Back to Squawk list
  • 50

Airspeed systems failed on US planes

提交時間:
 
WASHINGTON – On at least a dozen recent flights by U.S. jetliners, malfunctioning equipment made it impossible for pilots to know how fast they were flying, federal investigators have discovered. A similar breakdown is believed to have played a role in the Air France crash into the Atlantic that killed all 228 people aboard in June. (news.yahoo.com) 更多...

Sort type: [Top] [Newest]


EmeraldRocket
Well, when in doubt, I push the nose over. Better too much than not enough.
N1982K
N1982K 0
Except in severe turbulence where you need to slow down to avoid bending metal. Best to avoid areas of thunderstorms and not try to penetrate.
kapstaad
kapstaad 0
@EmeraldRocket: seriously? Maybe that works in Microsoft Flight Simulator with the "real world" airframe stress settings turned off, but in real-world aviation it's a very bad idea.

Go Google "Coffin Corner" for a quick insight as to why airliners cant just "push the nose over". Airliners routinely fly right up there in the Corner, sometimes with only a handful of knots separating mach buffet and aerodynamic buffet. "Push the nose over" in that environment, and Mach Tuck is probably going to make that flight your last.

Even in a GA aircraft, it's not the right answer. If you're stupid enough to penetrate a bad cell in the first place, and your airspeed indication is "in doubt", for some reason, the proper procedure is to set power to a value that will produce a level-flight TAS below Va (and you should know that power setting for your equipment), and fly the attitude indicator until you're out of the cell.

登入

還沒有帳戶嗎? 現在就註冊(免費),設置諸多客制化功能、航班提醒等等!
您知道FlightAware航班跟蹤是由廣告支持嗎?
通過允許展示來自FlightAware.com的廣告,您可以幫助我們使FlightAware保持免費。我們努力使我們的廣告保持相關性,同時不顯突兀,以創造一流的體驗。在FlightAware上將廣告加入白名單快速而簡單,或者請您考慮選擇我們的高級帳戶.
退出