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  #41  
Old March 3rd 08, 04:37 AM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.student
William Hung[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 349
Default Wow

On Mar 2, 7:57*pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
William Hung wrote :







On Mar 2, 5:25*pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
wrote :


We had a couple of very windy days over here in Europe.
Look at a crosswind landing of an A320 at HAM, a near crash:


http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=ddb_1204404185


Nice pic:


http://www.airliners.net/uf/view.file?id=536882887

&filename=phpOltUWB
...


Next time someone tries to tell you that airliners just "kick it
straight"


when they land, like this guy did, show em this...


Bertie


Remnds me of this video. *http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S9M3m1U-QYA
I can watch tis all day.


Yeah, they are kicking i straight, though they are laying off a bit of
the drift by getting the wing down as the flare. The first one has th
edownwind wing donw slightly. Remember that this exercise is intended to
demonstrate what the airplane is capable of and not to develop
technique. I have a frined who flies the 777 and he tells me it flies
just like an airplane. His first line flight to LHR had mih landing in a
strong crosswind. The trainer next to him asked if he would prefer that
he do th elanding, but my friend pressed on and found it easy.
Note that in each touchdown, the alignment takes place after touchdown,
and that th etouchdonw is positive. the yaw towards alignment is done
smoothly and though you can't see it, they are almost certainly
introducing full aileron ( smoothly) to keep the wing down and to
introduce some very welcome adverse yaw.We used to have to land the 727
like this and though it felt absolutley awful, it worked OK.

Bertie- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


I heard the Helio also has crabbing gears. Ia that right?

For some reason, I don't feel threatened by the heavies like most
people seam to be. I some how, even though Ihave never flown ne,
think that I can if givemn the chance. I think the big ones would
probably be more stable that the 150 that I train in.

Do thebig ones give you more or less time to react and plan ahead?

Of course, not having any experience in them makes make my opinion
just that, only an opinion.

Wil
  #42  
Old March 3rd 08, 10:35 AM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.student
Bertie the Bunyip[_25_]
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Posts: 3,735
Default Wow

Dudley Henriques wrote in
:

Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
Dudley Henriques wrote in
:


Totally agree. I can still see Bevo flying that thing. An absolutely
wonderful airplane.


I must make an effort to get out in a Jungmannn one day. I have heard a
rumor of one for rent near a place I overnight in....


Bertie

By all means do so if you can. I've not flown the Jungmann but I've been
told it's a great bird.
Closest I got was the Great Lakes. Good times for sure!


I love the Lakes. I've only flown "new" ones, but a close friend has a '29
with a 260 Franklin. he lives a long way from me ( but very close to you)
I'm hoping to meet up with him this summer.


Bertie
  #43  
Old March 3rd 08, 11:32 AM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.student
Bertie the Bunyip[_25_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,735
Default Wow

William Hung wrote in
:

On Mar 2, 7:57*pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
William Hung wrote
innews:bff1ba6f-28ab-44c0-884e-85cc

:







On Mar 2, 5:25*pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
wrote :


We had a couple of very windy days over here in Europe.
Look at a crosswind landing of an A320 at HAM, a near crash:


http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=ddb_1204404185

Nice pic:


http://www.airliners.net/uf/view.file?id=536882887

&filename=phpOltUWB
...


Next time someone tries to tell you that airliners just "kick it
straight"


when they land, like this guy did, show em this...


Bertie


Remnds me of this video.
*http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S9M3m1U-QYA


I can watch tis all day.


Yeah, they are kicking i straight, though they are laying off a bit
of the drift by getting the wing down as the flare. The first one has
th edownwind wing donw slightly. Remember that this exercise is
intended to demonstrate what the airplane is capable of and not to
develop technique. I have a frined who flies the 777 and he tells me
it flies just like an airplane. His first line flight to LHR had mih
landing in a strong crosswind. The trainer next to him asked if he
would prefer that he do th elanding, but my friend pressed on and
found it easy. Note that in each touchdown, the alignment takes place
after touchdown, and that th etouchdonw is positive. the yaw towards
alignment is done smoothly and though you can't see it, they are
almost certainly introducing full aileron ( smoothly) to keep the
wing down and to introduce some very welcome adverse yaw.We used to
have to land the 727 like this and though it felt absolutley awful,
it worked OK.

