9-11 - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
The Impossibility of Flying Heavy Aircraft Without Training |
|
by Nila Sagadevan Physics 911 Entered into the database on Monday, February 20th, 2006 @ 18:09:55 MST |
|
There are some who maintain that the mythical 9/11 hijackers, although
proven to be too incompetent to fly a little Cessna 172, had acquired the impressive
skills that enabled them to fly airliners by training in flight simulators. What follows is an attempt to bury this myth once and for all, because
I’ve heard this ludicrous explanation bandied about, ad nauseam,
on the Internet and the TV networks—invariably by people who know nothing
substantive about flight simulators, flying, or even airplanes. A common misconception non-pilots have about simulators is how “easy”
it is to operate them. They are indeed relatively easy to operate if the objective
is to make a few lazy turns and frolic about in the “open sky”.
But if the intent is to execute any kind of a maneuver with even the least bit
of precision, the task immediately becomes quite daunting. And if the aim is
to navigate to a specific geographic location hundreds of miles away while flying
at over 500 MPH, 30,000 feet above the ground the challenges become virtually
impossible for an untrained pilot. And this, precisely, is what the four hijacker pilots who could not
fly a Cessna around an airport are alleged to have accomplished in
multi-ton, high-speed commercial jets on 9/11. For a person not conversant with the practical complexities of pilotage, a
modern flight simulator could present a terribly confusing and disorienting
experience. These complex training devices are not even remotely similar to
the video games one sees in amusement arcades, or even the software versions
available for home computers. In order to operate a modern flight simulator with any level of skill, one
has to not only be a decent pilot to begin with, but also a skilled instrument-rated
one to boot — and be thoroughly familiar with the actual aircraft type
the simulator represents, since the cockpit layouts vary between aircraft. The only flight domains where an arcade/PC-type game would even begin to approach
the degree of visual realism of a modern professional flight simulator would
be during the take-off and landing phases. During these phases, of course, one
clearly sees the bright runway lights stretched out ahead, and even peripherally
sees images of buildings, etc. moving past. Take-offs—even landings, to
a certain degree—are relatively “easy”, because the pilot
has visual reference cues that exist “outside”
the cockpit. But once you’ve rotated, climbed out, and reached cruising altitude in
a simulator (or real airplane), and find yourself en route to some distant destination
(using sophisticated electronic navigation techniques), the situation changes
drastically: the pilot loses virtually all external visual reference
cues. S/he is left entirely at the mercy of an array of complex flight
and navigation instruments to provide situational cues (altitude, heading, speed,
attitude, etc.) In the case of a Boeing 757 or 767, the pilot would be faced with an EFIS (Electronic
Flight Instrumentation System) panel comprised of six large multi-mode LCDs
interspersed with clusters of assorted “hard” instruments. These
displays process the raw aircraft system and flight data into an integrated
picture of the aircraft situation, position and progress, not only in horizontal
and vertical dimensions, but also with regard to time and speed as well. When
flying “blind”, I.e., with no ground reference cues, it takes a
highly skilled pilot to interpret, and then apply, this data intelligently.
If one cannot translate this information quickly, precisely and accurately (and
it takes an instrument-rated pilot to do so), one would have ZERO SITUATIONAL
AWARENESS. I.e., the pilot wouldn’t have a clue where s/he was
in relation to the earth. Flight under such conditions is referred to as “IFR”,
or Instrument Flight Rules. And IFR Rule #1: Never take your eyes off your instruments, because
that’s all you have! The corollary to Rule #1: If you can’t read the instruments in a quick,
smooth, disciplined, scan, you’re as good as dead. Accident
records from around the world are replete with reports of any number of good
pilots — I.e., professional instrument-rated pilots — who ‘bought
the farm’ because they screwed up while flying in IFR conditions. Let me place this in the context of the 9/11 hijacker-pilots. These men were
repeatedly deemed incompetent to solo a simple Cessna-172 — an elementary
exercise that involves flying this little trainer once around the patch on a
sunny day. A student’s first solo flight involves a simple circuit: take-off,
followed by four gentle left turns ending with a landing back on the runway.
