View: https://youtu.be/8XYO-mj1ugg?si=t9buTs6QcfphnDfV
It's seems more likely to be double engine failure.
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I didn't see birds in the video, and if the fuel were contaminated, would the plane be able to get to takeoff speed? Wouldn't the engines show irregular performance, or shudder, or something?
Not until the contaminations clogged the screens preventing fuel from getting through.
Its happened before on two Boeing 777s, and an Airbus A330. All three of them with Rolls Royce Trent engines. All three were contaminated with ice in the screens. There is an airworthiness directive out for Trent Engined regarding this.
A contamination can be anything, does not have to be ice.
The sole survivor reported that the lights started flickering just before the aircraft lost altitude (he described this as being "stuck in the air", so this definitely could be a double engine failure. The problem might be hardware, but it sounds like software, which Boeing has struggled with in recent years.
IIRC, in the event of a double engine failure, the 737 has a ram-air turbine set up to generate emergency power, so lights don't go out, but they could flicker as the turbine is only providing emergency power for onboard avionics systems. I think that the 787 also has the same turbine set up.
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British man describes how he escaped Air India wreckage
Mr Ramesh said he saw cabin crew members and passengers dying in front of his eyes.www.bbc.com
The sole survivor reported that the lights started flickering just before the aircraft lost altitude (he described this as being "stuck in the air", so this definitely could be a double engine failure. The problem might be hardware, but it sounds like software, which Boeing has struggled with in recent years.
IIRC, in the event of a double engine failure, the 737 has a ram-air turbine set up to generate emergency power, so lights don't go out, but they could flicker as the turbine is only providing emergency power for onboard avionics systems. I think that the 787 also has the same turbine set up.
![]()
British man describes how he escaped Air India wreckage
Mr Ramesh said he saw cabin crew members and passengers dying in front of his eyes.www.bbc.com
Software problems don't take 12 years to surface.
Indeed. Software is never static. Minor changes (a new feature here, update an old feature, improve this/that, etc.) happen periodically. Real-time event-driven software has to undergo more rigorous testing than procedural software, and aircraft software is "re-certified", hopefully. (True or False?). Small but necessary changes often have unintended knock-on effects and 15-year old modules can start to have problems. There are probably several hundred thousand source code lines in the software for the aircraft, probably only a third of which they haven't changed in some way since the first version. How many versions have been installed over years? Once a software "package" gets to 3 or 4 thousand lines of source code the number of possible "states" that event-driven software can occupy is far too large to test every possibility. You can only test the "most likely" branches of the state tree, including the known error branches (unit testing.) I spent 38 years writing software and have seen many IT "fads" come and go, but the first thing that is always asked when a piece of software fails is "what was the last thing changed?"From personal experience, sometimes they take even longer.
View: https://youtu.be/8XYO-mj1ugg?si=t9buTs6QcfphnDfV
It's seems more likely to be double engine failure.
Boeing has been cutting back on everything including software validation teams, unfortunately. Their software updates are notoriously buggy. The FAA required that they push out a software update for their buggy radios recently.Software problems don't take 12 years to surface.
I just finished watching the complete video and it's amazing. Thanks for sharing it, I should have watched the complete video before commenting. Video definitely proves that because the RAT was deployed, the engines probably weren't providing power. 200% dual engine failure.
Boeing has been cutting back on everything including software validation teams, unfortunately. Their software updates are notoriously buggy. The FAA required that they push out a software update for their buggy radios recently.
In 2022, there were serious instrumentation bugs with the 787 on landing.
not an expert on Boeing, but this is my source:Cutting back on what?
Hmmm?
not an expert on Boeing, but this is my source:
Flying Blind: The 737 MAX Tragedy and the Fall of Boeing: Robison, Peter: 9780385546492: Amazon.com: Books
Flying Blind: The 737 MAX Tragedy and the Fall of Boeing [Robison, Peter] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Flying Blind: The 737 MAX Tragedy and the Fall of Boeingwww.amazon.com
I don't want to derail this discussion on the crash but the book mentions that Boeing had a series of CEOs who implemented cost-cutting measures. "Flying Blind" covers how these CEOs were cutting corners on virtually everything, which led to the 737 Max disasters.I'm not sure thats "cutting back."
I don't want to derail this discussion on the crash but the book mentions that Boeing had a series of CEOs who implemented cost-cutting measures. "Flying Blind" covers how these CEOs were cutting corners on virtually everything, which led to the 737 Max disasters.
Specifically, the 737 Max crashes happened because Boeing tried to use improperly validated software to patch an engineering issue. The software validation team which should have found the bug wasn't properly funded and was given an impossible deadline.