT parameter would seem to have been included for calculations such as mine.Hi Will,
Perhaps you could use the PITCH ANGLE CAPT parameter that is recorded 4 times per second rather than the FLT DIR - PITCH CAPT parameter which is only recorded once every 4 seconds.
My guess is that the two PITCH ANGLE parameters were measured with respect to some reference other than the direction of flight. If I knew that reference, I might be able to extend my calculations back before t=-20 seconds.Can anyone tell me why these parameters would have such different values?
With my initial conditions, which were chosen because they gave a close match to the pressure altitude, the aircraft is still descending at about a 3% grade at end of data, which is less than 2 degrees from horizontal. IMO, the one frame of the DoD 5 frames video that shows the aircraft doesn't offer enough detail to distinguish a 3% grade from level flight.It appears to me that the aircraft could have hit the light pole as placed in R.Mackey's graph in The Reconstruction of Hanjour's Final Approach, however it shows the aircraft still descending when it hits the Pentagon rather than having levelled off as in the DoD 5 frames video. Does anyone have any comments on why this is?
The aircraft had been descending at about a 10% grade just a few seconds earlier. It levelled out a lot during the last two seconds, which averaged 1.8g of vertical acceleration (including 1g gravity). By comparison to its previous rate of descent, the 800 or so feet it covered during that last second would have looked pretty level.
Another possibility is that the recorded pressure altitudes were a little off, as has been speculated. I'm now inclined to disregard that speculation, because there's a pretty good match between the pressure altitudes for the last few seconds and my reconstruction from the accelerometer data.
As you noted, another possibility is that our assumption about the end of data coinciding with the generator trailer or Pentagon could be wrong. John Farmer suggested that the longitudinal accelerometer might have had such fast transient response as to fail to record impacts that didn't coincide with the instant of sampling. If that were true, then impacts that did happen to coincide with the instant of sampling would register as much larger; hence the pegging of the last longitudinal acceleration could have been an impact with a light pole. I think that's highly unlikely; to improve the accuracy of reconstructions such as mine, the longitudinal accelerometer should have been selected for a transient response that would perform some averaging over the 1/4-second sampling interval.
Without the 4 new seconds you uncovered, we wouldn't have been able to discuss these things sensibly. Thanks again, Warren.
Will
