Jet lag

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Nereus
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Jet lag

Post by Nereus »

The strangely sleepy triumph of Alcock and Brown

https://www.flightsafetyaustralia.com/2 ... and-brown/

Exactly 100 years ago tomorrow(today here) two pioneers became the first people to experience an aviation-related malady that has since affected millions and remains a factor in aviation safety management to this day.

Pilot John Alcock and navigator Arthur Whitten Brown were having a hard time getting up in the mornings immediately after they made the first non-stop flight over the Atlantic Ocean. Twenty years before the invention of the jet engine, they became the first people in history to experience what is now called jet lag.

‘In our eastward flight of two thousand miles we had overtaken time, Brown wrote. ‘Our physical systems having accustomed themselves to habits regulated by the clocks of Newfoundland, we were reluctant to rise at 7am; for subconsciousness suggested it was but 3.30 am.’

Brown noted that this difficulty of adjustment to the sudden change in time lasted several days. ‘Probably it will be experienced by all passengers travelling on the rapid trans ocean air services of the future…’

Brown was right; fatigue remains a factor in aviation safety 100 years later. This year CASA is implementing its response to an independent review that confirmed the need to modernise Australia’s fatigue rules for air operators and pilots.

Alcock and Brown took off in the afternoon of 14 June 1919 from Lester’s Field, near St John’s on the Canadian island province of Newfoundland. A contemporary photograph shows the fuel-heavy aircraft barely airborne near the airfield. ‘Several times I held my breath, from fear that our undercarriage would hit a roof or a treetop. I am convinced that only Alcock’s clever piloting saved us from such an early disaster,’ Brown wrote.

Their flight was eventful, with an exhaust manifold breaking and subjecting the cockpit to a deafening roar, airframe icing, and on two occasions, loss of control. The Vimy was not equipped with ‘blind flying’ gyroscopic instruments; instead Alcock relied on longitudinal and lateral spirit levels.

Brown described how ‘about sunrise, 3.10am, to be exact,’ the Vimy had spun (or possibly spiral dived) from 4000 feet to under 100 feet.

‘We left the cloud as suddenly as we had entered it. We were now less than a hundred feet from the ocean. The sea-surface did not appear below the machine, but, owing to the wide angle as which we were tilted seemed to stand up level, sideways to us.’

Later, sleet jammed the ailerons and Brown was required to step out of the cockpit to wipe slush off a fuel gauge, an exercise he described as ‘very unpleasant,’ but which he repeated at ‘fairly frequent intervals’.

After just over 16 hours of flight they saw the Irish coast and lined up with what looked like a green field, near Clifden in the country’s rugged west.

From Brown’s description: ‘The machine sank gently, the wheels touched earth and began to run smoothly over the surface. Already I was indulging in the comforting sensation that the anxious flight had ended with a perfect landing.

Then, so softly as not to be noticed at first, the front of the Vickers Vimy tilted forward, shook itself, and remained poised on a slant, with its fore-end buried in the ground, as if trying to stand on its head.’ The green field was an Irish bog.

After landing, fatigue overtook the two aviators. ‘I suddenly discovered an intense sleepiness, and could easily have let myself lose consciousness while standing upright’ Brown wrote, noting also his ‘lassitude of mind’.

An Irish journalist drove them (in a Ford Model T) to the nearest large town, Galway, with crowds of well-wishers gathering along their route. Interest in the race to cross the Atlantic was intense after the recent rescue of Australian pilot Harry Hawker. A civic reception was mercifully rescheduled into ‘a short and informal affair,’ and, after 40 hours awake, Alcock and Brown finally partook of the only sure remedy for fatigue – sleep.
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Re: Jet lag

Post by Scout »

Flying from Bangkok —> Taipei —> Seattle, the jet lag is intense and lasts upwards to a week and a half. Depending on the time of year (daylight savings time), the time change is either 14 or 15 hours. Due to crossing the date line, on some previous flights I’ve arrived back in Seattle a half hour before the flight departed Bangkok, even though 20 some hours have elapsed. For days afterward, I’ve found my body totally shutting down and demanding sleep in the middle of the day, only to come wide awake around 2am. Traveling the same route but opposite direction the jet lag is still present but not as intense and dissipates after only a couple of days.
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Re: Jet lag

Post by oakdale160 »

Just a tiny cottection, Newfoundland , the first British Colony, was still a colony in 1919. . It joined Canada affter WW2
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Re: Jet lag

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oakdale160 wrote: Sun Jun 16, 2019 8:44 am Just a tiny cottection, Newfoundland , the first British Colony, was still a colony in 1919. . It joined Canada affter WW2
Be Jaysus, that amount of time should have stopped the Jet Lag. :shock:
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