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ladjf

(17,320 posts)
48. Some type of stall, depending on the exact speed and power at the time
Sat Mar 15, 2014, 01:56 PM
Mar 2014

of the stall. Pilot may be able to recover during the descent unless the plane went into an inverted spin.

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Its max ceiling is 43000 feet. n-t Logical Mar 2014 #1
Max ceiling.... Avalux Mar 2014 #6
And wings would not provide enough lift to go higher based on the size of the plane. nt Logical Mar 2014 #12
Ok, that makes sense.... Avalux Mar 2014 #13
Drunk. n-t Logical Mar 2014 #14
Certainly plausible...and really, really horrible to think about. n/t Avalux Mar 2014 #16
The stall would occur on the wings. The Velveteen Ocelot Mar 2014 #19
I didn't know that. I kept thinking engine stall. Avalux Mar 2014 #28
Yes. The Velveteen Ocelot Mar 2014 #31
I thought so. Avalux Mar 2014 #32
Too expensive The Velveteen Ocelot Mar 2014 #33
Yes that's true! Avalux Mar 2014 #34
It would stall and fall out of the sky Renew Deal Mar 2014 #2
Ok....so if it couldn't recover, would plummet and hit the ground. Avalux Mar 2014 #4
In my uneducated opinion, yes. Renew Deal Mar 2014 #10
My uneducated opinion tells me it depends on what angle they would have hit the water... Agschmid Mar 2014 #18
So if the pilot went up, then did a nosedive down into the water.... Avalux Mar 2014 #21
You would think... Agschmid Mar 2014 #26
The plane would disintegrate on impact. Similar to the aircraft in the 9/11 attacks. Gravitycollapse Mar 2014 #30
There is always debris Reter Mar 2014 #41
Let me clarify. I know what goes up must come down... Avalux Mar 2014 #42
The debris could be under water, the thing could have sunk. Or under vegetation in the uppityperson Mar 2014 #46
The density of the air would decrease until the wings lose too much lift or the engine stalls. Gravitycollapse Mar 2014 #3
But how high up could it go? Avalux Mar 2014 #5
It would be substantially higher than the service ceiling. By how much I'm not sure. Gravitycollapse Mar 2014 #17
It's wiki but it seems scientifically accurate... Agschmid Mar 2014 #20
Thank you. Avalux Mar 2014 #27
I don't... Agschmid Mar 2014 #29
Full throttle, probably about 70,000 feet. Loudly Mar 2014 #25
And then if the plane fell.... Avalux Mar 2014 #38
They found plenty of recognizable debris from Columbia. Loudly Mar 2014 #43
The air becomes so thin that no lift can be created. Loudly Mar 2014 #7
E.g. the last scene of the movie "The Right Stuff" Tommy_Carcetti Mar 2014 #9
It would stall and descend quickly. The Velveteen Ocelot Mar 2014 #8
Thank you. Avalux Mar 2014 #11
It depends on the aircraft type, weight, and the engines. The Velveteen Ocelot Mar 2014 #24
Malaysia joins the space race. penultimate Mar 2014 #15
It would bump into the space station. A HERETIC I AM Mar 2014 #22
And you gave me a laugh! Avalux Mar 2014 #23
Here's some info 2naSalit Mar 2014 #35
Heard expert say that the air is so thin there that the plane cannot get lift applegrove Mar 2014 #36
So there may not be debris. n/t Avalux Mar 2014 #39
No if the debris is from high up there would be a wide debris field I think. applegrove Mar 2014 #40
Water droplets??? The Velveteen Ocelot Mar 2014 #44
molecules....sorry. I'm not good at verbatim recall. applegrove Mar 2014 #45
Outer space! Calista241 Mar 2014 #37
stall out? n/t 2pooped2pop Mar 2014 #47
Some type of stall, depending on the exact speed and power at the time ladjf Mar 2014 #48
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