I am not sure you have those "stabilities". Where did you get that information? I appreciate the feedback, and will correct that if accurate. For reference, my friend, Clive, who "chopped" this article was chief aerodynamicist for Concorde as well as chief UK engineer on the A330. I would think he would have caught an error like that, but I will make some inquiries just the same. The French chief engineer on the A330 is also an acquaintance of mine.
Seagull
I dunno but it seems to me like this kind of stuff should be day 1 stuff when going to ground school on a swept wing jet.
Good discussion. Would be nice to keep here in the thread, rather than back-channel, if at all possible. @Jimflyfast
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Very correct in regards to the sim modelling the stall- only the approach to stall is required to be modeled. We're actually negotiating with the FAA on the new requirements on modelling full stall in the sims.
I dunno but it seems to me like this kind of stuff should be day 1 stuff when going to ground school on a swept wing jet.
Seagull
I have no idea who you are, and would like to continue this offline if you like
First, a question. How many high altitude stalls have you done and in what type of airplanes? As an experimental test pilot and FTE, I have done literally 100s (probably closer to thousands) of them in 737, 757, 777, 747-4, G-V, citations, and even king airs. And I will throw in a MS in Aero to back up the theoretical side. I say this as a basis of what I am going to say next, so you know it isnt some high school troll
First of all, your article is fine, but incomplete. I didnt read past the AF447 part, because it is not really relevant to high altitude stalls, as there were so many other factors in that crash. The second most important part to talk about in high altitude stalls, after the stall ID, is that the lack of Ps is going to highly influence the recovery. Most modern jets are going to require 4000-5000 feet to recover, and that is with no startle factor and near perfect recovery. I could continue, but I am not really at a place to write a novel here. And as a small, but regularly misstated point, lift does not increase with AOA, Lift Coefficient does. No true areo weeenie would ever use the word lift max, it is Cl max.
@Derg will give you my private email if you like
Well written article overall.
To be clear, they were in "alternate law," where the ailerons are now being directly controlled. Load factor change remains commanding the pitch.
It is incorrect that there are no stall protection features that remain when degraded to alternate law- you now have high and low speed "stabilities" where it will insert a slight pitch up for high speed protection and pitch down for low speed.
I've had it in alternate and direct law in the 20's. It is quite twitchy!
Also, don't forget that pitching to 17 degrees nose up at FL350 is never a good idea on any transport jet.
Very correct in regards to the sim modelling the stall- only the approach to stall is required to be modeled. We're actually negotiating with the FAA on the new requirements on modelling full stall in the sims.
Aerodymamics for Naval Aviators is interesting but not exactly an easy read, especially for the Math challenged.
I've flown with guys who couldn't average two numbers on a performance chart, no way in hell they're understanding anything here.