BobDDuck
Island Bus Driver
So cute watching the airbii pilots bicker.
Real men use a mirror to read their whiskey compass.
So cute watching the airbii pilots bicker.
Read my original response with the 3/4 of the cross. That is where you went off the rails. Our max crosswind is the Airbus limitation of 38 knots.... you have to get maximum aileron input in before popping the spoilers in order to make that happen. That is applying 3/4 of the cross (actually just a tad more than that before they start to float up) at the beginning of the takeoff roll. If you don't do that, the wing will lift and stuff gets pretty spectacular from there. Interestingly enough, the Airbus company sims in MIA will have you crash if you don't put in the aileron. The wing lifts and it flops out of control on their own sims at the aircraft limitation of 38 knots.
You changed your crosswind landing technique with control inputs but not with the way the plane looks and lands. You just have to adapt your inputs to make it happen. That is being a good pilot.
Completely and absolutely disagreed with the converting a good and bad pilot to average. You will degrade to an average and worse pilot only if you resign to that mindset. Your goal should be an absolute mastery of stick and rudder skills and flight guidance management at all levels on every plane you fly. Fifi is a stick and rudder plane when it really comes down to it, and man is she fun to fly in all regimes. It's a battle for a favorite for me between her and the 757.
170 OP DES, gear down, Flaps 3 is your last resort and if that doesn't work, nothing will!
Speaking of that, as a former Boeing pilot, the idea of slowing down in order to go down was complete weirdness.
I wouldn't have guessed that to be true for Boeing. The Airbus doesn't require much sidestick input in gusty conditions since the computer does all the work. The high crosswind takeoffs are just awkward since ailerons aren't suppose to be used on the ground. Any other time just pick a bank and/or pitch and the computer auto-trims and holds it for you with the stick in neutral. I've never flown a boeing but I don't believe it does that. Hand flying isn't really hand flying any more in the bus but I haven't heard the same about Boeing?
170 OP DES, gear down, Flaps 3 is your last resort and if that doesn't work, nothing will!
Speaking of that, as a former Boeing pilot, the idea of slowing down in order to go down was complete weirdness.
We just need high speed descents under 10 like a lot of countries do. You can get rid of a lot of altitude at 330kts, power idle, boards out.The only issue is is that in most busy airspace ATC probably doesn't want you slowing from 250 to 170 just to get down. Think crossing CAMRN 11000/250 and Jfk is on the 4s.
The Airbus is the first plane where I feel like when I finished training I had no clue about it! The ECAM and really crappy QRH makes me feel like they really tried to engineer the pilot out.
250 with the boards out gets you down quickly as well.The only issue is is that in most busy airspace ATC probably doesn't want you slowing from 250 to 170 just to get down. Think crossing CAMRN 11000/250 and Jfk is on the 4s.
Real men use a mirror to read their whiskey compass.
Come on up to 390 and we'll talk about it.
Wait…
Oh yeah.![]()
@Lunchbox what do you mean regarding the inputs regarding gusty condition and computer control? I'm new to the Bus but if a gust raises a wing you bring it back down right?
Manually getting the AT off by bringing it to idle brings the engines to idle quicker than pulling open descent, and being able to use full spoilers versus half with AP on, I think manually turning the AT and AP off you can get Fifi down quicker/sooner than with George on.
IMO the worst thing you can do in an airbus is try to overthink it.. Just fly the airplane, yes airplane.If a large gust of wind blew the wing up on an approach for example while hand flying then the computer would lower the wing without pilot input. The response is not instantaneous so the natural reaction would be to lower the wing yourself like we're all use to doing but by the time you do that the computer will also add its own input and now you have double correction. The end result would be a lot of unnecessary overcontrolling back and forth. It's weird getting use to since the bus has taken away maybe 25% of our old stick and rudder job. Don't get me wrong the Airbus is a great plane and the French engineers where really some smart peeps but I was listing the reasons why it's not my personal favorite. I could list a lot more but I think I hit my post limit for this thread and I don't want to sound like I'm complaining since I thoroughly enjoy the job we have.
AA allows small amounts of sidestick input in a "strong crosswind" and it should be zeroed out by the time you become airborne.Right but we're talking about on the ground, my mistake if I left out that part. The two different jet types I've flown not counting the 320 had logic to inhibit roll spoilers for takeoff. I'm just telling you what my company manual recommends as well as Airbus and the old US Airways (not sure about AA).
You are absolutely correct.
My point is, if we have to do all that just to (barely) make it, I'm trending towards "unable". All I'm sayin...
IMO the worst thing you can do in an airbus is try to overthink it.. Just fly the airplane, yes airplane.
That's one thing that's different...on old airplanes if you pull back long enough, the trees get bigger againStick back, trees get small. Stick forward, trees get bigger. Stick left, trees move right. Stick right, trees move left!
That's one thing that's different...on old airplanes if you pull back long enough, the trees get bigger again![]()