You come across to me like the same people who were acting as if heart failure or blood clots was an acceptable risk for getting the covid jabs and there were quit a few around until it became a massive recorded problem.
Turbine blade failures are something which simply has to be accepted as a statistical likelihood.
Did you miss this? No, he's not posting it, but he's certainly brushing it under the rug. Reeks of covid style covering up of industry wide incompetence by trying to dismiss anybody who keeps noticing these events. We all know how that went.
No amount of inspections will eliminate turbine blade failures. Too many inspections will probably increase them. But every time one happens, the conclusion will be that it could have been caught. Because although people will readily accept risk and carry on, authorities which exist to mitigate problems can never adopt that as their official stance. It would negate their reason for existing.
You come across to me like the same people who were acting as if heart failure or blood clots was an acceptable risk for getting the covid jabs and there were quit a few around until it became a massive recorded problem.
Did you miss "Atlas is probably skimping on blade inspections"? He's not saying human failure played no role.
Did you miss this? No, he's not posting it, but he's certainly brushing it under the rug. Reeks of covid style covering up of industry wide incompetence by trying to dismiss anybody who keeps noticing these events. We all know how that went.
Both interpretations are true.
No amount of inspections will eliminate turbine blade failures. Too many inspections will probably increase them. But every time one happens, the conclusion will be that it could have been caught. Because although people will readily accept risk and carry on, authorities which exist to mitigate problems can never adopt that as their official stance. It would negate their reason for existing.