The unbelievable dashcam footage of a plane careening into a
river in Taipei, Taiwan, has revealed some major clues about what happened in
the moments before the fatal crash.
"It was just pretty clear what happened. It's a classic
stall -- a loss of lift," said ABC News aviation and military consultant
Steve Ganyard.
The pilot reportedly called in a mayday, saying that one of
the engines had failed. Ganyard said that the footage appears to at least
partly support that claim.
"A lot of times when you're flying on one engine and
you get too slow and it stalls," he said. "It will tend to fall out
on one side or the other."
In the case of the TransAsia Airways flight, "it was
the left wing that fell first," Ganyard said.
"None of this really makes sense just yet because an
airplane with two engines should fly perfectly well with just one," he
said.
Pilots like those in the cockpit on this flight should have
been able to handle such a malfunction, especially since these pilots had
logged a "good" number of hours in the cockpit, according to Ganyard.
"It does take some piloting skill and good training to
fly around with one engine but we didn't see any other contributing
factors," Ganyard said.
The flight route and the location of the crash does clearly
show the pilots were aware of problems and actively tried to stay near the
water to help with a possible landing.
Though the footage of the plane's wing clipping the freeway
is dramatic, that damage is nothing compared to the potential disaster that
could have happened if the plane had hit a nearby building instead.
Ganyard pointed out that in the final moments before the
crash, the nose of the plane is kept pointed up to avoid what appears to be an
apartment building, and by clipping a wing on the bridge, that lessened some of
the impact on the water when it did crash.
While at least 23 fatalities have been confirmed at this
point, those final moves by the pilot likely helped save lives, Ganyard said.
He said he was surprised by how relatively unscathed the survivors were as they
were rescued from the site.
"The fact that people were able to climb out is really
surprising," he said. "You didn't see anybody bloodied. You just saw
people standing there."
Yahoo News
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