GypsyPilot
Mohawk Town
Isnt checking the stick pusher on the CRJ check list?
It is, for the FFOD (First Flight) tests. But I don't ever remember hearing that warbling ELT sound. That sure is strange.
Isnt checking the stick pusher on the CRJ check list?
Hmm... Well I've certainly been present for a lot of FFOD stick pusher tests and should recognize that sound, but for some reason it sounds different in this recording.
It is, for the FFOD (First Flight) tests. But I don't ever remember hearing that warbling ELT sound. That sure is strange.
It's 75, Mr. 'I fly 85 hours a year' Chief Pilot'.mikecweb said:Hawker has a lift dump system. When lift dump is actuated the flaps goto 70 or 75 degree and the spoilers extend further.
Probably just over-modulating the recording input, producing something that sounds a bit odd.It is, for the FFOD (First Flight) tests. But I don't ever remember hearing that warbling ELT sound. That sure is strange.
That's because that's the stall warning sound, not the stick pusher. In real life any time you get the stall warning sound you'd get the pusher also, but when you test the system FFOD you are just testing the pusher, not the stall warning horn.
Tapatalk crashed and only posted half of what I wrote.
There is some interesting stuff on there.
Also of note is Comair 3272 (EMB-120 Ice near Detroit in 1997). This one is pretty graphic.
The CVR audio surprised me. I thought that never went out even for trials.
Again, I apologize in advance if this is old news and ask the admins to remove this accordingly if so.
I've done it in 100% of the airplanes I'm typed in, but like yours, it was "Hey, let's check this out" in one case or "Hey, can we take this box up to 370 and recover at the pusher?"I'll start off by saying that this is in no way a knock against you.
That said, if you fly the actual airplane it is absolutely absurd that you can't recognize the stick pusher/stall horn sound. Part 121 training has been totally remiss in providing actual stall training to pilots. I actually only heard that sound once in a sim session prior to the change of procedure after the Colgan crash, and only because we had some extra time and the instructor said "hey, check this out". Nobody did "full stall" training because the ATP PTS didn't specify it.
It's 75, Mr. 'I fly 85 hours a year' Chief Pilot'.
Isnt checking the stick pusher on the CRJ check list?
As like a preflight check? I doubt it. Our pusher in the dash uses nitrogen from a bottle in the nose to make it 'push', so if you tested it continuously, MX would have to replenish the bottle every week or so.
That, and in the Dash there's no way to test it and make it push. We do can test the shakers, which checks the stall warning systems.
I don't know about the RJ.
It is on the CRJ, FFOD check.
Totally missed the last 20 posts on you guys talking about the pusher test on the FFOD. Carry on.
Totally missed the last 20 posts on you guys talking about the pusher test on the FFOD. Carry on.
I was an eyewitness to that crash. I really wish I hadn't just watched/listened to that.
As like a preflight check? I doubt it. Our pusher in the dash uses nitrogen from a bottle in the nose to make it 'push', so if you tested it continuously, MX would have to replenish the bottle every week or so.
That, and in the Dash there's no way to test it and make it push. We do can test the shakers, which checks the stall warning systems.
I don't know about the RJ.
I swear to god, that plane will make you go deaf before you're 30, which is amazing since it's a jet in which you can barely even hear the engines.