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by sandworm101 2806 days ago
No. If there was a leak then it wouldnt pressurize properly on the way up. If it was holding pressure, it would probably keep doing so.
5 comments

It totally depends. A weakened structure can hold pressurization for a while, and then suddenly (and possibly catastrophically) fail.

A famous example of this is American Airlines flight 96 (1972): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Airlines_Flight_96

Also Japan Airlines Flight 123
One minor UX gotcha: the alarm for a pressurization problem on a 737 is not all that intuitive.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helios_Airways_Flight_522

I'd rather not trust my life to "probably". If there was some damage to the hull or a cargo door that could lead to failure, it's under more stress and is more of a hazard as the altitude increases.
Less stress imho. At altitude the forces on wings/structure are far less than during takeoff.
The takeoff has already happened, and a landing (of some sort) will have to happen (which also means flying near ground level).

The thing that doesn't need to happen is flying at full flight altitude when the pressure differential between the inside and outside is greatest.

Incorrect. In level flight the wings have - by definition - 1g of upward load. Regardless of speed or altitude.
That’s what sand worm was saying - level flight puts less stress on the wings than takeoff (where you accelerate vertically, thus have more than 1g).

Still, you don’t want to take a structurally damaged plane high up.

Consider cabin pressure differential versus the outside ambient air.
1g in up/down force. But thicker air means more forwards/back forces. Higher engine power = more force, regardless of G.
Engine power is a fraction of weight. Even at full thrust (which is rarely used in commercial service, even for takeoff), the engines are only capable of 0.25g or so.
To take a structurally damaged plane to altitude with that argument (if it holds pressure, it probably won’t explode) is reckless folly.
"probably"