Different strokes I guess. Can't recommend similar behavior in EM2 EM4.Haha trust me, it wasn't out of habit, it was out of the manual. Tiller to 80kts then rudder.
Yur dead, dude
I had a steering disconnect on my first landing in NYC-Kennedy in the EMB 145. It swerved a bit but brisk application of rudder can control the airplane at high speed. (It reset once we got stopped.)
We have pedal steering to67 degrees either way on the Brasilia, plus tiller to50degrees, meaning that the nosewheel is power-steerable through...wait for it...6057 degrees. It is electrically commanded (potentiometers on the tiller and on the rudder pedals) and hydraulically powered (through the green hydraulic system). We also have disconnect switches on either yoke - press and hold the trigger, and the nosewheel is free-castering - useful for if the power system has a little freak out and makes you head for the weeds, or if you need to make a REALLY tight turn.
Edited for stoopid/cross-pollinating.
Gasp!
What aircraft was this? Seems pretty quick for extended tiller use.
Dangerous using rudder at 75kts...![]()
All irrelevant. You fly props. The brakes and steering should be on your NEF list.
The Falcon 20 and 50 were both like that. Steering could only be accomplished through the tiller until 80kts, then there was enough airflow to steer with the rudder.
Its not as bad as it sounds, at least in the 50, it was pretty docile. The 20 didn't have any kind of centering mechanism, and it was a real handful until you got used to it.
All irrelevant. You fly props. The brakes and steering should be on your NEF list.
The planes are all different but steering fails are usually caused by an electrical switch failing IMO. Either the plane fails to shift from Air to Ground modes or on the planes that have a manual switch in the cockpit that switch fails.
Got 99 problems but a nose wheel ain't one....
Dammit, I remember when I could actually say that, and it would have been true.... Gotta work on that.
The BE99, for all intents and purposes, has a castering nose wheel.
cmill said:The Falcon 20 and 50 were both like that. Steering could only be accomplished through the tiller until 80kts, then there was enough airflow to steer with the rudder.
Its not as bad as it sounds, at least in the 50, it was pretty docile. The 20 didn't have any kind of centering mechanism, and it was a real handful until you got used to it.
Gotcha, learn something new today.
All irrelevant. You fly props. The brakes and steering should be on your NEF list.
The CRJ 200 can operate with passengers with the NWS deferred. It ain't pretty, but you can diff brake/thrust it to the runway and back.
You can taxi the Brasilia around like that - but you may not.