The problem isn't flights *over* the areas in question. It's descending or ascending through it that they're really bothered about. Job was spot on when he said that the lockdown was due to a weather forecast rather than hard facts, data and observations. The airlines and Govts know this so they had to get some planes up to determine the actual situation. The general impression of the flights themselves were good, but the engines will need to be inspected for damage (if any).
What bothers me is the lack of a sense of proportion. This ash dust is finer than talcum powder so it floats on air currents easily. A plane flies along at 400-600mph at 30,000-35,000feet. To put it in context, sandblasting equipment has a nozzle speed of about 600mph. The particle density of the ash "cloud" is much much lower than a sandblaster so abrasion shouldn't be an issue. The only factor I can't comment on is powder getting into the engines because that is a specialised area of mechanics.
Very soon, the politicians are under immense pressure, cos it's costing us big and the whole thing is totally over the top safety wise.
Another symptom of our litigation age.
Then again would YOU want to be on the first flight?
its all fine and well moaning that the government etc is being overcautious but it only takes one plane to fall, just one. Sending out 1 test flight isnt quite the same as sending up thousands of planes now is it?
Been alot more then 1 test flight, been at least a dozen now of various journey lengths and not a single one has shown any problem with the engines. They were doing final tests to see if there was any damage done to the propellers etc within the engine last I knew, but from what they could tell there wasnt any real additional wear to them.
When you think that alot of airlines are in major debt as is, and this is costing airlines about £120m a day (combined), something that wont be covered by any insurance (act of god), then this cant really go on else every airline will end up bust.
Tell people it at their own risk and be done with it![]()
There's a whole world of difference between flying right through the plume as all the aircraft did with failed engines and flying 1500 miles away through air so thin with ash it's like throwing a teaspoon of talcum powder at the plane.
There´s also a whole world of difference between being responsible for people´s lives and sitting in your chair, picking your nose while writing clever statements although you actually don´t know jack shit.
maybe, but what would happen if a plane actually did crash because of the ashes if they DID open up the airspace?Yea, been reading up, seems it's been totally overblown by the government
People bitching about the government saying "oh let the planes fly and tell people it's at their own risk if anything happens" don't seem to be considering themselves or their loved ones being on a flight that goes down. No one has the right to fuck around with hundreds of people's lives, and the knock on effect on their loved ones etc, in a situation that we really don't know enough about yet. If they had said it was safe to fly and people got killed the same people bitching now would be up in arms about it, and talking about criminal charges etc. Whatever they do people are just gonna bitch, so I'd much rather they get bitched at without putting thousands of people's lives in danger.