In article , Alan
Dicey wrote:
Harry Andreas wrote:
In article , Alan
Dicey wrote:
* electrically signalled
* no manual connection
* pilot flies computer: computer flies plane.
The first two are what a fly-by-wire system is.
The third is one particular implementation of fly-by-wire.
And it doesn't matter whether it's analog or digital,
or whether the a/c is inherently unstable and the FBW
system keeps it in the air. Those are also just implementations of
fly-by-wire .
If I understand you correctly, you hold to the view that any
electrically signalled flight control system is fly-by-wire? I think
that makes the Vulcan a pioneer, along with the Vigilante.
As long as we're talking about the primary flight controls.
I'm not familiar enough with the Vulcan to say.
The point I was trying to make was that the term has only gained
currency recently, starting with the F-16. It has since been applied
retroactively to aircraft that lack the intermediate computer (be it
digital or analog), some of which have electromechanical equivalents
(mixer boxes) and/or control augmentation systems, autopilots or terrain
following systems. I don't think the term fly-by-wire was applied to
these aircraft when they were being designed or in service, but I would
be happy to be proved wrong, in the interests of illumination.
Lots of things fall under a later definition, say, supercruise...
Claiming you're the first because of your particular implementation
is disingenuous.
Thats a bit harsh. I stated up front that circular reasoning was
involved in the definition I was using and also indicated that the line
wasn't clearcut. No dishonesty or insincerity involved.
I wasn't criticizing you....
And its not my claim, nor ever has been: it was GD's claim, and only in
the sense that they made a selling point out of it.
....I was commenting on GD's re-definition of the term. Sorry if that
wasn't clear.
To me, fly-by-wire will always mean a system where the pilots inputs are
moderated by the flight control computers. As we have just
demonstrated, it has no clearly-agreed technical meaning, a fact which I
ascribe to its birth in the mind of a marketeer.
Can't argue with that.
ciao.
--
Harry Andreas
Engineering raconteur
|