This is as basic as flying can possibly get. Not one of the hijackers was deemed fit to perform this most elementary
exercise by himself. In fact, here’s what their flight instructors had to say about the aptitude
of these budding aviators: Mohammed Atta: "His attention span was zero." Khalid Al-Mihdhar: "We didn't kick him out, but he didn't live up to our
standards." Marwan Al-Shehhi: “He was dropped because of his limited English and
incompetence at the controls.” Salem Al-Hazmi: "We advised him to quit after two lessons.” Hani Hanjour: "His English was horrible, and his mechanical skills were
even worse. It was like he had hardly even ever driven a car. I’m still
to this day amazed that he could have flown into the Pentagon. He could not
fly at all.” Now let’s take a look at American Airlines Flight 77. Passenger/hijacker
Hani Hanjour rises from his seat midway through the flight, viciously fights
his way into the cockpit with his cohorts, overpowers Captain Charles F. Burlingame
and First Officer David Charlebois, and somehow manages to toss them out of
the cockpit (for starters, very difficult to achieve in a cramped environment
without inadvertently impacting the yoke and thereby disengaging the autopilot).
One would correctly presume that this would present considerable difficulties
to a little guy with a box cutter—Burlingame was a tough, burly, ex-Vietnam
F4 fighter jock who had flown over 100 combat missions. Every pilot who knows
him says that rather than politely hand over the controls, Burlingame would
have instantly rolled the plane on its back so that Hanjour would have broken
his neck when he hit the floor. But let’s ignore this almost natural reaction
expected of a fighter pilot and proceed with this charade. Nonetheless, imagine that Hanjour overpowers the flight deck crew, removes
them from the cockpit and takes his position in the captain’s seat. Although
weather reports state this was not the case, let’s say Hanjour was lucky
enough to experience a perfect CAVU day (Ceiling And Visibility Unlimited).
If Hanjour looked straight ahead through the windshield, or off to his left
at the ground, at best he would see, 35,000 feet -- 7 miles -- below him, a
murky brownish-grey-green landscape, virtually devoid of surface detail, while
the aircraft he was now piloting was moving along, almost imperceptibly and
in eerie silence, at around 500 MPH (about 750 feet every second). In a real-world scenario (and given the reported weather conditions that day),
he would likely have seen clouds below him completely obscuring the ground he
was traversing. With this kind of “situational non-awareness”, Hanjour
might as well have been flying over Argentina, Russia, or Japan—he wouldn’t
have had a clue as to where, precisely, he was. After a few seconds (at 750 ft/sec), Hanjour would figure out there’s
little point in looking outside—there’s nothing there to give him
any real visual cues. For a man who had previously wrestled with little Cessnas,
following freeways and railroad tracks (and always in the comforting presence
of an instructor), this would have been a strange, eerily unsettling environment
indeed. Seeing nothing outside, Mr. Hanjour would be forced to divert his attention
to his instrument panel, where he’d be faced with a bewildering array
of instruments. He would then have to very quickly interpret his heading, ground
track, altitude, and airspeed information on the displays before he could even
figure out where in the world he was, much less where the Pentagon was located
in relation to his position! After all, before he can crash into a target, he has to first find
the target. It is very difficult to explain this scenario, of an utter lack of ground reference,
to non-pilots; but let it suffice to say that for these incompetent hijacker
non-pilots to even consider grappling with such a daunting task would have been
utterly overwhelming. They wouldn’t have known where to begin. But, for the sake of discussion let’s stretch things beyond all plausibility
and say that Hanjour—whose flight instructor claimed “couldn’t
fly at all”—somehow managed to figure out their exact position on
the American landscape in relation to their intended target as they traversed
the earth at a speed five times faster than they had ever flown by themselves
before. Once he had determined exactly where he was, he would need to figure out where
the Pentagon was located in relation to his rapidly-changing position. He would
then need to plot a course to his target (one he cannot see with his eyes—remember,
our ace is flying solely on instruments). In order to perform this bit of electronic navigation, he would have to be
very familiar with IFR procedures. None of these chaps even knew what a navigational
chart looked like, much less how to how to plug information into flight management
computers (FMC) and engage LNAV (lateral navigation automated mode). If one
is to believe the official story, all of this was supposedly accomplished by
raw student pilots while flying blind at 500 MPH over unfamiliar (and practically
invisible) terrain, using complex methodologies and employing sophisticated
instruments. To get around this little problem, the official storyline suggests these men
manually flew their aircraft to their respective targets (NB: This still wouldn’t
relieve them of the burden of navigation). But let’s assume Hanjour disengaged
the autopilot and auto-throttle and hand-flew the aircraft to its intended—and
invisible—target on instruments alone until such time as he could get
a visual fix. This would have necessitated him to fly back across West Virginia
and Virginia to Washington DC. (This portion of Flight 77’s flight path
cannot be corroborated by any radar evidence that exists, because the aircraft
is said to have suddenly disappeared from radar screens over Ohio, but let’s
not mull over that little point.) According to FAA radar controllers, “Flight 77” then suddenly pops
up over Washington DC and executes an incredibly precise diving turn
at a rate of 360 degrees/minute while descending at 3,500 ft/min,
at the end of which “Hanjour” allegedly levels out at ground level.
