Escape through Time Fire | Car | Plane | Ship One of the most important developments in the long-term improvements in aviation safety was the jet engine. Between 1946 and 1958, the United States averaged three major plane accidents and 42 fatalities a year in accidents caused primarily by engine failures. Since the introduction of the passenger jet in the late 1950s, the number of crashes due to engine failure plummeted, as did the total number of plane accidents.
While traditional piston engines improved greatly through the 1930s and '40s, they did not offer satisfactory reliability. |
All this changed with the jet engine. In 1958, National Airlines launched its jet service between New York and Miami. These early jet engines extended the "time between overhaul" (TBO) to 6,200 hours and then to 20,000 hours. Today, with proper maintenance, jet engines can perform up to 50,000 hours before a complete overhaul is needed.
The Boeing 707, the first commercially successful jet engine-powered plane, marked a new era of safer, more powerful airplanes. |
back to topThe Flight Data Recorder is a powerful tool for avoiding plane accidents. This instrument provides investigators with information necessary to determine the cause of an accident. It also educates aircraft engineers striving to build planes whose improved design ensures that similar accidents will not happen.
Early flight recorders recorded time, air speed, altitude, vertical acceleration, and heading on metallic foil. |
Today's flight recorders can keep track of more than 700 parameters, which are stored on computer chips. |
How does one go about finding the FDR, or "black box," after an accident? For one thing, the FDR is not black at all, but rather bright orange, and it's covered in reflective material, making it easier to locate. In addition, a sonar pinger is attached to each recorder. These pingers have their own batteries and are activated by water. Once initiated, the box will emit a sound every second for 30 days.
In order to ensure that the FDR survives the crash, it undergoes a series of tests. Shot from a pneumatic cannon at a solid barrier, the storage media must be able to withstand an impact of 3,400 G's. (G's measure the force exerted by gravity on a body as it is accelerating.) Penetration resistance is tested by pounding a quarter-inch-diameter hardened steel rod with a force of 500 pounds at the recorder's weakest point. Flames of 2,000°F engulf the FDR, which also must be capable of surviving for 30 days under 20,000 feet of saltwater.
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Ground Proximity Flying in clouds or in darkness poses some major risks, the most basic of which is inadvertently flying into the ground. While the plane may be in complete control, loss of visibility may result in a severe accident with mountainous terrain or flat ground other than the intended landing site. These crashes, called "controlled flight into terrain" (CFIT), were major problems until one piece of technology presented an extremely effective solution.
Early Ground Proximity Warning System displays offered basic but vital information, which enabled pilots to avoid controlled flight in terrain, once a devastating problem in commercial flight. |
Today's Enhanced Ground Proximity Warning Systems can accurately predict potential dangers using the Global Positioning System. These detailed displays indicate the contours of approaching terrain and designate their proximity to the airplane's altitude with colors. |
back to topAs airplanes began to fill the sky, mid-air collisions became a real threat. In 1976, public concern over these accidents lead to the Separation Assurance Program, which, among other things, called for the development of the Beacon Collision Avoidance System (BCAS). The search for such a device was not new. As early as 1955, the Air Transport Association had been working to develop this equipment; the FAA joined the search in 1959. By 1976, the FAA had implemented a conflict alert system, capable of warning air traffic controllers of less-than-standard separation at all 20 air-route traffic control centers in the U.S.
The FAA tests the Boeing 727 and its Traffic Alert and Collision Avoidance System (TCAS) equipment. |
This Traffic Alert and Collision Avoidance System II Display indicates traffic dead ahead 600 feet below and another aircraft coming at 400 feet above. The pilot will get an advisory to climb or descend if the TCAS computer calculates that a collision hazard exists. |
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A microburst descends from a storm and sends strong surface winds outwards, creating a dangerous situation for planes that are landing or taking off. |
The first approach to combating this problem was a Low Level Wind Shear Alert System (LLWAS) that became operational at major airports in 1978. This system detected severe downdrafts and wind changes with wind speed and direction sensors around the airport periphery. When a microburst was detected, an alarm sounded in the control tower, and pilots in the area were informed.
By 1988, the FAA issued a rule that went a step further: All turbine-powered airliners seating 30 passengers or more must carry equipment that both warns pilots when they encounter low-altitude wind shear and provides them with information to escape safely. At first, these systems were reactive: Detecting sudden changes in airspeed due to horizontal wind, an alarm informed the pilot that they were flying in wind shear conditions. The pilot was then able to react properly and avoid stalling.
New, forward-looking wind shear detectors make visually clear to pilots hazardous wind shear conditions ahead. |
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Satellites positioned around the world have enabled pilots to use the Global Positioning System to accurately determine their coordinates. |
More recently, new navigational systems have built upon the success of GPS. In 1996, the Driver's Enhanced Vision System became operational at Boston Logan airport. This equipment, which uses satellite, digital, and infrared technologies, assists emergency crews when visibility is limited by smoke, flames, fog, or precipitation.
The Local Area Augmentation System (LAAS) may enhance the accuracy of the Global Positioning System enough to allow pilots to use GPS to make precision landings with zero visibility. |
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Photos/Illustrations: (1,3,5,7-9) National Archives/FAA; (2) Courtesy of Boeing; (4,6,10) AlliedSignal; (11,12) FAA.
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