Guys, my unfortunate work position requires me to check many videotapes for airline quality control. The titles I see are not exactly… provocative.
So, in "Joe Dirt", David Spade finds a meteorite which eventually turns out to be a "frozen chunk of shit". "we call 'em Boeing bombs", replies the shopkeeper. He explains that airlines regularly drop large loads of waste in rural areas. How true is this? Has is ever happened or only in the case of an overflow emergency? - Thanks, Peter
Someone will be round with a link shortly, I’m sure. but for now: Yes, it happens when for whatever reason, a valve sticks open. The “blue water” freezes and drops off.
What I want to know is: Has this stuff ever dropped off from the forward lavatory and then been sucked into an engine?
Seems to me I recall that happening 15-20 years ago on a 727. The deceleration and imbalance loads on the #3 engine actually tore it off (hint: that isn’t supposed to happen).
Amazingly enough, here’s one account from a UFO publication-
So, it appears to happen enough that it’s a problem. And it also appears that “Ice Bombs” have been sucked into engines, without any major incident.
Interestingly, to me anyways, is the line, from the last article, “But it had to be an accident because the lavatories are normally not allowed to be drained off over land”. Hmmm. It kind of leaves open the idea on whether or not they’re allowed to empty the lavatories over water.
It happened in the early 1990s in north Florida. The 727 was a Northwest Airlines jet. I was a co-op (similar to an intern) there at the time. And no, it wasn’t my fault!