Aircraft safety - Strike
out!
Radar stops aircraft colliding with each
other. It should be used to stop them colliding with birds,
too
ONE of the scarier videos on YouTube (ow.ly/sBIOq) was
recorded by the nose-cone camera of a fighter jet as it was taking off. Just
after the plane leaves the runway a large bird comes hurtling towards it and
vanishes into the aircraft's engine. The pilot spends an agonising 30 seconds or
so trying to regain control, before issuing the order to eject, after which the
viewer is treated to a shot of the onrushing ground before the screen goes
blank.
Bird strikes are a problem-sometimes a fatal one-for military and
civil aviation alike. America's Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) reports
that there are about 10,000 such strikes a year to the country's non-military
aircraft, costing more than $957m in damage and delays. The worldwide figure is
estimated by the European Space Agency to be $1.2 billion.
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