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Ag-fly brekker vingene - AVweb Video

 

I diskusjonen som følger under, glemmes en C-130 som havarerte under ganske identiske omstendigheter i 2002:

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Wings Fold On Ag Plane

By

 Russ Niles

 -

December 12, 2021

 

What appears to be a practice or demonstration drop by a Brazilian Embraer EMB-202A Ipanema ended with the wings folding and the pilot surviving with serious, but not life-threatening, injuries. The Ipanema is an aerial application plane but this aircraft appears to dump its load rather than spray it.

In the crash sequence, the airplane flies the centerline of a rough air strip and starts jettisoning a load of liquid from the belly rather than the application nozzles on the wings. About halfway through the drop, the aircraft pitches up and the wings fold. Authorities are undoubtedly investigating.

Sjekk video her: https://tinyurl.com/2778v8e5

5 COMMENTS

Looks like a high-speed run. As the load is dropped the pilot pushes to maintain altitude, airspeed exceeds the manoeuvring speed and voila, wings depart with the merest hint of g. A smattering of fatigue may also have been a factor. Almost analogous to the Phantom pilot at Abingdon, doing a loop he attempted to re-position on the display line by pushing at the top while inverted – the airspeed increased to a value which made it impossible for the loop to be completed successfully, which it wasn’t!

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What a tribute to the integrity of the cockpit!

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  1. https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/a2e5aac9710742361c3b0fbcd4f7148e?s=50&d=mm&r=g

IMHO, you guys have been scammed. Remember the video of the aerobatic pilot who lost a wing in flight and somehow landed safely? As we now know, the airplane in that flight sequence was a model. Having been a serious aerobatic competitor, I cannot imagine a set of circumstances where one wing, LET ALONE BOTH, fail upwards. Metal fatigue coincidentally reaching a critical point on both wings at the exact same time? The climb had just begun prior to the failure, it was not an extreme maneuver, and I doubt that more than a couple of G’s would have been placed on the airplane. In an ag plane that’s built for abuse, there’s no way that 2 G’s is going to fold a wing, let alone, coincidentally, both at the same time. Re exceeding maneuvering speed, it’s not the speed itself that is dangerous. It’s when ‘full deflection of controls is applied. There’s no way that the fairly mild initiation of the climb involved full deflection. Utility aircraft are designed to withstand 4.4 G’s. It would have had to have been an almost immediate pullup to vertical.

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o    https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/510e673ae88c9c68c38cca322325b4b5?s=50&d=mm&r=g

I agree with Marshall Friedman that things don’t quite seem quite right about this accident. The maneuver during which the wings folded did not appear to be extreme and should not have overloaded the airframe; however, both wings of an airplane can fail simultaneously if subjected to a severe overload. Additionally, depending on the structural design of the airplane, the failure of one wing could induce the failure of the other; however, I would think that simultaneous failure is rare indeed. Unless the wreckage shown in the video is the result of another crash, I’m guessing that this was a real event involving a real airplane.

 

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