AVIATION-Aircraft Machenism

AVIATION-Aircraft Machenism

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19/08/2019

AMEs are the scape goat. Everytime DGCA suspends the AMEs if any thing happens . They will not reach the cause of incident whether AME was pressurised, fatigued, harassed or worked under adverse environmental conditions. 16 AMEs got suspended in last 3 years because AMEs has ordered the spares before pilot entered the snag in tech log. In this case are AMEs got benefited by any means, I will surely say NO. They did because operator pressurised/requested them. In these cases are the AME only responsible person, thr is no pilot fault ultimately he is flying the aircraft and he is not entering the snag in tech log means he has flown the faulty Aircraft knowingly. Thr is no responsibility of CAMO and Accountable manager but every time AMEs become the scape goat.
Technically thr is no fault in pilot , ame and camo because they all are saving thr jobs to run thr houses but our regularity body doesn't understand this. They have to understand that main culprit is owner, who actually got benefited but thr is no system to punish them.
To save our licences and jobs we have to have form one association.....

Photos 24/11/2016

EMIRATES AND DUBAI MIRACLE GARDEN BUILD WORLD's LARGEST FLORAL INSTALLATION IN SHAPE OF AN EMIRATES A380
A new botanical wonder has taken root at the heart of the world’s largest natural flower garden in Dubai. Emirates Airline has teamed up with Dubai Miracle Garden to construct the world’s largest floral installation through a life-size version of the Emirates A380, covered in more than 500,000 fresh flowers and living plants. When in full bloom, the aircraft structure will have an unprecedented total stem count of 5 million flowers and will weigh over 100 tonnes (take-off weight of an actual A380 is 575 tonnes). Learn more about what went into creating this incredible aircraft installation.
Boutros Boutros, Divisional Senior Vice President, Corporate Communications, Marketing & Brand said: “The Emirates A380 is a statement making aircraft that is tremendously popular with passengers around the world, and we hope that through our collaborative efforts with Dubai Miracle Garden we will inform, inspire and delight visitors through the sheer scale and beauty of the floral A380 installation. Aviation affects all of our lives, and the A380 on showcase will offer visitors the opportunity to get up close to the double-decker. The progressive environmental initiatives and methods of building and planting the Emirates A380 installation are also in harmony with the eco-efficiency of the aircraft.”
Abdel Naser Rahhal, Co-Founder and Creator of Dubai Miracle Garden said: “Having an Emirates A380 is a great achievement for Dubai Miracle Garden and we are proud to have the floral installation of the aircraft as the world’s largest floral sculpture ever built. This standing piece of art is a result of countless hours of brainstorming, designing and strategizing to pull all of the details together. At Dubai Miracle Garden, we showcase everyday objects and give them life through flowers and plants, creating a connection with our visitors. We hope that when visitors get up close to

Photos 23/10/2016
AME Online Examination- VIMAN - AeroCareers 23/10/2016

DGCA is going to apply module system very soon.it has been published on DGCA's official web page VIMAN.visit out here-
http://aerocareers.in/ame-online-examination-viman/

AME Online Examination- VIMAN - AeroCareers   The Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) has been conducting examinations for issue of Aircraft Maintenance Engineers (AME) License, in accordance with Rule 61 of Indian Aircraft Rules 1937. The Central Examination Organisation(CEO) of DGCA, located at R. K. Puram, New Delhi is responsible...

Notable decompression accidents and incidents - Uncontrolled decompression - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia 14/08/2016