Bertie- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


I heard the Helio also has crabbing gears. Ia that right?


Might do. I used to fly a 195 that had them. Awful, really.
The 737 has castering mains. It makes it a bit difficult to taxi,
actually (just go to to th esupermaket if you don't believe me)


For some reason, I don't feel threatened by the heavies like most
people seam to be. I some how, even though Ihave never flown ne,
think that I can if givemn the chance. I think the big ones would
probably be more stable that the 150 that I train in.


Well, you don't have to be an astronaut to fly them, but it's unlikely
you'd be able to just jump in one and fly it well. You might, and that's
a big might, be able to land one if someone were to instuct you every
step of the way.
They vary from type to type. The newer ones are a bit easier, mostly
because of the high bypass fans they have. This makes them effectively a
prop driven airplane. The old skinny jet engines had less "traction" and
needed a lot of power changes during approach.Newer wings are easier to
handle too.Older wings had very flat drag curves and keeping the speed
nailed kept your attention.
You'd find controlling the pitch and speed a bit of a handful both on
departure and arrival in any of them, though. In addition, the ones with
underslung engines will have a fairly large pitch trim change with each
power change, and if you aren't ahead of the airplane you will have a
lot of power changes. This can degenerate to a very mess situation where
you're chasing just about everything.
They have to be flown solidly "in the slot" on the approach. You can't
just chop the power and dive for the runway if you get a little high in
the last couple hundred feet. Well, you could, but the result would be
pretty nasty.
There are fairly narrow allowable speeds for each flap postition. On
some airplanes, max speed for the first flap postition might be 230 and
the minimum speed for that position might be 210, for instance. With
that flap out, you can go down to 190 but the max sped for the next flap
setting would be 215, min 170 and so on. That sounds like a lot and it
is when you are used to it, but add to this the fact that the flaps wear
quickly if you put them out near the max speed and you have an airplane
you must keep an eye on, particularly if you're hand flying.

Do the big ones give you more or less time to react and plan ahead?


Mmmm. You have to think ahead about a number of things much more so than
in a light plane. Leaving out instrument departures and arrivals, just
handling it requires a lot of procedures.Then there are emerergencies,
but if you were going to just go out and do some sunday flying in one
like you would in a 150 then the big differences would be knowing the
numbers for pitch and power (and there are a lot of them) and being able
to visualise the flight path to a finer degree than you are used to. The
speed is just a bunch of numbers, it's a scale thing. And since you fly
a wider pattern anyway the speed is kind of irrelevant. Just a bunch of
different numbers. Even with a 1500 fooot pattern (normal visual size)
you would be flying a downwind probably three miles out and be hitting
the descent point in finals at about four miles. It;s the numer of
things the airplane would demand from you rather than the speed of the
thing you'd find a bit demanding. Although, how do you think you'd cope
with a 6,000 fpm plus rate of climb during take off or go around?
That's what the 757 wil do lightly loaded.
Anyhow, to adress your point, more stable they are not. More lumbering,
maybe, but not more stable. But they need to be flown in a more stable
fashion.


Of course, not having any experience in them makes make my opinion
just that, only an opinion.


It's do-able, alright. I put a 16 year old from my model flying club and
put him an an old 737-200 sim years ago. I gave him about two hours of
instruction before we went in and I had to talk him through most of the
actual flying, but he did every appraoch and landing pretty well. We
were heavily reliant on the flight director (these are little bars that
superimpose over the airplane figure on the Attitude indicator that
basically give you pitch and bank) and I , of course, was feeding the
flight director with the info tha it needed to guide him,. but he did
pretty well. The Chief pilot was there and was impressed. Unfortunately
the kid had a fairly big color blindness deficiency, but he's a
succesful accountant today and has his own glider..
We're trainign up a lot of new hires in work at the moment. The ones who
have been flying turboprops and such are getting up to speed pretty
quickly, but the lightplane guys are on a steeper learning curve, though
they'll get there in the end. As a rule, glider pilots and guys who have
flown airplanes that 'need to be flown' ultimately are smootehr and more
accurate when they get used to them...

