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ATR 72 with four crew and 58 pax crashed near Sao Paulo. No survivors. Aircraft entered a flat spin.
T-Tails are notorious for stalling when they get iced up. When they stall, the aircraft is almost always irrecoverable. In general, stalling a T-Tail aircraft results in a proverbial “deep stall,” where the stabilator is blocked from receiving airflow from the fuselage and the only way to recover is to change the aerodynamic configuration of the aircraft (flaps/speed brake) to help a nose over, or use inertial forces to recover (by “rocking” the aircraft out of the stall, although you need fairly heavy control surfaces and/or large control surfaces movements to be effective)Watching the video, the only thing I can think of is that the aircraft was badly out of CG (too much cargo aft?); it stalled somehow and there was no getting the nose down…
I didn’t really think about icing until I heard about the Sigmet for severe icing around the time and place of the accident.T-Tails are notorious for stalling when they get iced up. When they stall, the aircraft is almost always irrecoverable. In general, stalling a T-Tail aircraft results in a proverbial “deep stall,” where the stabilator is blocked from receiving airflow from the fuselage and the only way to recover is to change the aerodynamic configuration of the aircraft (flaps/speed brake) to help a nose over, or use inertial forces to recover (by “rocking” the aircraft out of the stall, although you need fairly heavy control surfaces and/or large control surfaces movements to be effective)
You learn something new every day on Army.ca!T-Tails are notorious for stalling when they get iced up. When they stall, the aircraft is almost always irrecoverable. In general, stalling a T-Tail aircraft results in a proverbial “deep stall,” where the stabilator is blocked from receiving airflow from the fuselage and the only way to recover is to change the aerodynamic configuration of the aircraft (flaps/speed brake) to help a nose over, or use inertial forces to recover (by “rocking” the aircraft out of the stall, although you need fairly heavy control surfaces and/or large control surfaces movements to be effective)
…and even more from some of the old test pilots at Boeing and McDonnell-Douglas:You learn something new every day on Army.ca!
T-tail - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
Supersonic- is there an advantage to T tailed aircraft?T-Tails are notorious for stalling when they get iced up. When they stall, the aircraft is almost always irrecoverable. In general, stalling a T-Tail aircraft results in a proverbial “deep stall,” where the stabilator is blocked from receiving airflow from the fuselage and the only way to recover is to change the aerodynamic configuration of the aircraft (flaps/speed brake) to help a nose over, or use inertial forces to recover (by “rocking” the aircraft out of the stall, although you need fairly heavy control surfaces and/or large control surfaces movements to be effective)