What happens if you open the plane door during a flight? It’s one of the nervous flier’s (numerous) nightmare scenarios. A potty fellow passenger makes a beeline for the emergency exit and yanks the door open, sending themselves, and any unsecured trolley dollies and holidaymakers, spinning into the stratosphere.
That nightmare almost became reality this week, when a female passenger attempted to open the cabin door on board a Jetstar service between Sydney and Avalon. The crew managed to restrain her and she was arrested once the plane touched down.
But are our fears founded? What would have happened had she been successful? Should someone actually manage to open the door of a large passenger aircraft at high altitude, the cabin would lose pressure – extremely rapidly – and chaos would ensue.
Even instances of slow decompression, of which there are an estimated 40 to 50 a year, can be fatal. In 2005 a Boeing 737 operated by Helios Airways crashed, killing all 121 passengers and crew (the deadliest air disaster in Greek history), after a gradual loss of cabin pressure. The lack of oxygen at 30,000 feet left the crew incapacitated, and the plane – on auto-pilot – slowly ran out of fuel, before plunging to the ground.
In such instances, oxygen masks (with enough oxygen to last several minutes) should drop from the ceiling to stave off hypoxia (a lack of oxygen, which leads to sluggish thinking, dimmed visions, unconsiousness and then death). In the cockpit, the flight crew will don their rubber masks and begin a rapid descent to a safe altitude – anything below 10,000ft (mountainous obstacles notwithstanding).
Sudden decompression, which would occur if a plane door was suddenly thrust open, is another matter. Anyone standing near
the exit would be ejected into the sky; the cabin temperature would quickly plummet to frostbite-inducing levels, and the plane itself might even begin to break apart. In 1988, an Aloha Airlines flight (also a Boeing 737) with 90 people on board was en route to Honolulu, cruising at an altitude of 24,000 feet, when a small section of the roof ruptured.
The resulting “explosive” decompression tore off a larger section of the roof, and a 57-year-old flight attendant called Clarabelle Lansing was swept from her seat and out of the hole in the aircraft. Luckily, all other passengers were belted up, and the pilot managed to land 13 minutes later, avoiding further loss of life. Dozens of other examples of explosive decompression have been recorded ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uncontrolled_decompression ) , and it often doesn’t end well. And let’s not forget the vaguely hilarious demise of James Bond’s nemesis Goldfinger (see video below).
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/content/dam/Travel/2016/may/oxy-masks-BDBNWF_3477877b-large.jpg
Fortunately, while decompression can be dangerous, it is not going to happen because a fellow flier fancied a bit of fresh air for one simple reason: it is simply impossible to open a plane door during a flight.
“Cabin pressure won’t allow it,” explains Patrick Smith, an airline pilot and author of Cockpit Confidential, a book about air travel. “Think of an aircraft door as a drain plug, fixed in place by the interior pressure. Almost all aircraft exits open inward. Some retract upward into the ceiling; others swing outward; but they open inward first.
“At a typical cruising altitude, up to eight pounds of pressure are pushing against every square inch of interior fuselage. That’s over 1,100 pounds against each square foot of door.”
So even Chuck Norris couldn’t open it. But what about at lower altitudes, when cabin pressure is reduced?
“A meager two pounds per square inch is still more than anyone can displace — even after six cups of coffee and the aggravation that comes with sitting behind a shrieking baby,” says Smith. “The doors are further secured by a series of electrical and/or mechanical latches. You would need a hydraulic jack, and airport security doesn’t allow those.”
But there has been at least one incident when a passenger did manage to open the door of an aircraft while it was in the sky. In 1971 “Dan Cooper” hijacked a Boeing 727, extorted a $200,000 ransom, and then leapt from the rear exit with a parachute, never to be seen again. However, he had the pilot depressurise the plane in order to do so, while a year later “Cooper vanes” were installed to completely disable aircraft doors while the landing gear is up.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/content/dam/Travel/2016/may/skydive_2670353b-large.jpg
Incidentally, the reason skydivers or military personnel can regularly leap from aircraft doors is because those planes are not pressurised.
On the ground, however, the situation changes — as one would hope, with the possibility of an evacuation in mind.
Smith explains: “While the plane is taxiing, you will get the door to open. You will also activate the door’s emergency escape slide. As an aircraft approaches the gate, you will sometimes hear the cabin crew calling out ‘doors to manual’. This has to do with overriding the automatic deployment function of the slides. Those slides can unfurl with enough force to kill a person, and you don’t want them billowing onto the jet bridge or into a catering truck.”

