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What the Sun Did to an Airbus Computer

A serious issue has been discovered in the Airbus A320 family flight control system — and today, I’m breaking it down in the simplest way possible.
If you want to understand what the ELAC (Elevator Aileron Computer) is, why Airbus and EASA issued an Emergency Airworthiness Directive, and how a solar flare caused an uncommanded pitch-down event, this video explains everything clearly and accurately.
In this video, I cover:
✔ What the ELAC computer actually does on the Airbus A319 / A320 / A321
✔ How fly-by-wire, the sidestick, and elevators/ailerons work together
✔ The technical problem with ELAC B software L104
✔ How a solar flare can confuse the flight control computer
✔ Why the aircraft pitched down without pilot input
✔ Why Airbus released an AOT (Alert Operators Transmission)
✔ Why EASA released an Emergency AD and grounded affected aircraft
✔ What operators must do: downgrade to L103+, replace ELAC units, or upload new software
✔ Which aircraft, part numbers, and ELAC versions are affected
✔ How Airbus protects flight safety using redundancy (ELAC 1, ELAC 2, SECs)
This is the most complete explanation of the incident, combining simple English with engineering accuracy — perfect for pilots, engineers, students, and anyone curious about aviation safety.
🚨 Why This Matters
A single ELAC computer malfunction on an A320 caused an unexpected nose-down pitch event while the autopilot was still engaged.
This could have led to dangerous structural loads, so every aircraft with ELAC B L104 must be fixed before the next flight.

Видео What the Sun Did to an Airbus Computer канала AERO LAUNCH
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