Folks, I'm new to this board. I was an Eastern Air Lines pilot for 31 years and had flown both the A300 and the L1011 when I left three years before my age would have required it.
In the mid nineteen-sixties, there was a spate of accidents in the lower tier of the US in which large jet aircraft (both passenger and military) were literally falling out of the sky on a somewhat regular basis. At that time, I wrote a paper that suggested an explanation for the problem. Eastern published it in its internal newsletter but, so far as I know, it never went much farther. Their training, however, added some procedures that incorporated some of the suggestions I had made to avoid the problem.
Having read all I could find (so far) about Air France's recent disaster over the Atlantic, I'm persuaded that my theory might explain it. Nothing I have read rules it out. I've sent copies of my old (and not-all-that-well-written) thesis to Air France's investigating body but never even received an acknowledgment.
I'm looking for a computer simulator that can be used to test this theory. It has to do with the formation of "eddies" aloft, penetration of those hyper-swift currents of air, the subsequent loss of lift as momentum carries the aircraft out of those currents, and the subsequent reaction of the aircraft when the airfoils are deprived of that lift.
Is there a simulator (preferably an Airbus) among those in the library of this organization that I can download and create this scenario with reasonably realistic and recordable results? Better yet, might i be able to focus on specific instruments during the course of the session?
Any help would be appreciated. Thanks in advance.
Ellis







People Eating Tasty Animals.
