Va - Maneuvering Speed- What's It Mean to You

Yes, but they don't test the rudder with full side to side deflections, so Va offered no protection.

A fact not many pilots knew prior to AA 587, including myself. Most pilots familiar with stall recovery and aerobatics know the rudder is more effective at slow speeds than the ailerons. Couple this knowledge with a misinterpretation of a company manual (AAMP), lack of training in wake turbulence recovery techniques and it is an accident waiting to happen.

From the NTSB accident report pg 12:
According to the captain, he and the first officer discussed this event later in the flight. The captain pointed out to the first officer that his use of the rudder pedals was “quite aggressive,” but the first officer insisted that the American Airlines Advanced Aircraft Maneuvering Program (AAMP) directed him to use the rudder pedals in that manner.

Like many NTSB reports, they are very good reading for learning from the mistakes of others. Rarely does the fault of an accident squarely and singularly belong on the shoulders of a pilot. According the Reason model of accident causation (aka Swiss Cheese model) the pilot is almost always the last obstacle to an accident but it is never alone.
 
Here's my take on Va, the speed at which you can apply full up elevator and not cause any damage. Doesn't work the other way around, lets say you apply full nose down, most likely will exceed manufacturers negative G loading and regret it. That's it nothing to do with ailerons/rudder deflection.

Why do I say that, well, the slower you go the higher and closer your AOA to MAX AOA, Va should guaranteed that when you apply all this up force. i.e. sudden increase in AOA, you will reach max AOA before reaching max positive G load, get airflow separation and induce a stall preventing you from overloading the wings, but going the other way you have nothing protecting you from reaching a max negative load.

This is why Va changes with weight, has little to do with inertia, as some people are missed instructed, and more to do with AOA. A heavier airplane requirers a higher AOA to sustain level flight. So let's say that your wing reaches Max AOA at 15 degrees, and lets say Va puts the wings at 10 degrees AOA giving you a 5 degree cushion. Then a lighter airplane needs to go slower to get an AOA of 10 degrees and a heavier airplane can go faster while maintaining that same AOA.

Now it has been a few years since my AE degree and a few as well since CFIing.
 
That's the definition of "maneuvering speed" you find in aerodynamics books, and probably the original intent of Va, but the FAA now does not include that requirement in the regulations. They provide a different V speed for that purpose: Vo:
§ 23.1507 Operating maneuvering speed.
The maximum operating maneuvering speed, VO, must be established as an operating limitation. VO is a selected speed that is not greater than VS times the square root of n established in § 23.335(c).

Va, on the other hand, is defined thusly:

(c) Design maneuvering speed VA. For VA, the following applies:
(1) VA may not be less than VS * sqrt(n) where -
(i) VS is a computed stalling speed with flaps retracted at the design weight, normally based on the maximum airplane normal force coefficients, C(na); and
(ii) n is the limit maneuvering load factor used in design
Notice the difference? Vo can't be greater than the speed that will prevent the load factor from being exceeded, but Va can't be less than that speed, meaning that it can be greater, much greater. If it is, then the load factor limit can be easily exceeded. The only thing that restricts manufacturers from actually creating these high Va speeds is that the control surfaces must be certified to handle the flight loads created from full or abrupt deflections at these speeds.

In practice, many manufacturers will establish Va = Vo, so the distinction is moot, but not all manufacturers will do that.
I love this stuff.
 
A fact not many pilots knew prior to AA 587, including myself. Most pilots familiar with stall recovery and aerobatics know the rudder is more effective at slow speeds than the ailerons. Couple this knowledge with a misinterpretation of a company manual (AAMP), lack of training in wake turbulence recovery techniques and it is an accident waiting to happen.

We have had numerous accidents where the info was either not understood, was not applicable or never reached the line crew. The Pinnacle RJ crash is an example in that from what I read, most crews never heard of 'core lock-up' until after the crash. The Colgan crews saw the video on tailplane icing but again, from what I read, the Q400 and Saab are not subject to the problem. Air Florida was taught to not 'overboost' the engines and never advanced the throttles.

It's not only what you don't know but also what you know but is incorrect that can get you killed.
 
Am a big advocate of Reason's Swiss Cheese model.

Reason's model works very well but it ignores the fact that we are extremely creative in going outside the assumptions. In the Airbus crash a while back where the Capt was pushing on the yoke trying to force the airplane down to capture the ILS, he was controlling the elevator while the autopilot was retrimming the stabilzer. When it let go, the Capt was the loser ('looser' in net speak).

The Airbus officials said, "We never considered a pilot would fight with the autopilot." New disconnects were implemented.

Likewise, from what I read, Grumman said the F-14 was virtually impossible to spin and soon after its introduction to the fleet, a nugget showed 'em how to do it.
 
Reason's model works very well but it ignores the fact that we are extremely creative in going outside the assumptions. In the Airbus crash a while back where the Capt was pushing on the yoke trying to force the airplane down to capture the ILS, he was controlling the elevator while the autopilot was retrimming the stabilzer. When it let go, the Capt was the loser ('looser' in net speak).

The Airbus officials said, "We never considered a pilot would fight with the autopilot." New disconnects were implemented.

Likewise, from what I read, Grumman said the F-14 was virtually impossible to spin and soon after its introduction to the fleet, a nugget showed 'em how to do it.

Reason's model does have some places it could improve and flex, but I do like it better than accident chain for many types of accidents; though accident chain does work for some also; though to me it implies more of a single-point/single-event failure, which is not always the case. Each has its good place though IMO.
 
Reason's model does have some places it could improve and flex, but I do like it better than accident chain for many types of accidents; though accident chain does work for some also; though to me it implies more of a single-point/single-event failure, which is not always the case. Each has its good place though IMO.

