Comment by iwontberude

1 year ago

Haha I didn’t parse it that way but I can see how you thought that upon rereading. I just want to understand why we would hear the RAT when there wasn’t an emergency overhead. I supposed planes regularly test them?

They don’t.

  • I'm not going to bother slogging through everything to be able to speak in specifics for every airplane ever built, but:

    A RAT provides backup electrical and/or hydraulic power for control surfaces (and other goodies). A RAT would certainly be inspected during a heavy check and likely even during line checks (e.g. an "A" check or equivalent). How often is gonna depend on the airplane. But to suggest that a critical piece of equipment isn't checked regularly is just silly.

    Additionally, it's pretty much guaranteed that if an airplane comes with a RAT the RAT is required to be functional for ETOPS flights. That alone means you're gonna be inspecting it pretty frequently. ETOPS certification has three parts: airplane, airline, and humans. You'd want to look at the ETOPS Maintenance Document at whatever airline to be sure.

    Outside of Asia (where domestic widebody flights are still common) I'd guess many if not most 787 flights are ETOPS flights.

    • > Additionally, it's pretty much guaranteed that if an airplane comes with a RAT the RAT is required to be functional for ETOPS flights. That alone means you're gonna be inspecting it pretty frequently.

      I remember a decade or more ago I was on a US domestic flight - I forget exactly what, I think it was American from SFO to LAX - so I doubt it needed ETOPS. But the captain announced - while we were still at the gate - that he was getting an error in the cockpit saying the RAT was faulty. And he called maintenance, and they told him to try resetting something (a computer or circuit breaker or whatever) to see if that cleared the error - and when it didn’t, he announced we could not take off and would all have to go back into the terminal. Thankfully they had a spare plane a few gates over and they put us all on that (same crew, same passengers) so we only lost an hour or two.

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    • You’re right; my statement was in the context of the above discussion about people claiming to somewhat-regularly hear RATs in the air above them. That definitely isn’t happening.