That's not big hours, surely other 330s have flown in similiar conditions. It puts fatigue in doubt. Did the aircraft fly into the storm? I was under the impression that they were merely "in the vacinity".
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I think the problem is they don't know exactly where it was as it was a long way off the coast....
All fingers are pointing to pitot icing at the moment. It would be a surprise if the cause was deemed to be anything else - if they find a cause. If you loose airspeed in "coffin corner" at night and in a thunderstorm many people are saying that it would be almost impossible to keep things within the airspeed window despite there being a procedure for it.
Airbus issued a procedure some time ago that if you loose airspeed you set the throttles to a designated position, and hold a specific number of degrees of positive incidence. Then, you basically hope that the ASI starts working again. There is no descent procedure without an ASI.:eek:
the ASI is just an instrument the information comes from the pitot static tubes and these are heated (too hot to touch in air mode), in the old days the instrument would basically read the difference between pitot air and static air px, but now thats read by sensors that tell a computer that tell the instrument what to say, this is better as it reduces the run of pipe work required so reduces chance of error or error from damaged pipes that make great steps or hand holds.
ian