Ummm - you haven’t flipped a switch then immediately lost control of the aircraft before? Amateur.And fwiw, the only issue I had with the incident was where it said he supposedly operated a single switch in the cockpit and immediately lost control of the aircraft…
The airplane always behaves oddly when I turn off the autopilot. So i like to keep it on.Ummm - you haven’t flipped a switch then immediately lost control of the aircraft before? Amateur.
<unbelievable sarcasm if that’s not evident>
but in all seriousness, if I ever flipped a switch or did something and the airplane behaves weirdly after, my gut instinct would have been to undo what I just did and flip I the other direction lol.
I now have to read this report. I don't recall the switch that makes the F-16 immediately depart, but there were a hell of a lot of switches in it, three (if I recall) that turned off an individual axis of the FBW, or something to that effect.....
Oh for sure, I certainly don't blame the guy for pulling the handle in this situation. The panel in question is different than it was in the Block 15, but that's essentially similar stuff. We just had a few extra things that I heard were flight test holdovers, I'm sure removed by the C/D blocks. I also recall (again, very distant memory) the ALT flaps being used to get them down during such an event as a WoW failure or a few other degradations. Might be an accepted work-around for sustained low speed flight, not sure. Never used it in BFM, where you could get pretty slow on the 25 AoA limiter. Regardless,
intercept.
Everything about that report sounds like dude was just behind his aircraft and they went from briefed planned training to “let’s try this out” and it got away from a guy who didn’t have the cards to throw at the problem when it continues down a bad series of events.
You could kind of get that “what the F were you thinking!?!?!!” Vibe the whole time that report explained what the pilot did and what he could have been doing.
Good news everybody! We have a new officer to act as the state guard facilities manager of gyms and swimming pools!”
military.com is one of the last places you should be looking for definitive truth and context with regards to mil aviation.
Oh for sure, I certainly don't blame the guy for pulling the handle in this situation. The panel in question is different than it was in the Block 15, but that's essentially similar stuff. We just had a few extra things that I heard were flight test holdovers, I'm sure removed by the C/D blocks. I also recall (again, very distant memory) the ALT flaps being used to get them down during such an event as a WoW failure or a few other degradations. Might be an accepted work-around for sustained low speed flight, not sure. Never used it in BFM, where you could get pretty slow on the 25 AoA limiter. Regardless,
<---- captain obvious says it sounds like not entirely the best execution of said maneuver/intercept.
Help me out, @///AMG , did I miss something?
He hears the stall horn. Instead of instinctively lowering nose and advancing throttle he attempts to raise flaperons by switching the ALT Flaps to normal. Shouldn’t we avoid raising flaps in the flare… or while stalling?
So this is mostly just guessing here. It sounds like he was trying to accelerate and climb away, which won't happen with draggy TEF's extended, especially in a fixed extended configuration like you'd have with Alt Flaps. So retracting them would make sense to me. But he didn't actually flip the right switch to do this. The way I read this, DBU (which I don't recall being a mode in the A/B) is like the GAIN ORIDE mode we have in the F/A-18 family. It is a backup mode that allows you to tell the FCCs (or FLCS in this case) to just use fixed gains. Used in situations like AoA probe damage, or other unreliable sensor inputs to the FCCs. Like they mention, flap up settings are typically high and fast, fixed assumptions in terms of CAS, air density, and AoA. It sounds like his departure indications occurred following inadvertent and unrecognized selection of this mode, so basically he got what he didn't ask for or realize he had asked for. For reference, were you to throw the guarded GAIN ORIDE switch in an F/A-18 super far outside the fixed assumed flight parameters, you'd get a very weird response and potentially depart as well. Again, I don't really know if my guess that these two backup modes are analogous is true, but if they are, it makes sense.
Yeah, it seems like addressing that annoying horn would have been high on the priority list prior to cleaning up.
I think you are getting at breaking critical AoA here? I probably didn't read carefully enough to find that part. I can't even remember if we had such a thing in the F-16. We have a ton of tones in the F-18, which all come on regularly in slow speed flight. You have the gear up with excessive descent rate below a certain altitude. You had the >40 AoA tone in the legacy Hornet (not in the SH or Growler). You also have a yaw rate tone, should that become a trend. And then you have the screaming AIM-9 seeker head in your ear. I'll just submit, there are a lot of tones potentially going off at once. I remember the F-16 being quieter in this sense, but there also isn't a fixed stall speed or even a stick shaker region graphically or visually depicted in either aircraft. They will still stall, but it is very very difficult to turn that stall into anything other than mushy controls and a wallowy nose. Unless you are greater than 90 deg nose high, in which case things get a little more violent as the ship rights itself. But generally, you have to work damned hard to actually get into a full departure. And in a lot of cases, you can just power out of a stalled condition, with so much excess thrust.
Good point. Report didn’t mention that he acknowledged hearing the horn.
@///AMG @Lawman
Great posts here that help understand what happened.
Now for us civvies, can anyone explain what this button was that no qualified pilot would ever push?
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A pilot who lied about his flying experience to secure a job at British Airways was said to have been caught when he pressed a button 'no qualified pilot would'
The former pilot was sentenced to 12 months in jail after pleading guilty to four counts of fraud, the UK Civil Aviation Authority said.www.businessinsider.com
Well your point is of course correct in a traditional basics of aviation sense. If the airplane is stalled, the correction is the same in any aircraft. I think the grey area here is that potentially he wasn't stalled?
Did you read the report?
Are you familiar with what you’re looking at?
Because I can tell you from both its history and the choice of how it phrased the comment, military.com is one of the last places you should be looking for definitive truth and context with regards to mil aviation.
There was absolutely nothing in that report saying non participating GA aircraft are off limit and thus the intercept is “unauthorized.” It was however improperly planned/briefed and since they didn’t do that any explicitly permitted maneuvers could be classified as “unauthorized.” The failures to follow AF training rules have to do with keeping the aircraft in defined parameters so as to leave the pilot sufficient outs to lessen likelihood of a mishap. He let the aircraft get ahead of himself and in the process went into those defined limits at which point he should have recognized and terminated. The rules however aren’t there to create some sort of protected exclusion for GA declaring them off limits. In fact to the contrary they actually define how to go up and treat “non participating” aircraft for training evolutions.
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