The question was - why does the barberpole speed of an aircraft come down as the aircraft climbs.
It sounded like a no-brainer - the barberpole comes down because the air is thinner, and the ASI is basically just a well calibrated pitot pressure gauge, so less air molecules = lower IAS and the pole comes down accordingly.
But, why ?????
Surely a given *indicated* airspeed isn't going to do anything at FL300 that it wouldn't do at sea level ? If a plane can handle sufficient air molecules hitting it for it to feel like 240kts, shouldn't it be able to handle that many molecules at FL300 as easily as it can at FL0 ?
Gary