So the answer is yes, you could do it, but if you're going to spend
money trying it probably best to wait til you get your instrument raing
or at least are well along training for one. You'd get more out of the
experience.


Bertie

  #44  
Old March 3rd 08, 01:23 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.student
Oz Lander[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 44
Default Wow

Bertie the Bunyip wrote:

"Blueskies" wrote in
. net:


"Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message
...


Well, he doesn't appear to have made any effort towards putting the
wing down at all. Not his fault.He was obviously never taught how

to do a crosswind landing properly. You'd be amazed at how many
airline pilots beleive that this is the way to do it... Mostly,
they get away with it. The crosswind doesn't appear to be all that
bad. From the drift angle, I'd reckon the max compnenet to be
under thirty knots and steady. Well within the airplane's
capability. He wasn't realy in trouble until the flare.

Bertie

Bertie


Sounded gusty in the audio of the video...


Wel, the airplane is steady on the approach, so while there are
surely little variations in the wind, really gusty conditions would
have either the pilot or autopilot manipulating the airplane a bit
more than that. He's fine til he tries to kick it straight.



Bertie


The A320 has a crosswind landing limit of 33 kts gusting 38 kts

According to the data at the time, the wind was 35kts, gusting 55 kts.

The incident happened at 13:55 local time
The flight LH 044 (D-AIQP), an A320 from MUC (Munich)
The landing runway was 23 LOC-DME (ATIS gave no other option)
after the go-around the pilots elected runway 33 also LOC-DME approach
and landed safely but minus the left winglet...
immediately after the incident ATIS gave runway 23 and 33 as well

--
Oz Lander.
Straight and Level Down Under Forum.
http://www.straightandleveldownunder.net
  #45  
Old March 3rd 08, 01:25 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.student
Oz Lander[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 44
Default Wow

Oz Lander wrote:

Bertie the Bunyip wrote:

"Blueskies" wrote in
. net:


"Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message
...


Well, he doesn't appear to have made any effort towards putting

the wing down at all. Not his fault.He was obviously never
taught how to do a crosswind landing properly. You'd be amazed
at how many airline pilots beleive that this is the way to do
it... Mostly, they get away with it. The crosswind doesn't
appear to be all that bad. From the drift angle, I'd reckon the
max compnenet to be under thirty knots and steady. Well within
the airplane's capability. He wasn't realy in trouble until the
flare.
Bertie

Bertie

Sounded gusty in the audio of the video...


Wel, the airplane is steady on the approach, so while there are
surely little variations in the wind, really gusty conditions would
have either the pilot or autopilot manipulating the airplane a bit
more than that. He's fine til he tries to kick it straight.



Bertie


The A320 has a crosswind landing limit of 33 kts gusting 38 kts

According to the data at the time, the wind was 35kts, gusting 55 kts.

The incident happened at 13:55 local time
The flight LH 044 (D-AIQP), an A320 from MUC (Munich)
The landing runway was 23 LOC-DME (ATIS gave no other option)
after the go-around the pilots elected runway 33 also LOC-DME approach
and landed safely but minus the left winglet...
immediately after the incident ATIS gave runway 23 and 33 as well


For got the ATIS!
EDDH 011220Z 29028G48KT 9000 -SHRA FEW011 BKN014 07/05 Q0984 TEMPO
29035G55KT 4000 SHRA BKN008

--
Oz Lander.
Straight and Level Down Under Forum.
http://www.straightandleveldownunder.net
  #46  
Old March 3rd 08, 02:01 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.student
William Hung[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 349
Default Wow

On Mar 2, 9:41*pm, Jim Stewart wrote:
Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
Jim Stewart wrote in
:


Bertie the Bunyip wrote:


Much snippage...


technique. I have a frined who flies the 777 and he tells me it flies
just like an airplane.


Ok, I'll bite. *What airplanes don't fly like airplanes?


Well, some of the older airliners had some interesting and challenging
quirks. They were not very speed stable on approach, wallowed around like a *
milk van and could develop rates of descent on approach that could plant
you in seconds if you weren;'t careful. Then there's the FBW Airbusses.
Every time I talk to one of those guys I walk away more confused about how
the flight controls work than I was before. Others, most of the 4 engine
contraptions, for instance, have to be landed wings level. The nmost recent
crop handle quite nicely, don't have spool up times stretching towards ten
seconds and just generaly are pleasant to handle. The satisfaction in
handling the older jets came mostly from tricking them into doing what you
wanted them to!


