Aviation Engine Test Systems (aets) Parts

(Page 2) End item NSN parts page 2 of 6
Part Number
NSN
NIIN
10914729 Electrical Wire
005787520
1105-1 Conduit Chase Nipple
007522703
114-367-0001 Electrical Plug Connector
008996869
12-37-6 Pipe To Tube Elbow
002313017
12-8-140139C Pipe Reducer
001438937
1220-QF-25K Force-weight Load Cell
012616265
1289AS131-1 Sensor Torque Tube
011790452
130445 Butt Hinge
008393749
1377426P252 Nonwire Wound Variable Resistor
010362798
1389/0 Electrical Wire
005786601
1474 Electrical Special Purpose Cable
014421702
1486557-1 Transmitter Synchro
000101413
1492267-0002 Dial Window
005386382
1497015 Transmitter Synchro
000101413
1497015-0001 Transmitter Synchro
000101413
1558B041040 Pressure Indicator
005570350
158-31 Glass Tubing
013221070
16 070109S Threaded Tube Fitting Plug
002668451
16PNTXSS Threaded Tube Fitting Plug
002668451
18-1102 Pressure Indicator
005570350
Page: 2

Aviation Engine Test Systems (aets)

Picture of Aviation Engine Test Systems (aets)

On Sunday 10 March 1946 a Douglas DC-3 aircraft departed from Hobart, Tasmania for a flight to Melbourne. The aircraft crashed into the sea with both engines operating less than 2 minutes after takeoff. All twenty-five people on board the aircraft died. It was Australia's worst civil aviation accident.

An investigation panel was promptly established to investigate the accident. The panel was unable to conclusively establish the cause but it decided the most likely cause was that the automatic pilot was inadvertently engaged shortly after takeoff while the gyroscope was caged. The Department of Civil Aviation took action to ensure that operation of the automatic pilot on-off control on Douglas DC-3 aircraft was made distinctive from operation of any other control in the cockpit, and that instructions were issued impressing on pilots that gyroscopes should be un-caged prior to takeoff.

An inquiry chaired by a Supreme Court judge closely examined three different theories but found there was insufficient evidence to determine any one of them as the cause. This inquiry discovered that the captain of the aircraft was diabetic and had kept it secret from both his employer and the Department of Civil Aviation. The judge considered the captain's diabetes and self-administration of insulin probably contributed significantly to the accident but he stopped short of making this his official conclusion.

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