I'm not an aviation expert so I'll leave the fine details to people like Broomstick and to have them correct me when I am wrong, but first off...
So when a plane is landing, it seems to tilt it's nose up and turn it's engines off and fall down a lot before going on the road.
Pilots do not turn the engines off while landing the plane, They throttle the engine down and change the slap settings so that the plane goes into a controlled descent.
At most perhaps they put the engines into idle on occasion, but I would imagine that's normally not done. The rate of decent is dependant on a variety of factors (weather, location of airport, location of runway, approach vector etc). The engines stay on until the aircraft gets to the gate (how else does it move while on the ground, you don't usually see them getting towed!). You can
hear and
feel the engines when they are turning on and off, so they really shouldn't come as a surprise.
What is the risk of the nose going all the way up until the plane is vertical and fall directly downwards and crashing?
IIRC while take off and landing are generally considered the riskiest parts of the flight,. the chances of an actual stall are very low - you don't see planes smashing into the ground every day! Actually, what you are describing is
worse than a stall - I'm not even sure if it's possible to get something like a large passenger jet to go fully vertical before it stalls under normal conditions, especially if it is in the process of landing and its speed is already low. Would the engines have enough power to do that if the pilots suddenly went to full power and pulled the nose up? I highly doubt it, though erhaps Broomstick would know more... And besides which IIRC there are safety measures on the plane to prevent that sort of thing from happening (For example in addition to stall warnings IIRC the control column itself would prevent the pilot from making such a drastic move). If a plane stalls it would almost certainly be due to human error at some point during the line, it's not going to do that spontaneously. Again, odds are very low that a plane will stall during landing- as others have pointed out many times already,
air plane crashes are rare. Please get that into your head.
Or what about the risk of losing too much speed and going backwards very fast while moving its nose up and over until it's flipping over and over vertically which would obviously destroy the plane and everything onboard.
Congrats, you broke my stupid meter.
If it's very difficult to get a landing passenger aircraft to go fully vertical before stalling, what do
you think are the odds of getting it do the things you just described? The plane would have stalled, hit the ground and/or started breaking apart long before something like that would happen. Flip over and over
vertically? Suddenly go from "too slow" to "going backwards very fast" instantly (and how would the aircraft start travelling backwards anyways?)? So the plane basically decided to start doing back flips all of a sudden?
Really?
Posts like this are why I don't tend to take Dumber than Parrots seriously. This appears to be another scenario of his - the more evidence he is given showing that aircraft are quite safe to travel in, the more ridiculous his questions become as he tried to "prove" that they aren't safe.
"I reject your reality and substitute my own!" - The official Troll motto, as stated by Adam Savage