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Lower pressure inside the cabin

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Lower pressure inside the cabin

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Old 7th Mar 2011, 16:00
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Lower pressure inside the cabin

Ok, so you pull the alternate air open - the source inside the cabin. The altimeter and the VSI jump up because the pressure inside the cabin is lower. What is a good explanation for this? Wouldn't the air traveling faster on the outside surface cause a lower pressure by the static port than inside the cabin? I'm talking non-pressurized 152 here.
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Old 7th Mar 2011, 16:07
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Marvin,

You're on the right track.

The static sources outside the airplane are located and designed to minimize the effects of the slip stream and uncoordinated flight. They are located strategically to prevent false readings.

Air flowing around the cabin/cockpit area experiences a drop in pressure. This drop in pressure draws some air from inside the cabin, as the cabin isn't tight. Air pressure inside the airplane is slightly lower than ambient.

If you get a chance to fly an airplane like a Piper cherokee or a Bonanza, you can see the low pressure effect around the cabin by cracking the cabin door slightly open in flight. Put a chart or piece of paper near the opening at the difference in pressure will keep the paper sucked against the slightly opened space. Open the space just a little more, and the paper or chart will get sucked out.

The door doesn't need to be open to experience this drop in cabin pressure. Because the interior of the airplane isn't sealed from the exterior, the lower pressure that exists around the cabin is also experienced inside the cabin.
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Old 5th Apr 2011, 12:26
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and if you use a GPS attached to the screens with a rubber sucker, as you fly higher the sucker, and GPS, may well fall off at some altitude!
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Old 5th Apr 2011, 14:05
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Yeah, but that is due to the generic decrease in atmospheric pressure with increase in altitude. Not necessarily because of the process described above.
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