e-tek
Well-known member
Thought one of you know-alls would be able to answer this: Why don't they put screens over jet engines to avoid "bird-strikes" like occured today when the plane went into the Hudson??
. Setting aside for a moment the obvious gravity of the LaGuardia situation - from a pure engineering viewpoint, being tasked with getting a chicken to travel 250mph is what makes engineers get out of bed in the morning. Whoever was asked to make that happen has the best job in the world
.I wonder how they wind those chickens up to 250mph in the lab. Setting aside for a moment the obvious gravity of the LaGuardia situation - from a pure engineering viewpoint, being tasked with getting a chicken to travel 250mph is what makes engineers get out of bed in the morning. Whoever was asked to make that happen has the best job in the world
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I wonder how they wind those chickens up to 250mph in the lab. Setting aside for a moment the obvious gravity of the LaGuardia situation - from a pure engineering viewpoint, being tasked with getting a chicken to travel 250mph is what makes engineers get out of bed in the morning. Whoever was asked to make that happen has the best job in the world
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Were any of the birds wearing towels on their heads?
I give it a day before somebody complains about this post tho lol90% happen around airports. Not all that rare.
I wonder what percent happen around airplanes? LOL
Now the serious question, what is the MAXIMUM altitude, they think for strike possibilities?
I think the Concord was brought down by a bird. They are out of business now maybe because of it.
I thought it was the tire blowing and flames following the plane up on takeoff a few years ago now (I think the second to last flight of any Concorde).

Thought one of you know-alls would be able to answer this: Why don't they put screens over jet engines to avoid "bird-strikes" like occured today when the plane went into the Hudson??
I won't qualify as a know-all, but I think ddawg16 is on the right track. I've heard the chicken story also. The engineers have been battling this for years, balancing safety with adequate performance and efficiency. I don't envy them.
On the airflow side, I do know that those turbine inlets require a uniform flow into the chamber. Think of the rpm at full throttle on takeoff. Balance is king. So a screen would upset it. Plus, traveling at about 250 mph, any screen has all it can handle keeping birds out. I think all it would do is plug the inlet, when most of the time the turbine just pulverizes the goose and keeps going. It's a hard thing, deciding how much protection to put on a piece of equipment without rendering it ineffective. Bottom line: that pilot had some skills. Very impressive.
Any turbine engineers out there want to comment?
Which brings me back to the ddawg16 chicken story. It's not hard to imagine the inlet blades getting really bent up on impact, even if you threw a roll of Charmin in there at 250mph you'd think there would be consequences.
I wonder how they wind those chickens up to 250mph in the lab. Setting aside for a moment the obvious gravity of the LaGuardia situation - from a pure engineering viewpoint, being tasked with getting a chicken to travel 250mph is what makes engineers get out of bed in the morning. Whoever was asked to make that happen has the best job in the world
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Willy,
One of the shows on the Discovery Channel a couple of years ago showed them testing airplane windshields by sending frozen chickens at the plane using an air cannon. Seems like they'd test the engines the same way.
Wikipedia said:The first recorded use of a chicken gun was by the Royal Aeronautical (Aircraft) Establishment (RAE) in Farnborough, UK in 1961.

The news stated that 200 people have been killed since 1980 due to bird strikes. 90% happen around airports. Not all that rare.
Most airports have a bird control plan, but sometimes the birds dont follow the rules
A lot of people are injured each year due to hitting deer on the road, yet there are no specific deer-deflecting mechanisms on cars.

Yes, but the damage done to a pickup's bumper and that of a tiny 4 cylinder vehicle is pretty different. Even then, I've seen situations where deer have been directed into windshields. Most of a deer's mass is above their legs, which also happens to be above a lot of small cars' bumpers, or at least that's how I'm visualizing it right now - I could still be wrong.Here in central Texas we call 'em bumpers. When I see the number of deer dead on the roads each morning, I'm thinking maybe "bumper" is the wrong term!![]()
