@Ali Jalali On the 737s the weight of the engines was lower than the plane's centre of gravity, causing the nose of the aircraft to rise when thrust was increased, and that probably contributed to to a stall, combined with the faulty angle of attack sensors. In the case of the 777, taking off into a strong headwind on a desert runway, the low engine might have sucked in grit , initiating the subsequent fire.
The 777 accident used pw4000 engines and not ge90 - also the things you mentioned are all calculated. It was a failure because the engine model has had that exact failure a few times
@Ali Jalali there are just two different engine options for that aircraft model, it's just a matter of what the airline chooses, this is how many other planes such as the a320 work.
This is what a true plane start up sound like
this is why i became an aerospace engineer
My dream pilot
Sounds great 777 300er G90
I like listening to these engines spool up
This song represents flying ❤
Great sound.
lol I found you
Lol.
Love It!
Amazing..!!
i accidently broke my ears but i love this bass
0:18
Where are you heading to?
John F. Kennedy / NewYork
Where is this plane going
John F. Kennedy / NewYork
But taking off from where?
@@nathanfitzgerald6651 Cairo International Airport
@@nathanfitzgerald6651 to JFK
Best symphony!!!
Those engines droop too low beneath the wing. That could have been a factor in recent accidents.
@Ali Jalali On the 737s the weight of the engines was lower than the plane's centre of gravity, causing the nose of the aircraft to rise when thrust was increased, and that probably contributed to to a stall, combined with the faulty angle of attack sensors.
In the case of the 777, taking off into a strong headwind on a desert runway, the low engine might have sucked in grit , initiating the subsequent fire.
The 777 accident used pw4000 engines and not ge90 - also the things you mentioned are all calculated. It was a failure because the engine model has had that exact failure a few times
@Ali Jalali there are just two different engine options for that aircraft model, it's just a matter of what the airline chooses, this is how many other planes such as the a320 work.