What did you think of the 727? *In my youth I flew a lot
as a 727 pax. *There was always something reassuring
about having 3 people up front and 3 big ole engines in
the back. *Engines that you could fsking feel when the
levers were pushed all the way forward. *A real airplane
for passengers that love planes.

Then there was the time I asked if I could sit up front.
The copilot graciously apologized for not being able to
let me, but he kindly offered to let me tag along as he
preflighted the a/c. *Those were the good old days.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


The good old days, sure mis them. I flew in a PanAm 747 a few imes
and an Eatern 727 once as a kid and remember getting the wing from the
PanAm crew. Too bad I lost that wing.

The good old days when kids get wings from pilots, fire hats from
firemen and badges from policemen. I jnow the firemen still give out
fire hats at open houses, but the cops are no longer someone that
kidslook up to anymore. At least not around here.

Wil
  #47  
Old March 3rd 08, 02:02 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.student
Dudley Henriques[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,546
Default Wow

Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
Dudley Henriques wrote in
:

Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
Dudley Henriques wrote in
:


Totally agree. I can still see Bevo flying that thing. An absolutely
wonderful airplane.

I must make an effort to get out in a Jungmannn one day. I have heard a
rumor of one for rent near a place I overnight in....


Bertie

By all means do so if you can. I've not flown the Jungmann but I've been
told it's a great bird.
Closest I got was the Great Lakes. Good times for sure!


I love the Lakes. I've only flown "new" ones, but a close friend has a '29
with a 260 Franklin. he lives a long way from me ( but very close to you)
I'm hoping to meet up with him this summer.


Bertie


Let me know when your coming. We'll have a few together.

--
Dudley Henriques
  #48  
Old March 3rd 08, 02:08 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.student
William Hung[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 349
Default Wow

On Mar 3, 6:32*am, Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
William Hung wrote :





On Mar 2, 7:57*pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
William Hung wrote
innews:bff1ba6f-28ab-44c0-884e-85cc

:


On Mar 2, 5:25*pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
wrote :


We had a couple of very windy days over here in Europe.
Look at a crosswind landing of an A320 at HAM, a near crash:


http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=ddb_1204404185


Nice pic:


http://www.airliners.net/uf/view.file?id=536882887
&filename=phpOltUWB
...


Next time someone tries to tell you that airliners just "kick it
straight"


when they land, like this guy did, show em this...


Bertie


Remnds me of this video.
*http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S9M3m1U-QYA


I can watch tis all day.


Yeah, they are kicking i straight, though they are laying off a bit
of the drift by getting the wing down as the flare. The first one has
th edownwind wing donw slightly. Remember that this exercise is
intended to demonstrate what the airplane is capable of and not to
develop technique. I have a frined who flies the 777 and he tells me
it flies just like an airplane. His first line flight to LHR had mih
landing in a strong crosswind. The trainer next to him asked if he
would prefer that he do th elanding, but my friend pressed on and
found it easy. Note that in each touchdown, the alignment takes place
after touchdown, and that th etouchdonw is positive. the yaw towards
alignment is done smoothly and though you can't see it, they are
almost certainly introducing full aileron ( smoothly) to keep the
wing down and to introduce some very welcome adverse yaw.We used to
have to land the 727 like this and though it felt absolutley awful,
it worked OK.


Bertie- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


I heard the Helio also has crabbing gears. *Ia that right?


Might do. I used to fly a 195 that had them. Awful, really.
The 737 has castering mains. It makes it a bit difficult to taxi,
actually (just go to to th esupermaket if you don't believe me)


Don't they have a locking option?


sniped

setting would be 215, min 170 and so on. That sounds like a lot and it
is when you are used to it, but add to this the fact that the flaps wear
quickly if you put them out near the max speed and you have an airplane
you must keep an eye on, particularly if you're hand flying.


That does sound like a lot of work.



Do the big ones give you more or less time to react and plan ahead?


