| ▲ | crote 8 hours ago | |
An important factor in AA 191 is that the engine leaving did significant damage to the hydraulic lines in that wing - including those for the leading-edge slats. At the time the plane was not equipped with any mechanism to keep the slats extended, so after hydraulic pressure was lost airflow over the wings caused them to retract, which significantly lowered that wing's stall speed. After AA 191 the DC-10 was equipped with a locking system: loss of pressure now results in the slats getting stuck in their current position. The MD-11 will undoubtedly also have this system, so a direct repeat of AA 191 is unlikely. | ||
| ▲ | AceyMan 3 minutes ago | parent [-] | |
> significantly raised the stall speed (yeah, it's one of those weird metrics where "bigger is worse", so you're absolved) | ||