T6NL is a code for an airplane engine over temperature condition. "T" stands for temperature, the number six refers to stage six, "N" stands for shaft rotation speed in the engine and the "L" stands for low pressure. Stage six refers to the engine temperature and low pressure shaft speed.
T6NL can be caused by many things such as an object being sucked into a jet turbine (such as shrapnel or a bird strike), In some cases it could be a major flight failure such as this one.
this video is so trippy, I love the sounds. I watched it when I was high and I can never forget the last seconds when you can see the grass as the planes smashes the ground. This is awesome footage, one of my favorite videos on youtube.
@Janspeed69: Reminds me of the 'Falcon flightsimulator' my brother and I used to play on my dad's Atari 1206 ST (it 's bit late... could be that the type isn't correct)
As kids of 5 years old or so, we new how to fly the thing, but that was it. The only thing we didn't understand was the 'warning' sound, ofcourse, speech-modules from that time weren't as good as today, but until my dad explained what the voice tried to say, we understood it as 'bonnie'
@TheEpicBlob The gear was up. Maximum gear speed in the Hawk is far below the 293 knots when the accident occurred, and the accident investigation clearly said it was up. The warning message is "gear not down" - the aircraft generates this when a sink rate is present, close to the ground, with gear up, to warn the pilots they may have forgotten to lower it. I worked as a test pilot on the simulators for these Hawks; that's how I know.
well apart from the aerodynamic penalty's the bird would be reduced to bird cubes doing as much damage. Even if you reduced the bird to a bag of blood that much mass hitting fan blades that are already at max N1 would cause terminal shock.
It amazes me that we can drive remote controlled cars around mars but cant stop a little bird from taking down a plane, I'm sure in the future they will be amazed as well, awesome video by the way.
Well, there are ways to stop birds from hitting airplanes...just kill every single bird that comes within distance of an airport. Other than that, there's not a whole lot to be done. F=MxA turns a 1 pound bird into a cannon shell at aircraft speeds.
T6NL is a code for an airplane engine over temperature condition. "T" stands for temperature, the number six refers to stage six, "N" stands for shaft rotation speed in the engine and the "L" stands for low pressure. Stage six refers to the engine temperature and low pressure shaft speed.
T6NL can be caused by many things such as an object being sucked into a jet turbine (such as shrapnel or a bird strike), In some cases it could be a major flight failure such as this one.
bullseatpizza 9 months ago
Oh my god was the jet ok?
TRoast77 9 months ago
"gear not down, gear not down" sounds like my bossy gps in the car....
"eject at next intersection....."
chicane2k 1 year ago 2
this video is so trippy, I love the sounds. I watched it when I was high and I can never forget the last seconds when you can see the grass as the planes smashes the ground. This is awesome footage, one of my favorite videos on youtube.
NMoulana 1 year ago 3
@NMoulana totally agree man! This is as close as I ever get to the real thing! Fuck planes!
bk373904 3 months ago
WOW How to avoid DEATH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
MCaperoon 2 years ago 2
Brit planes use male voices, hmmm. American and Russian aircraft have "bitching betty" a stern female voice :).
gaff2006 2 years ago 7
That wasn't a bird-strike. It was a jet striking a bird :)
WolYou 2 years ago 5
jet-strike :) it was all over the birdy news
Teales 2 years ago 3
"Gear not down, gear not down" you can tell it's a British aircraft, love the accent.
LooseRivet2103 2 years ago 7
Finally someone who actually knows what he is talking about!
Right on!
Janspeed69 2 years ago
@Janspeed69: Reminds me of the 'Falcon flightsimulator' my brother and I used to play on my dad's Atari 1206 ST (it 's bit late... could be that the type isn't correct)
As kids of 5 years old or so, we new how to fly the thing, but that was it. The only thing we didn't understand was the 'warning' sound, ofcourse, speech-modules from that time weren't as good as today, but until my dad explained what the voice tried to say, we understood it as 'bonnie'
weeardguy 2 years ago
I remember that game!
Janspeed69 2 years ago
@LooseRivet2103 Does it not say "Gear not done, Gear not done"?
As if its just after departure/Touch then the gear would still be down prompting a reminder to retract them?
I may be wrong :D
TheEpicBlob 4 months ago
@TheEpicBlob The gear was up. Maximum gear speed in the Hawk is far below the 293 knots when the accident occurred, and the accident investigation clearly said it was up. The warning message is "gear not down" - the aircraft generates this when a sink rate is present, close to the ground, with gear up, to warn the pilots they may have forgotten to lower it. I worked as a test pilot on the simulators for these Hawks; that's how I know.
MrMudgeonCur 1 month ago
I don't think the controller is going to get an answer to that last question, there's nobody home anymore.
nocalsteve 2 years ago
why dont u just put a cage around where they can get in?
silentpounce 2 years ago
well apart from the aerodynamic penalty's the bird would be reduced to bird cubes doing as much damage. Even if you reduced the bird to a bag of blood that much mass hitting fan blades that are already at max N1 would cause terminal shock.
LooseRivet2103 2 years ago 2
It amazes me that we can drive remote controlled cars around mars but cant stop a little bird from taking down a plane, I'm sure in the future they will be amazed as well, awesome video by the way.
rewirewi 2 years ago
Well, there are ways to stop birds from hitting airplanes...just kill every single bird that comes within distance of an airport. Other than that, there's not a whole lot to be done. F=MxA turns a 1 pound bird into a cannon shell at aircraft speeds.
macgriffyn 2 years ago 4
what airport
lxrqsc123 3 years ago
It is, Simply because this accident happened in a BAe Hawk in the NTFS in Canada.
The noob who said it is an F-16 should stick to trainspotting!
Oh and btw, the aural warnings you hear are from a Hawk too.
Thanks
Janspeed69 3 years ago
This video is often listed as an F16... How do we know this is a Hawk?
mungrymatt 3 years ago