Many of the restrictions on speed are based on external stores being carried....drop tanks, some munitions, etc.
So if one were to exceed "drop tank Vne", the drop tank would depart the aircraft? Interesting. Got any accident reports about it?
well, in my drunken stupor, i think Vne is just another way of saying load factor, and i imagine load factor would be way more than what the body can withstand in a fighter plane. Sooo yes, in my non professional opinion, i would think there is a Vne, but its so fast that it doesnt matter.
well, in my drunken stupor, i think Vne is just another way of saying load factor, and i imagine load factor would be way more than what the body can withstand in a fighter plane. Sooo yes, in my non professional opinion, i would think there is a Vne, but its so fast that it doesnt matter.
The F-15E has both max Mach and max indicated speeds...neither of which I ever came close to hitting despite several attempts.
Yeah, well I made some pretty awesome copies at work today. So there.![]()
So are you able to bug the VNE for a given configuration, or just brief and be aware of the a/s and G limits?Moreso likely to have damage to the mounting equipment, etc. Or, might cause undesirable aerodynamic actions. The bigger limitation with external stores is G onset/loading, and speed range for employment of weapons stores.
Some other considerations would also be thermodynamic; compression/expansion; metallurgical, etc
Lot's of good info on the SR-71 and many problems (i.e. extremely shallow bank angle limitations at high speed)
And I took off in under 1000'.Yeah, well I made some pretty awesome copies at work today. So there.
So are you able to bug the VNE for a given configuration, or just brief and be aware of the a/s and G limits?
Does aerodynamics affect which pylons you can put a given device on?
Technically, because we're talking about a jet here, wouldn't it be Vmo/Mmo, and not Vne? Principle is pretty much the same, but still. Also, I'm fairly certain (though I've never flown such an aircraft before) that there is a speed in which aerodynamic forces would be sufficient to cause structural damage.
You are pretty much correct. Military aircraft do not need to comply with FAA regulations on speeds (regarding certification of aircraft), but it would make no sense at all to establish "Vne" for any jet. Vne actually only applies to Title 14 CFR PART 23 aircraft, which are AIRWORTHINESS STANDARDS: NORMAL, UTILITY, ACROBATIC, AND COMMUTER CATEGORY AIRPLANES. Transport aircraft are certificated under Part 25, which utilizes Vmo and Mmo.
I'm vaguely remembering a story about some sort of g limit horn on maybe an F15? Guys would just pull until they heard the horn maybe? And some incident involving entering the wrong exterior load into the computer to processes load limits for the flight controls?
Stories from long ago for sure.