Grazie per la tua preziosa testimonianza, nel nostro paese il Comet ebbe diversi incidenti.sardinian aviator ha scritto:cico140976 ha scritto:CHE INVIDIA!!!!!!sardinian aviator ha scritto: Jet:
Comet IV C
Eh, lo so, tu pensa che mi invidio da solo e non riesco a capacitarmi che non ce ne siano più in circolazione (almeno credo) eccetto il Nimrod.
Ho avuto il piacere di volarci di volarci due volte, l'una nel 1962 da bambino sulla tratta LHR-FCO con la BEA e la seconda LGW-AHO con la Dan Air Services nel 1978. La cosa che mi impressionò di più era la "vastita" delle poltrone ed il corridoio rialzato rispetto al livello delle poltrone stesse: Già nel 1978 sembrava uno spreco di spazio concedere ai pax di voli charter tanta comodità...!
In cockpit poi c'era un'aria vintage: ricordo una specie di passamontagna integrali per i piloti con cuffie audio incorporate. stile bombardieri, color grigioverde. microfoni preistorici oltre a strumenti solo analogici (evidentemente): una delizia.
Status: Final
Date: 10 JAN 1954
Time: 10:00 UTC
Type: de Havilland DH-106 Comet 1
Operator: BOAC
Registration: G-ALYP
C/n / msn: 06003
First flight: 1951
Total airframe hrs: 3681
Engines: 4 de Havilland Ghost 50
Crew: Fatalities: 6 / Occupants: 6
Passengers: Fatalities: 29 / Occupants: 29
Total: Fatalities: 35 / Occupants: 35
Airplane damage: Destroyed
Airplane fate: Written off (damaged beyond repair)
Location: 16 km (10 mls) S off Elba (Italy)
Phase: En route (ENR)
Nature: International Scheduled Passenger
Departure airport: Roma-Ciampino Airport (CIA/LIRA), Italy
Destination airport: London-Heathrow Airport (LHR/EGLL), United Kingdom
Flightnumber: 781
Narrative:
Comet G-ALYP left Rome-Ciampino Airport (CIA) at 09:31 UTC on a flight to London. After taking off the aircraft was in touch with Ciampino control tower by radio telephone and from time to time reported its position. These reports indicated that the flight was proceeding according to the B.O.A.C. flight plan and the last of them, which was received at 09:50, said that the aircraft was over the Orbetello Beacon. The Captain of another B.O.A.C. aircraft, Argonaut G-ALHJ, gave evidence of communications which passed between him and G-ALYP. The last such message received by the Argonaut began " George How Jig from George Yoke Peter did you get my " and then broke off. At that time, approximately 09:51, the aircraft was probably approaching a height of 27,000 feet. The Comet descended and crashed into the sea off the Island of Elba.
Initial examination and reconstruction of the wreckage of G-ALYP revealed several signs of inflight break-up. Shreds of cabin carpet were found trapped in the remains of the Comet's tail section; The imprint of a coin was found on a fuselage panel from the rear of the aircraft; and Smears and scoring on the rear fuselage were tested and found to be consistent to the paint applied to the passenger seats of the Comet.
When most of the wreckage was recovered, investigators found that fractures started on the roof, a window then smashed into the back elevators, the back fuselage then tore away, the outer wing structure fell, then the outer wing tips and finally the cockpit broke away and fuel from the wings set the debris on fire.
To find out what caused the first failure, BOAC donated G-ALYU for testing. The airframe was put in a huge water tank, the tank was filled, and water was pumped into the plane to simulate flight conditions. After the equivalent of only 3,000 flights investigators at the Royal Aircraft Establishment (RAE) were able to conclude that the crash had been due to failure of the pressure cabin at the forward ADF window in the roof. This 'window' was in fact one of two apertures for the aerials of an electronic navigation system in which opaque fibreglass panels took the place of the window 'glass.' The failure was a result of metal fatigue caused by the repeated pressurisation and de-pressurisation of the aircraft cabin. Another worrying fact was that the supports around the windows were only riveted not glued, as the original specifications for the aircraft had called for. The problem was exacerbated by the punch rivet construction technique employed. Unlike drill riveting, the imperfect nature of the hole created by punch riveting may cause the start of fatigue cracks around the rivet.
The Comet's pressure cabin had been designed to a safety factor comfortably in excess of that required by British Civil Airworthiness Requirements (2.5x P as opposed to the requirement of 1.33x P and an ultimate load of 2x P, P being the cabin 'Proof' pressure) and the accident caused a revision in the estimates of the safe loading strength requirements of airliner pressure cabins.
PROBABLE CAUSE: "We have formed the opinion that the accident at Elba was caused by structural failure of the pressure cabin, brought about by fatigue. We reach this opinion for the following reasons: -
(i) The low fatigue resistance of the cabin has been demonstrated by the test described in Part 3, and the test result is interpretable as meaning that there was, at the age of the Elba aeroplanes a definite risk of fatigue failure occurring.
(ii) The cabin was the first part of the aeroplane to fail in the Elba accident.
(iii) The wreckage indicates that the failure in the cabin was of the same basic type as that produced in the fatigue test.
(iv) This explanation seems to us to be consistent with all the circumstantial evidence.
(v) The only other defects found in the aeroplane were not concerned at Elba, as demonstrated by the wreckage. "