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Please take more photos at different views and some rough dimensions but I can say any aircraft part would be marked. Those markings may have been damaged.Fess up now, boys. SIX TO SEVEN POUNDS! OUCH!
The FAA has joined the hunt for the airline and airplane that dropped a substantial piece of hardware on the granite sidewalk in front of the Maine State Legislature in Augusta, narrowly missing a Capitol Police employee. The 6- to 7-pound machined hunk of steel, which may be a sleeve or bushing of some sort, hit the rock courtyard a few feet from the guard about 12:30 p.m. last Friday. So far, it doesn't appear anyone has formally identified the hunk of metal (anyone out there willing to take a stab?) nor are there any reports of any landing issues with aircraft that were in the area at the time.
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As an aside to give you an idea of the suction of a modern jet engine - this is what happens to a lightly loaded ULD (3 tonnes) when when a baggage cart driver drives too close to a running jet engine.
Sounds like he didn't bother to look out the window to see if anything, or anyONE, was near the engine before start-up.First, I would doubt that any aircraft part like that would weigh 6 to 7 pounds.
A guy I worked with said that he had an amusing chat with his cousin, an airline pilot. The cousin had walked into the pilot's lounge at Tulsa Airport and saw a pilot he knew sitting there, looking very dejected. "What's wrong?" he asked. The other pilot replied, "They had to cancel my flight. I started up number 1 and all was Okay, I started up number two and all was Okay. I started up number three and all was Okay. Then I started up number four and they had parked the food service truck too close and the engine sucked up 167 chicken salad sandwiches."
I could easily see how a food serve truck could be parked near the No 4 engine of a 707 or DC-8 and the pilot be unable to see it.Sounds like he didn't bother to look out the window to see if anything, or anyONE, was hear the engine before start-up.
I don't fly commercial, but my checklist included being sure the prop area was clear of obstructions (people, vehicles, etc.) - surely the pilot and co-pilot have that on their startup list?