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There was a lot in that website link you posted earlier, somehow I missed the synopsis. |
I am not an expert but I also believe that getting kerosene to burn is difficult, let alone explode.
On the TV the other night there was a flight 800 documentary where they did the same experiment: mostly empty fuel tank, heat, spark. First small spark nothing, a couple more tries with slightly larger sparks (but still very small) and then kaboom, the whole thing blows apart. Any insight on why ostensibly the same experiment yielded such different results? Thanks Quote:
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The issue is flash point. Jet A has a flash point of 140 F (60 C). For the fuel tank to have explosive vapors, the fuel and tank would need to be 140 F or higher.
Jet fuel - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Did the show you were watching mention what fuel they used? If it wasn't JET A, then it wasn't a good experiment. |
I think they mentioned it was JET fuel: they showed a 55 gal drum being handled.
They also heated the tank to simulate the temps incurred while waiting on the runway for 2 hours. I don't think they quoted what the internal temp was. |
The theory was that the air conditioning packs (2 of them), being mounted immediately in front of the center fuel tanks were radiating their heat to the forward wall of the fuel tank.
An air conditioning 'pack' is a turbocharger that takes very hot bleed air as motive energy, spins a compressor turbine, and then uses a condenser and pressure drop to chill ambient air. It works so well that hot bleed air is even introduced in the cool air flow to keep it from freezing and blocking the condenser. A LOT of ambient heat is generated. Normal normal, the center tank has enough fuel in it that is cooled by the temperatures at altitude. The route that FLT800 was flying (JFK to Europe) was so short, no fuel was needed in the center tank. The long time on the ground with the packs running was assumed to have heated the empty tank, and it's vapors to flash point. The ignition source was one of the three A/C electric submersed pumps in that tank. Each of those breakers are 100 amp, three phase, A/C. More than enough to arc. They are also fairly high on the likely fail list, especially uncovered/uncooled. Ever since that accident, we have been required to carry a minimum fuel amount in that tank. |
wow
now we have a sufficient heat source and a significant ignition source that key info makes the fuel tank explosion entirely plausible thanks for the explanation |
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I'd need to look at the 747 bleed stage. I can't find a CF6 diagram. Here is the 777's GE90. http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-cq5D-npsCo...GE90%2Bjtr.jpg From here, it looks like the intermediate bleed is used for the cooling system. http://aviationandaccessories.tpub.c...21-10_71_1.jpg I'd like to see the data of the bleed pressure/temp and the heat rejection to that compartment. If at idle, it truly is enough to get the empty fuel tank above the flash point, that is a serious design flaw. |
On the ground would the high pressure (hot) air come from the APU?
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I don't think the APU is used for operating the cooling system. I think you have power for Electrical systems and starting air. I passed that question to my sister who worked for an APU company until about 2 weeks ago...
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So with damaged/worn fuel tank pumps, as 800 had, and they then start galling (metal on metal) from lack of fuel to lubricate the pumps (fuel in the tank but not enough to submerge and cool the pumps) and thus heat up, way more than normal, and finally after prolonged "abuse" they get hot faster and get so damn hot that they can ignite even "hard to ignite" fuel and vapor then what's the issue?
I flew Boeing KC-135Rs in the USAF (1988-94) and now 737s in commercial service I've always had to abide by very, very strict fuel pump limits--when I can turn them on and when I have to turn them off--imposed directly by Boeing. Run a KC-135 pump 100 pounds (of fuel) below a limit (3500 or 5500 pounds in a body tank) and they'd bust you on the spot. Unqualified. Need to take a re-check and your name was mud. If the TWA guys inadvertently ran those pumps dry too many times (on the ground in Rome for several hours, if memory serves) and thus incurred pump damage over time, isn't it possible that the pumps finally wore to a point that they got hot enough, finally, on climb-out from Kennedy, to ignite the fuel/vapor in the tank? This missile theory is like the grassy knoll. It sounds really good but it just cannot be proven beyond a reasonable doubt. I'd call it damaged pumps that wore so much that the friction built up and made enough heat to finally blow her up. |
If the tank was empty, why would the fuel pump be running?
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New Boeing 737s have fuel pump shutoff systems that automatically switch pumps off when fuel is at a certain level. In the old days the pilot or flight engineer simply monitored the quantity and switched the pump(s) off at the specified level. If the pump(s) get left running without fuel then that's when damage can occur. Cumulatively that repeated damage, over time, can result in a pump making excessive heat and possibly causing an explosion. |
So if it was the fuel pump, why did they say it was the wiring harness?
Or did they? EDIT: found this Safety investigators stand by cause of TWA Flight 800 crash http://news.yahoo.com/safety-investigators-stand-cause-twa-flight-800-crash-003054024.html Susan Cornwell July 2, 2013 Quote:
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There is wiring that goes to the fuel pumps and passes through the tank. If the fuel pumps were damaged they would draw more current due to the increased frictional load and less fuel flow to cool them. More current means hotter wires, which could damage their insulation and result in a spark.
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So lets play the game. To get this to happen: #1. The tank is above the flash point #2. The fuel pump in the center tank is running without fuel #3. The fuel pump is damaged and causing an overload #4. The overload does not trip a breaker on the circuit #5. The overload causes the wiring to be damaged #6. A spark occurs from the damaged wiring which ignites the air/fuel mixture in the fuel tank Do I have this correct? |
Some of those things are inter-related, so I would say it is not 6 individual things having to line up, but I still think it is more plausible than a missile.
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Besides, "the government can't do anything right" right? If that's the conventional wisdom with everything else then how come the government is, conversely, so highly skilled at covering up presidential murder conspiracies and airliner explosions inflight? People are blabbermouths. (Yes, here I am blabbering on the Internet. Point taken.) If TWA 800 had been shot-down by a military missile firing error it would have come out right away. The news media would have feasted on that. Talk about a great story--the national media would have absolutely eaten that up, especially with a Democrat in the White House. (The media is only as "liberal" as its corporate suits allow it to be.) Someone would have uncovered that fact right away. Pierre Salinger, an early proponent of the missile theory, was treated as a wacko by the media. Yeah, they put him on the air, but it was not as a credible commentator but as a sideshow nutcase. It basically ruined his reputation IMO. Maybe there is a conspiracy. It would have to include all levels of government and all levels of the media. Any one person who tried to shed light on the conspiracy would have to be dealt with. How? Threaten to ruin their career? Or worse, have the "black ops guys" deal with that person? Sounds like that could spin out of control pretty fast and then the rest of the news media swims in fast and starts feasting. Sometimes the real explanation is the simplest one. |
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http://forms.house.gov/israel/issues/shoulderfiredmissiles.pdf In general I think the NTSB is right on the mark and doesn't miss much in accident investigations. They got it exactly right when my dad's Glassair went down in April 1996. Everyone overlooks something sometimes and the Flt 800 investigation does not ring true to me... but I could be wrong... :) |
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