h a l f b a k e r yWhat was the question again?
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I'm no expert, but I would have thought you'd need more than a parachute if you were exposed at 34,000ft? |
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How does the fuselage break up into several components? Is this one component per seat? Wouldn't it be dangerous to have the various components released at such high speeds with that much proximity? What would happen to people away from their seats? |
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You didn't think this one through, did you? |
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//How does the fuselage break up into several components? Is this one component per seat?// First class has a parafoil. Business class gets a standard drab-green cargo 'chute. Economy has a bag of bedsheets, a roll of shock cord, and an instructional video. |
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Parachutes wouldn't help if the /extreme emergency/ was the plane crashed into the side of a mountain...it's already on the ground. |
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Very few aircraft emergencies happen at altitude. And almost all of those are passenger related. And of those few that are mechanical, almost none are going to make it safer to leave the aircraft rather than simply glide down to the nearest airport. |
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Your best use for these parachutes would be to cocoon each passenger before take off so that they cannot move. Then stack them like cordwood. |
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I have yet to read the science that says it can't happen
with large passenger planes.It would be a good real topic
for mythbusters. |
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Ballistic parachutes already exist on some light planes,
ultralights, hangliders and paragliders. They operate
without jettisoning any part of the flying object. |
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The Ballistic Recovery Systems website saved list indicates
they do save lives. |
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It would seem that they would eliminate the aircrash
from a mechanical malfunction at altitude, as they would
provide a safe way down, whereas instead, straight down
she goes, or the pilot has to attempt a forced landing,
often unsuccessfully due to the malfunction. Anywhere
you live in the world, you will be reading about several of
these kind of totally unneccessary accidents occuring
with light planes every year in your area. |
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For ensuring survival in all but the onboard fire, or crash
from altitude in the severest storm,(both uncommon) why
are they not on all aircraft, including large passenger
planes? |
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They could also be used for lessening impacts on take
off and landing accidents. |
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Skydiver pilots could test prototypes on retired
passenger planes from aircraft graveyards over deserts. |
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Including: multiple cell airbags for floatation and survival
at sea. and impact from aircrash generally. |
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Existing technology, the parachute and the airbag
(parachutes invented in the 1700's) why not deployed?
The unsinkable chinese junk was invented thousands of
years ago. |
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I'll take your "weight" and raise you "speed" and "loss of control". |
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I think all the parachute systems are on non-jets or you would need some crazy drouge chute to slow the plane down as even a working parachute would kill all occupants if deployed at 400 mph. |
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Now add loss of control or "great, now we have a 747 slowly falling towards Chicago, in front of a train or into the Grand Canyon." These are small problems for small planes, but HUGE problems for huge planes. Was this going to be a steerable chute? |
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from wikipedia.....
Ribbon and ring parachutes |
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Ribbon and ring parachutes have similarities to annular
designs. They are frequently designed to deploy at
supersonic speeds. A conventional parachute would
instantly burst upon opening at such speeds. Ribbon
parachutes have a ring-shaped canopy, often with a large
hole in the center to release the pressure. Sometimes
the ring is broken into ribbons connected by ropes to
leak air even more. These large leaks lower the stress on
the parachute so it does not burst or shred when it
opens. Ribbon parachutes made of kevlar are used on
nuclear bombs such as the B61 and B83. |
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See also BuzzB's Halfbakery External Airbags which
describes NASA and a company researching external
airbags for the pathfinder's Mars landing, which raises
these issues.
Quote from the NASA link,
..'The air bag system underwent a series of rigorous tests
in Plum Brook's Space Power Facility, the world's largest
vacuum chamber pressurized with a simulated Martian
atmosphere. When the Mars Pathfinder spacecraft enters
the Martian atmosphere, it will be traveling about 17,000
miles per hour. A parachute and rocket braking system
will slow the spacecraft to about 50-60 miles per hour.
Then the air bags will deploy to protect the spacecraft
when it impacts the surface. The Space Power Facility
enabled the project team to test the air bag system in
the extreme atmospheric conditions it will be subjected
to when it reaches Mars. |
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The air bag system was tested on numerous terrains
ranging from flat surfaces to steep, rocky inclines. While
initial single-layered designs could not survive the jagged
rocks, testing enabled the JPL team to concoct the
perfect recipe for unbreakable, lightweight bags: multiple
layers of lighter fabric instead of a single layer of heavier
material. The outer layer was tearing, absorbing energy,
but more importantly creating a buffer, like a soft blanket
over the rocks. The second layer didn't get all the sharp
little edges and corners digging into it.' |
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Mars has about one third the gravitational pull of earth. |
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Also Wikipedia ,Landing process :-
Mars Pathfinder used an innovative method of directly
entering Mars using an entry capsule, a supersonic
parachute, followed by solid rockets and large airbags to
cushion the impact. |
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This was almost a decade ago. |
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I voted Baked, as I believe it would work if the system I outlined in the gliders on planes article was used. |
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//I vote Baked// err... you've seen passenger jets which blow out separately chuted compartments ? |
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No, but I've seen people parachuting from planes, and my idea is functionally similar. |
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you're [lukecleland] ? welcome back |
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