Oh, I almost forgot: He also had the presence of mind to turn off the transponder
in the middle of this incredibly difficult maneuver (one of his instructors
later commented the hapless fellow couldn’t have spelt the word if his
life depended on it). The maneuver was in fact so precisely executed that the air traffic controllers
at Dulles refused to believe the blip on their screen was a commercial airliner.
Danielle O’Brian, one of the air traffic controllers at Dulles who reported
seeing the aircraft at 9:25 said, “The speed, the maneuverability, the
way that he turned, we all thought in the radar room, all of us experienced
air traffic controllers, that that was a military plane.” And then, all of a sudden we have magic. Voila! Hanjour finds the Pentagon
sitting squarely in his sights right before him. But even that wasn’t good enough for this fanatic Muslim kamikaze pilot.
You see, he found that his “missile” was heading towards one of
the most densely populated wings of the Pentagon—and one occupied by top
military brass, including the Secretary of Defense, Rumsfeld. Presumably in
order to save these men’s lives, he then executes a sweeping 270-degree
turn and approaches the building from the opposite direction and aligns himself
with the only wing of the Pentagon that was virtually uninhabited due to extensive
renovations that were underway (there were some 120 civilians construction workers
in that wing who were killed; their work included blast-proofing the outside
wall of that wing). I shan’t get into the aerodynamic impossibility of flying
a large commercial jetliner 20 feet above the ground at over 400 MPH. A discussion
on ground effect energy, tip vortex compression, downwash sheet reaction, wake
turbulence, and jetblast effects are beyond the scope of this article (the 100,000-lb
jetblast alone would have blown whole semi-trucks off the roads.) Let it suffice to say that it is physically impossible to
fly a 200,000-lb airliner 20 feet above the ground at 400 MPH. The author, a pilot and aeronautical engineer, challenges any
pilot in the world to do so in any large high-speed aircraft that has a relatively
low wing-loading (such as a commercial jet). I.e., to fly the craft at 400 MPH,
20 feet above ground in a flat trajectory over a distance of one mile. Why the stipulation of 20 feet and a mile? There were several street light
poles located up to a mile away from the Pentagon that were snapped-off by the
incoming aircraft; this suggests a low, flat trajectory during the final pre-impact
approach phase. Further, it is known that the craft impacted the Pentagon’s
ground floor. For purposes of reference: If a 757 were placed on the
ground on its engine nacelles (I.e., gear retracted as in flight profile),
its nose would be almost 20 above the ground! Ergo, for the aircraft to impact
the ground floor of the Pentagon, Hanjour would have needed
to have flown in with the engines buried 10-feet deep in the Pentagon lawn.
Some pilot. At any rate, why is such ultra-low-level flight aerodynamically impossible?
Because the reactive force of the hugely powerful downwash sheet, coupled with
the compressibility effects of the tip vortices, simply will not allow the aircraft
to get any lower to the ground than approximately one half the distance of its
wingspan—until speed is drastically reduced, which, of
course, is what happens during normal landings. In other words, if this were a Boeing 757 as reported, the plane could not
have been flown below about 60 feet above ground at 400 MPH. (Such a maneuver
is entirely within the performance envelope of aircraft with high wing-loadings,
such as ground-attack fighters, the B1-B bomber, and Cruise missiles—and
the Global Hawk.) The very same navigational challenges mentioned above would have faced the
pilots who flew the two 767s into the Twin Towers, in that they, too, would
have had to have first found their targets. Again, these chaps,
too, miraculously found themselves spot on course. And again, their “final
approach” maneuvers at over 500 MPH are simply far too incredible to have
been executed by pilots who could not solo basic training aircraft. Conclusion The writers of the official storyline expect us to believe, that once the flight
deck crews had been overpowered, and the hijackers “took control”
of the various aircraft, their intended targets suddenly popped up in their
windshields as they would have in some arcade game, and all that these fellows
would have had to do was simply aim their airplanes at the buildings and fly
into them. Most people who have been exposed only to the official storyline
have never been on the flight deck of an airliner at altitude and looked at
the outside world; if they had, they’d realize the absurdity of this kind
of reasoning. In reality, a clueless non-pilot would encounter almost insurmountable
difficulties in attempting to navigate and fly a 200,000-lb airliner into a
building located on the ground, 7 miles below and hundreds of miles away and
out of sight, and in an unknown direction, while flying at over 500 MPH —
and all this under extremely stressful circumstances. Nila Sagadevan is an aeronautical engineer and a qualified
pilot of heavy aircraft. |