Notable decompression accidents and incidents - Uncontrolled decompression - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Decompression incidents are not uncommon on military and civilian aircraft, with approximately 40–50 rapid decompression events occurring worldwide annually.[26] In the majority of cases the problem is relatively manageable for aircrew.[11] Consequently, where passengers and the aircraft do not suff...

cdn.planeandpilotmag.com 12/07/2016

Revolutionary Electric Motor Makes First Flight
Researchers at Siemens have developed a new type of electric motor that delivers a continuous output of about 260 kilowatts—five times more than comparable drive systems. Weighing just 110 pounds, the propulsion system completed its first public flight at Schwarze-Heide Airport near Dinslaken, Germany, where it powered an Extra 330LE aerobatic plane—in near silence.
According to Siemens researchers, this advance means that hybrid-electric aircraft with four or more seats now will be possible.
http://cdn.planeandpilotmag.com/2016/07/elec-650.jpg
Siemens thinks the Extra 330LE, which weighs 2,200 pounds, is particularly well suited for taking the components of the new propulsion system to their limits, testing them and giving Siemens engineers clues toward enhancing their design.
Additionally, Siemens will be contributing this technology to a joint cooperative project that Siemens and Airbus agreed to in April 2016 for developing electrically powered flight. The companies will be using this motor as a basis for developing regional airliners powered by hybrid-electric propulsion systems.
“By 2030, we expect to see initial aircraft with up to 100 passengers and a range of around 1,000 kilometers [540 nm],” said Frank Anton, head of eAircraft at Siemens’ central research unit Corporate Technology.

cdn.planeandpilotmag.com

30/06/2016

13 Things you didn’t know about the Boeing 747
Introduced in the 1970s with Pan Am, nothing has ever screamed “American prosperity” quite like a double-decker plane, the Boeing 747. Large enough to destroy even the most claustrophobic passenger’s fears, these airborne islands—with penthouse apartments for business class—blew minds every time their wheels eased off and on the tarmac.
The elephantine planes could have been reduced to a few years of hubristic service, but these jumbo jets beat the odds and rising fuel costs to enjoy an enormous reign as the “Queen of the Skies.” They still hold a few routes today, thanks to Lufthansa, KLM, British Airways, and United.
They were cool when we were in kindergarten, and they’re still cool now. Here’re some awesome 747 facts you probably don’t know.
1. Boeing 747s have flown more than 3.5 billion people.
That is almost half the planet’s population.
2. The 350-400 person Boeing 747 once carried 1,087 people at once.
During the Operation Solomon evacuation, Israel played some serious clown airplane, tripling standard capacity by modifying the airplane. This beat Quantas’ 747 evacuation record of 674.
3. It takes 90 gallons of paint to paint a Boeing 747.
This is the same volume as a 30-minute shower with a decent-flow/Kramer-approvedshower head, and looks sweet in time-lapse.
4. There are 14 stairs to the upper deck.
Maybe not that impressive on its own, but this is a plane with stairs, people. Think about that!
5. That upper deck alone has the same square footage as a 737.
Did we mention this is a big plane?
6. Boeing has modified around 15 of their 1,500 Boeing 747 planes for special purposes.
Air Force Ones, E-5 military command centers, space shuttle carriers, refueling tanker planes, and the Dreamlifter…the plane that looks like an anaconda that ate a horse. This one in particular was built to transport the fuselage of Boeing’s new jumbo jet, the Dreamliner. A few others are also modified to be converted at a moment’s notice into cargo planes.
7. The Wright brothers could have fit their historic first flight inside a Boeing 747.
And could have stayed strictly within the 150-foot economy section.
8. The landing gear tires are filled with nitrogen to prevent explosive tire blow outs.
This, in turn, prevents spilled Bloody Marys.
9. It was originally designed to be converted into a cargo plane.
When Boeing created the original design, they assumed supersonic travel was going to be the standard, but that subsonic cargo planes would be future-proof. It turned out that subsonic travel was pretty future-proof as well.
10. There are 365 switches, dials, and lights in the incredibly confusing cockpit.
One for every day of the year. Apparently this is down from 971.
11. The engine fan diameter is almost as girthy as a B-29 bomber.
Which was an enormous plane in its day.
12. The engine noise of the current Boeing 747 is about half that of the original Pratt & Whitney engines.
It is still, however, f***ing loud.
13. It would take Usain Bolt seven seconds to run from tip to tail.
To be fair, the 747 can cover 100 meters in 0.36 seconds, besting Bolt’s time by 9.22 seconds.

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