Mmmm. You have to think ahead about a number of things much more so than


snipped
thing you'd find a bit demanding. Although, how do you think you'd cope
with a 6,000 fpm plus rate of climb during take off or go around?


I think I would cope with that with a big ****e eating grin, what do
you think? :-))))

That's what the 757 wil do lightly loaded.
Anyhow, to adress your point, more stable they are not. More lumbering,
maybe, but not more stable. But they need to be flown in a more stable
fashion.


See, that's the term that I have heard from many pro pilots 'more
stable' and that gave me confidence. You tell me that it is 'more
lumbering', that's probably a more accurate description.



Of course, not having any experience in them makes make my opinion
just that, only an opinion.


It's do-able, alright. I put a 16 year old from my model flying club and
put him an an old 737-200 sim years ago. I gave him about two hours of


Where do I get in line? :-)

instruction before we went in and I had to talk him through most of the
actual flying, but he did every appraoch and landing pretty well. We
were heavily reliant on the flight director (these are little bars that
superimpose over the airplane figure on the Attitude indicator that
basically give you pitch and bank) and I , of course, was feeding the
flight director with the info tha it needed to guide him,. but he did
pretty well. The Chief pilot was there and was impressed. Unfortunately
the kid had a fairly big color blindness deficiency, but he's a
succesful accountant today and has his own glider..
We're trainign up a lot of new hires in work at the moment. The ones who
have been flying turboprops and such are getting up to speed pretty
quickly, but the lightplane guys are on a steeper learning curve, though
they'll get there in the end. As a rule, glider pilots and guys who have
flown airplanes that 'need to be flown' ultimately are smootehr and more
accurate when they get used to them...

So the answer is yes, you could do it, but if you're going to spend
money trying it probably best to wait til you get your instrument raing
or at least are well along training for one. You'd get more out of the
experience.

Bertie- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Thanks for a great explanaton Bertie.

Wil
  #49  
Old March 3rd 08, 03:08 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
Big John[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 65
Default Wow

-----------clip---------------

I heard the Helio also has crabbing gears. Ia that right?

------------------------clip-----------------------


Wil

I flew the Helio Courier (USAF U-10) with castering gear.

Felt crazy after landing and nose weather vaned into the cross wind.

If you took off with gear unlocked you landed with it unlocked. This
was to prevent a malfunction and only one gear locking if you tried to
lock in air. Landing with one locked and one unlocked would probably
cause an accident or ground loop at least.

You could unlock in air for landing as no failure in unlocking system.

I played with system to keep current but never had to use it in
practice.

Big John


  #50  
Old March 3rd 08, 03:30 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
Big John[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 65
Default Wow

-------------------clip----------------

What did you think of the 727? In my youth I flew a lot
as a 727 pax. There was always something reassuring
about having 3 people up front and 3 big ole engines in
the back. Engines that you could fsking feel when the
levers were pushed all the way forward. A real airplane
for passengers that love planes.


I liked it for some of the same reasons you did. The three crew thing
was great. We used pro flight engineers ( as opposed to a kid fresh out
of Embry Riddle ). It wasn't exactly a sprots car in the handling
department, but it went where you told it with a bit of persuasion
(though you would get exactly the opposite view from a guy who came onto
it off of a 707, which was supposed to be a real handful) It was very
fast. Anything up to mach .93, a bit slower if you were heavy.
Very noisy flightdeck (wind) Nicely thought out for it's day with lots
of redundancy in all systems. It must have seemed like something from
Buck Rogers in 1963.



-----------clip------------

Bertie

Tell the story about when 727 first came out and a couple crashed
during flare (one was at SLC as I remember).

Bird was dirtiest aircraft I had seen up to that time when on final.
With everything out and down and Stews dragging their feet out of back
stair well didn't hardly look much different than a flying brick )

You can correct my remembrance. Bird started to get a bad name and
lots of quick investigations took place. It was found that if pilots
were sloppy flying the handbook airspeed on final and got just a
couple of knots slow they couldn't flare the bird. The fix was to
change the operating manual and raised approach speed 3 or so knots
(just a tweak) and bird became one of the best and safest birds
flying.

Correct me where I have remembered the details wrong.

Big John
 




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