I like Dekker's and Dismukes' look at events. It is not enough to point out what happened but ask WHY it happened. People do not crash on purpose. and while the cheese model and the chain theory make things into a neat package, as Dekker says, "Classification is not explanation." It does help create more 'barriers' but we have to remember each accident is an exception to the rule and a unique event. That takes us to FOQA and ASAPs. And that takes us to culture.

While the guy/gal in the seat has changed over the last decade and the technology has also changed, name the last time you were in a CRM or Error Management class that was attended by some high ranking official in the company.
 
I would put money on structural damage.
If an aileron falls off, will you be debating the semantics on the way down?
If you ever went to engineering school, and had to generate vn diagrams, you would answer structural too.

:yup: For some reason that quote made me spit beer on my screen. Thank you for that on a Sunday night.
 
Reason's model works very well but it ignores the fact that we are extremely creative in going outside the assumptions.
--------------snip----------
The Airbus officials said, "We never considered a pilot would fight with the autopilot." New disconnects were implemented.

Likewise, from what I read, Grumman said the F-14 was virtually impossible to spin and soon after its introduction to the fleet, a nugget showed 'em how to do it.

You just demonstrated examples of engineering failures, imagination failures, management failures and training failures. All additional discs on the model.
 
You just demonstrated examples of engineering failures, imagination failures, management failures and training failures. All additional discs on the model.

As said before, we simply can not write enough rules to cover all possibilities.

When I was in the tng dept one of our guys was involved with the introduction of the F-15. The first manual was quite thin and of course, the USAF has always differed from the Navy in that in the Navy the maxim was 'if we don't say you can't, you can'. The USAF said, "if we don't say you can, you can't." And as incidents and accidents occurred, the USAF manuals got thicker and thicker.

And, one of Weiner's Laws is that with each new technology, a new potential for error is introduced. For example, prior to retractable landing gear, gear up landings did not happen.
 
As said before, we simply can not write enough rules to cover all possibilities.

True. However, the model isn't designed for rules generation. It's an analytical tool for understanding causal factors in an accident. Once a causal factor is identified and understood, it can be mitigated.

As a retired Naval Aviator I am aware of the USAF/Army vs. Navy/USMC philosophical differences. Although Naval Aviation philosophy leans toward "if it doesn't say you can't, then you can", an aviator who exercises bad judgment (aka Headwork) will see his wings clipped....given he survives the incident.

Headwork/judgment would be another wheel on the Reason model with Aviation Decision Making (ADM). A pilot's ability to exercise good ADM can be screened for and enhanced through education. As this link states:
we still are left with human judgment in cases that cannot be automated. The challenge of the future is to provide support for the weak links in human decision processes
You are right that we can't write rules for everything, but in many instances it isn't necessary. It is like the ancient Lao Tzu quote, "Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day. Teach him how to fish and you feed him for a lifetime." A well-trained and proficient pilot has a greater chance of responding properly to a situation, regardless what it is, than a pilot only given the bare minimums to meet the standards. The Colgan accident is proving to be a textbook example of this philosophy.


Further reading: FAA AC 60-22 Aeronautical Decision Making
 
Decision Making and Intiution

True. However, the model isn't designed for rules generation. It's an analytical tool for understanding causal factors in an accident. Once a causal factor is identified and understood, it can be mitigated.

Agreed. But there is seldom a single factor.

As a retired Naval Aviator I am aware of the USAF/Army vs. Navy/USMC philosophical differences. Although Naval Aviation philosophy leans toward "if it doesn't say you can't, then you can", an aviator who exercises bad judgment (aka Headwork) will see his wings clipped....given he survives the incident.
And that is probably a result of the culture change wherein rogues are finding it harder to survive. Think the aviator in this photo could fly in today's Navy?

f14pass.jpg


(never met the man but have heard lots of stories about him)

Headwork/judgment would be another wheel on the Reason model with Aviation Decision Making (ADM). A pilot's ability to exercise good ADM can be screened for and enhanced through education. As this link states:
Ah.. Ms. Orasanu. Have you met her? She, for a period of time was working with a GaTech researcher, Ute Fischer. Nice people.



Did you see the piece in the NYTimes a few weeks ago about intuition and combat ops? Very interesting. But we aviators like to think we arrive at our actions via very controlled and pristine logic. Not so.

And while the FAA uses the term ADM, it really is just DM. And like James March says in his primer on decision making, we have to focus our minds, learn how to use the information and how to arrive at a decision. More often than not, without training, our decision making is more of a meander than a direct path.
 
Va is the point at which I have to stay below in order to not break things. Below Va, I should (in theroy) be able to yank the yoke into my lap before the wings clap above my head.
 
In our Q manual, it pretty much explicitly states that at speeds below Va, large alternating control inputs will cause structural failure/dammage. I take that to mean, that the airplane will most likely survive a sudden excursion, but, VA isn't a ticket to just do as you like.
 
Great statements, all.

I was pondering this concept the other day. I remembered how in my initial private pilot training how V(a) was explained to me, and how it was usually stated "no abrupt control movements".

Later on, when I was delving more deeply into the aerodynamics and math behind such things, V(a) was explained as a defining line between the point where structural damage might occur vs. a stall.

As a young private pilot I didn't do a lot of "abrupt control movements" so I saw V(a) as an almost intellectual concept, and didn't really understand the gravity of it. Now when you consider the more realistic aspects of it, I give it a little more respect.
 
In our Q manual, it pretty much explicitly states that at speeds below Va, large alternating control inputs will cause structural failure/dammage. I take that to mean, that the airplane will most likely survive a sudden excursion, but, VA isn't a ticket to just do as you like.

I think this is the key. I was told during an RPC oral that Va provides airframe protection provided only one full deflection of a control surface is made. The instructor was specifically referencing AA587.
 
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