How did this British Airways flight end up with a square
tire?
A spare tire is one thing, but one British Airways flight landed in London
with something many experts have never seen before: a square tire.
The Airbus A380-800 departed Hong Kong on May 6 and was climbing when the
crew received a tire-pressure notification, the Aviation Herald
reports.
The plane can land safely with one of its 18 tires deflated, so the crew
continued on to London Heathrow. The landing was normal, but the photo of the
plane taken afterward -- with one of the tires smooshed into a shape as square
as Pat Boone -- drew buzz from plane-watchers.
Suggestions as to how the tire was forced into the square shape were many
and varied. Some Aviation Herald readers questioned the temperature when the
tire was inflated, some blamed the pressure of descent crushing the tire and
some just wanted to argue about why the other reasons were wrong.
Royal Aeronautical Society aviation safety expert Kumar Mysore was quoted
in the Daily Mail as blaming the way the plane distributes weight.
"The effect of the weight on the deflated tire is the same as when you
squeeze a rubber ring toy with different intensity, it can turn into a different
shape," he said. "In an A380, for this particular situation, it happens to be
squarish. In a 747, for instance, the load of the aircraft does not give rise to
this particular shape."
One Aviation Herald reader didn't care about the reason, but was fascinated
with the result, writing, "I wish to acquire this tire and exhibit it in a
sculpture park."
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.