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Max dude...get off the bong. I think we all know why your ticket was revoked now as well.
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Originally Posted by shackone
(Post 213061)
Why not?
Do you think there is a rate device that limits the rate at which the rudder moves?
Originally Posted by shackone
(Post 213061)
Depending on airspeed, there may be a limiter for how far the rudder can be moved...but one for how rapid?
Originally Posted by shackone
(Post 213061)
I'm not sure.
Originally Posted by shackone
(Post 213061)
6 seconds can be a long, long time.
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Originally Posted by Lifizgud
(Post 213062)
Training film: ( note the date )
"Flight Without A Fin" (1964, Color, 9:56) This film includes some absolutely amazing footage of an actual B-52 which has lost its vertical stabilizer! The film serves as a briefing on what to do in this unusual situation. This a really interesting short film! http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/Ultim...QQcmdZViewItem http://www.military.cibmedia.com/mai...nam&id=NF-D585 http://www.periscopefilm.com/stfoli3.html |
Originally Posted by HercDriver130
(Post 213098)
Max dude...get off the bong. I think we all know why your ticket was revoked now as well.
Dude Check this out :D this is why my licenses was revoked..!!!!!!!! http://video.google.com/videoplay?do...arch&plindex=1 God bless you my man ...:cool: http://www.darkhorizons.com/2006/borat/borat10.jpg MaxJet |
That video was funny as hell!!!! :p:p
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Originally Posted by kronan
(Post 212302)
Food for thought-
Boeing also came out with the warning that their airplanes weren't built to take the rapid alternating full scale deflection of the rudder either. A fact that was a big surprise to pretty much everybody I know since after all, if you are below the limiting speed----most of us thought stop to stop to stop wasn't even a factor---just as it is in small planes. |
Originally Posted by shackone
(Post 212473)
I thought that video was long gone...I'm amazed that it is still being used. Is anything in training said about the rudder commentary in it?
WIth all due respect, those of you who watched that video watched it a good 4-5years ago. That video is long gone, as is the "AAMP" unusual attitude training program, with which I also had several problems agreeing with. In place now is an unusual attitude training program that is consistent with most other airlines' programs. And it works very well, and is safe. It is one thing to sit here and throw stones at AA pilots because of the grudge you harbor against them (I'm talking to you, Ironspud) and extremely poor form using that accident to channel your anger... and it quite another thing in taking the lessons learned from this accident and applying them today, while respecting the deceased and their loved ones. I'll let you decide with is the more mature decision. As others have pointed out above, ailerons should always be used primarily in recovering, with rudder inputs as necessary to help along. At least, that's what I was taught from early flight training. /r, 73 |
Originally Posted by aa73
(Post 213814)
That video is long gone, as is the "AAMP" unusual attitude training program, with which I also had several problems agreeing with.
/r, 73 |
Exactly. It was an ex F-100 Super Sabre pilot who though that these techniques should apply to flying airliners. Not. Whoever signed off on that program really screwed up. Even when I was "taught" it in the sim, I still cheated using mostly ailerons with a little rudder help.
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The crash of fight 587 was disgrace and several people should be in prison for killing all those people. Three years before the accident I went to Railsback ,head of safety an told him the school house was teaching how to wreck a plane and not fly it. He agreed and said he had taken the same argument to management but had been over ruled. I talked to one of the "expert airman" going from base to base touting heavy rudder use only to have him turn his back on me mid sentence. Because I had once been a test Pilot for the company, an acrobatic pilot in my spare time, a current line pilot and an engineer by listening to him I could tell that he was both weak and inexperienced. One of the brown nosed working in flight management.
The standard recovery for Dutch roll had been use spoilers and definitely not rudder for 30 years. They biased the sims to make the sim behave the way they were teaching and not according to aircraft performance. The company had been repeatedly warned and yet a clique of pilots under the VP of flight were teaching a doctrine all their own in conflict with established procedure and aeronautical experience. The FAA came down pretty hard on them but not hard enough. THOSE PEOPLE SHOULDN'T HAVE DIED. It was a murder by a corrupt management |
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