When Pilots treat the Aircraft Like a TOY! | Air Crash Investigation
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Channel: Mentour Pilot
Views: 1,798,830
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Keywords: pinnacle airlines flight 3701, bombardier crj 200, bombardier crj 200 takeoff, aviation accidents, aviation accidents documentary, aviation accident clips crash animation, aviation accident investigation, Aircrash, air crash investigation, air crash 2021, Fear of flying, fear of flying help, mayday air crash investigation, mayday air disaster, nervous flyer tips, nervous flyer help, mentour pilot crash, Mentour Pilot Pinnacle, Mentour Pilot, core lock jet engine
Id: DCMmCekKO_c
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 40min 57sec (2457 seconds)
Published: Fri Jun 25 2021
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Pilot here- airspeed is almost always dictated by nose attitude during flight. You canβt really βpull out of a stallβ. The stall breaks and you recover from it by nosing down to gain airspeed and then climbing again if possible. This is the process for all airplanes. Thrust from the engine means nothing when the aircraft is in a stalled condition. You can stall at any airspeed.
In fact if you enter a dive or spin as a result of a stall, the proper procedure is to pull your power all the way back as to not over speed the aircraft.
The deciding factor is something called the Critical Angle of Attack. Which is the angle of the chord line of the wing (think of a line from the root of the wing to the tip, bisecting it) in relation to the relative wind (wind flowing under and over wing).
When the critical angle of attack is exceeded (I.e. airflow over the wing has been disrupted) a stall will occur.
Mentour is a good aviation channel in general.
Kerbals know.
This is incredibly misleading. In almost no situations can a plane pull out of a stall without lowering the nose, or going nose down. The only aircraft that may have enough to overcome stall are fighter jets and even then only certain ones. What they are really doing is changing the wing angle to decrease air separation from the surface and Re establishing lift. So. No.
Why is that? Is because less oxygen at that height? Or.... help me out here lol