On the occassion of my 1000th post I thought I'd satisfy my curiosity about something.
As part of the safety demonstration airlines say something to the effect of 'In the event of the plane landing on water...'. To the best of my knowledge no regular (non-amphibious plane) has ever successfully 'landed' on water. Some have crashed into water, some have broken up over water and a few have slid off runways into water but I cannot think of an occassion when a plane has ever actually landed in reasonable deep water and offloaded passengers into rafts.
This is prompted in part by watching a programme last night about Ethiopian Flight 961 that ditched in the sea off the Comoros islands in the Indian Ocean after being hijacked and running out of fuel. Reading up on this reveals that this is only the third time survivors have walked away from a plane ditching in the sea. One of the facts that came out of this is that the design of most aircraft nowadays - with engines hung from the wings - makes a water landing virtually impossible as the drag on the engines - which enter the water first - pulls the aircraft apart.
If the plane did remain intact - would it actually float as shown in the safety cards?
Has anyone else any opinions or can think of an occassion when a successful landing (e.g. plane did not break up) occurred?
Phil
As part of the safety demonstration airlines say something to the effect of 'In the event of the plane landing on water...'. To the best of my knowledge no regular (non-amphibious plane) has ever successfully 'landed' on water. Some have crashed into water, some have broken up over water and a few have slid off runways into water but I cannot think of an occassion when a plane has ever actually landed in reasonable deep water and offloaded passengers into rafts.
This is prompted in part by watching a programme last night about Ethiopian Flight 961 that ditched in the sea off the Comoros islands in the Indian Ocean after being hijacked and running out of fuel. Reading up on this reveals that this is only the third time survivors have walked away from a plane ditching in the sea. One of the facts that came out of this is that the design of most aircraft nowadays - with engines hung from the wings - makes a water landing virtually impossible as the drag on the engines - which enter the water first - pulls the aircraft apart.
If the plane did remain intact - would it actually float as shown in the safety cards?
Has anyone else any opinions or can think of an occassion when a successful landing (e.g. plane did not break up) occurred?
Phil