And I don't think you fully appreciate how cabin pressurization works.
A pistol bullet hole or even losing a window isn't a Hollywood catastrophe.
The amount of "input" air is variable through bleed valves. The amount of "output" air is regulated and variable too. The system is designed to compensate for fluctuations in both input and output.
Now, can you lose a piece or create a hole big enough to overcome the system's ability to cope? Yes, you can.
OTOH, the public's apparent belief that a stray round through the fuselage, just making a hole and hitting no vital lines/cables/etc. can bring down an airliner is based in Hollywood fiction.
Crack in the fuselage? I flew an L-1011 that had a crack about 10 inches long that was about a finger wide, ~ 1". Big crack. It was in the lower galley area, within the pressure hull. Guess what....nothing unusual was noted. There was ONE reason and ONE reason alone it was found. The Captain was a smoker and smoking had just been banned on board. It was his habit to go down into the lower galley near the oven exhaust fans and have a smoke on the long 4 hours flights. This time, he notice his smoke was drifting
away from the fans, followed it and saw daylight through the hull. The aircraft maintained pressurization perfectly. It was determined that the aircraft had flown about a week like that when the catering driver that put the hole in the hull finally 'fessed up.
Now
if you have a big enough hole...and we're talking several square feet or better....
and it happens suddenly, you'd get an explosive decompression that might move things around. However, it doesn't last long, as the pressure will equalize pretty quickly at 8 psi differential or less.
That is designed to equalize pressure. The pressure in the cabin would be much higher if it weren't functioning.
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Which is why there are both positive and negative pressure relief valves on an aircraft.
Sucking pages out of a tech order doesn't take all that much force. I lost a page out of a T-38 checklist binder while taxing with the canopy open in a light crosswind; of course the page was loose to begin with.
I am saying that a situation that can cause a rapid depressurization will lead to a more violent reaction due to the forces involved. More things could give way, **** will be pulled out the opening.
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I guess if you weren't set on
Originally posted by MiniD:
being stupid
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and weren't
Originally posted by MiniD: chosing to be about as ignorant as I've seen you
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you'd realize we're saying pretty much the same thing.
A stray bullet or two going through the cabin wall is no big deal. OTOH, a bomb or some other highly explosive device
could cause a serious problem with the aircraft, primarily due to structural failure but which would also generate a short period of intense decompression.