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colyncase on earthlink wrote:
where does the lack of gyron
come in to play? are you saying a CFS doesn't know which way is up if
the pitot is blocked?
The CFS system displays what the sensors tell it to display. I believe
the aircraft had a Crossbow 520 which to the best of my recollection
uses GPS aiding, not air data aiding to compute the attitude. On April
9, I posted the following to the LML, guessing what the pilot may have
seen:
While we are talking scary, think about the following scenario:
The pitot tube is blocked due to icing. The windshield may be iced
over
as well, blocking all outside references even if the airplane does
break
out into VMC.
The airplane is descending, causing the indicated airspeed to decrease
(the
difference between the increasing static pressure at lower altitudes
and
the "high pressure" air trapped in the pitot system is becoming less
and
less).
The pilot pushes the nose down making the dive steeper and decreasing
the
ground speed reported by the GPS. The decreasing ground speed
correlates
with the decreasing indicated airspeed. Even the unwinding altimeter
could
be interpreted as a stalled airplane in a descent by someone focused on
a
stall as the main problem.
Can an average pilot assess the situation with enough confidence to
overcome
all their training and cut the power and pull up when everything is
pointing
to a stall or an imminent stall? Can an average pilot do that in less
time
than it took you to read this post?
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