Is that a straight wing?
The CH-47D has a 50,000 lb MTOW, but as hard as I tried I couldn't stall the thing.
(For the picky, yes you can stall a helicopter, just in a much different way.)
What a tank of a airplane. They made good crap back in the day.anic:
No stick shakers or warning in the might O. Just buffet. Can actually fly out of a stall, but if you have an assymetric spool up, you are below VMC and this can happen.....
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=5972721339#/topic.php?uid=5972721339&topic=7668
On July 22, a Navy P-3C conducted a simulated engine fire and shut down one of the port engines. Shortly thereafter, the flight crew noticed engine fluctuations in the second engine and shut it down without trying to re-start the first. The plane violently rolled and began a spiraling nose dive at 290 knots.
The pilots allowed the starboard engines to remain at maximum power in spite of NATOPS' requirement to go to "flight idle." A counterclockwise rotation was driven by the stall and the yaw produced by the two engines at maximum power.
The plane was pulling between 5 and 7 Gs and did five spin rotations form 5500 feet before the flight crew was able to restart the first engine and recover at bteween 50 and 100 feet above the deck.
The plane returned to Whidbey without further incident however the aircraft was essentially destroyed -- the fuel tank was ripped open, several panels were bent or buckled, and 45 consecutive rivets ripped out as the starboard wing skin peeled away
B747.
She's a real bitch to stall. Something like 40 degrees nose up with 65% N2.
Do you guys practice them in the sim?Huh....You learn something everyday. :yup::yup:
Ditto. Just did one in a CJ2 the other day. Pretty benign as well.Citation 500. Full break, in a turn.
Metroliner. Only to the first indication though and you just power out of it.
19000 - 20000' feet???? They took it up to class A airspace and did stalls??? Seems a bit high to me.
edit: Maybe this happened doing some other test and they ended up in one. Maybe I'm just being overly skeptical, but that sounds a bit off to me... *shrugs*
So no 100,000 lb planes?
Can't remember if we did turning stalls but we did do FULL stalls in the 737-300 during a flight test. Full aft stick and letting the nose fall through.. like a big Cessna.
First a buzz, then the shaker and then a hard burble followed by the break. Not a big deal.
Wow... how much altitude did it take to recover?
The Flight Instructors guide allows for straight power off P-3 stall buffets. I would take instructors under training up to a full stall so they could see. Recovery was about 50 feet if you were good.Can't remember if we did turning stalls but we did do FULL stalls in the 737-300 during a flight test. Full aft stick and letting the nose fall through.. like a big Cessna.
First a buzz, then the shaker and then a hard burble followed by the break. Not a big deal.