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View Full Version : Nurse survives window blowout in air ambulance at 20,000 feet


AmericanFlyer
3rd Jul 2007, 16:44
Thank goodness, no one was seriously hurt...
http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/07/02/air.ambulance.ap/index.html

MarcJF
3rd Jul 2007, 20:05
Seems like a lucky escape, thank goodness these things don't happen often.

ThreadBaron
4th Jul 2007, 07:49
... and back at work the next day! The words 'Nurse' and 'bottle' take on new meaning.:ok:

eyeinthesky
4th Jul 2007, 10:51
6 ft and 220 lbs...

If you wanted something to block a window at 20000ft, that would do very nicely!

Final 3 Greens
4th Jul 2007, 13:37
The question is...

What is the pressure differential at 20,000'?

This sounds a bit odd to me.

mm_flynn
4th Jul 2007, 14:17
The question is...
What is the pressure differential at 20,000'?
This sounds a bit odd to me.

Say 5 PSI and 1 sq ft window (which is probably a bit large) gives 720 Lbs initial force pushing the guy out the window - but going down as the pressure differential is lost. You couldn't hold on with your hands, but there would be a lot of resistance from trying to squeeze the guy through a small hole!

hobie
4th Jul 2007, 18:26
The question is...

What is the pressure differential at 20,000'?

This sounds a bit odd to me.

have a look here .....

http://curriculum.calstatela.edu/courses/builders/lessons/less/les3/dense.html

5 psi differential sounds about right with cabin set around 8 to 10k level ......