I've seen suggestion the RAT was out? Which would indicate electrical failure, but not alleged thrust loss
Does double engine failure not also result in RAT deployment?
I've seen suggestion the RAT was out? Which would indicate electrical failure, but not alleged thrust loss
https://www.pprune.org/engineers-technicians/602364-787-fuel-system-question.htmlI've seen suggestion the RAT was out? Which would indicate electrical failure, but not alleged thrust loss imho though that's also very grainy footage and certainly not yet conclusive. Gear not being up is still the elephant in the room, as any normal take off or loss of thrust and gear up (to reduce drag) is first action on being airborne (unless it wouldn't go up?)
It's also not to long after being airborne it starts to sink, so if engines were working and producing thrust on runway, for them both to fail within seconds of being airborne, whilst not impossible, would be so extremely rare. If anything happened before V1 or thurst loss prior, they'd reject take off.
Sorry to others in getting technical with @PILTDOWN MAN !
I don't know the 787 intimately, I do know it's fly by wire, so you haven't got manual reversion hydraulic overide of controls without electrics working.
A double mechanical engine failure (birds) is super rare. Fuel contamination less so, but that should be checked on ground and it didnt seemingly flame out engines before getting airborne.
The "total electrical failure" theory, i struggle to believe could be a cause of total thrust loss even if RAT is out (which would indicate electrical power failure) as i can't imagine the 787, like other aircraft, wouldn't have sufficient critical systems redundancy for loss of engine driven AC electrical generators....
Electrical failure would make your day hard for sure, but it wouldn't normally stop the engines.
The engine fuel metering and FADEC are always normally connected to the hot battery bus on Boeing ot Airbus, the absolute essential systems which you can't switch off and which will give you at least 60 mins on battery power (DC-AC via invertor) with total AC generator power loss.
Still more questions than answers at this stage. Nothing yet seems overly clear or adds up.
There are two different 787 engine suppliers, GE and Rolls Royce. You’d have to know which this plane used, which I expect they do.If it was double engine failure, I'd hope they'd ground all of the same aircrafts, unless they were absolutely sure it couldn't happen to another plane.
One reason you couldn't hear the engines, is because the recording was someone filming another recording, so the audio was terrible.
There are two different 787 engine suppliers, GE and Rolls Royce. You’d have to know which this plane used, which I expect they do.
If you look at the video @Chicken Run posted that shows the “pure” video with the RAT deployed.
That is correct. Centre is higher pressure so centre tank is always first to drain when all pumps on to keep stability in wings (whose fuel burns last)https://www.pprune.org/engineers-technicians/602364-787-fuel-system-question.html
Appears that both engines would have fuel from the centre tank as it has a higher pressure output, I find that surprising but this pilot does raise it.
I’m not an expert but I hear a propeller noise, not two jet engines.Well yeah, you'd hope they know
Yes I've seen it. Can you not hear the engines in that?
I’m not an expert but I hear a propeller noise, not two jet engines.
While no expert in 787, yes it could (if RAT was out?) It would be so as loss of AC power (that comes from AC generators on both engines.Does double engine failure not also result in RAT deployment?
No u can hear the RAT engine which sounds like a single propWell yeah, you'd hope they know
Yes I've seen it. Can you not hear the engines in that?
No u can hear the RAT engine which sounds like a single prop
Two jet engines at takeoff thrust would be heard over a small prop.I think I can hear both
Two jet engines at takeoff thrust would be heard over a small prop.
The captain of the plane or the one in the video?So why didn't the Captain bother to mention it?
The captain of the plane or the one in the video?
He didThe one analysing the video in the video
He did. He said the sound was the prop not engine sounds. He put it at the top of his theory, double engine failure. Even mentioned fuel contamination which I have alluded to.The one analysing the video in the video
He didHe even showed test videos of low flying jets with the RAT deployed
He did. He said the sound was the prop not engine sounds. He put it at the top of his theory, double engine failure. Even mentioned fuel contamination which I have alluded to.
But he said repeatably twin engine failure. If both engines had failed they would still be turning unless seized and give off a whistling sound not a thrust one. In that video if the sound is right as he indicates those engines are not creating any thrust.I think you've misread what I posted. I know he posted videos of jets with RATs, and said that he thought that was deployed on the Air India flight. He says he thinks it's double engine failure. But presumably the engines losing power would mean engine failure even if they're still running to some extent?
I don't think he says that the engines can't be heard. He said that you can hear (and see) the prop (and that top of his theory) but I don't think he said there's no sound of the jets. Maybe there is no sound of the jets at all, or maybe they're quieter than they should be. I just don't think he said.
But he said repeatably twin engine failure.
If both engines had failed they would still be turning unless seized and give off a whistling sound not a thrust one.
In that video if the sound is right as he indicates those engines are not creating any thrust.