I don't discount it in the least.I would strongly support aerobatic training and real upset training, but do not be surprised if a pilot with all of those skills STILL stalls a jet aircraft at high altitude. Happened before, and could happen again.
I'm in recurrent now. We just changed our stall series and it's a huge difference.
Instead of US flying into the stall (You're "in the game"), the AP now is set to stall the aircraft (trimming the whole way in), and then we recover.
Way, way different than doing it hand flying into it, or setting the scenario where you hand fly into a stall. Very glad to have practiced this in the box....
Please don't every forget though, the reason planes have shakers, pushers, ventral fins and such is because they are very ill-mannered in a full, deep stall. Prevention is ALWAYS the best medicine in for keeping the machine out of the dirt.
Really, you don't reduce the AoA?
I'm in recurrent now. We just changed our stall series and it's a huge difference.
Instead of US flying into the stall (You're "in the game"), the AP now is set to stall the aircraft (trimming the whole way in), and then we recover.
Way, way different than doing it hand flying into it, or setting the scenario where you hand fly into a stall. Very glad to have practiced this in the box....
Please don't every forget though, the reason planes have shakers, pushers, ventral fins and such is because they are very ill-mannered in a full, deep stall. Prevention is ALWAYS the best medicine in for keeping the machine out of the dirt.
I find it interesting that in this thread, and other like it, the folks that explain that the simple procedure is to "get with it" because this stuff is "so simple" haven't flown an aircraft that weighs over 15,000 lbs.
Interesting that people that have never flown anything bigger than a Metro can give tips to 767 drivers about how to perform a maneuver. I mean I'm glad that they've got that kind of knowledge base, but I dunno, I generally tend to listen to the guys in my training department that have 10,000 hours in the type of aircraft they're giving instruction in.
But maybe I'm old fashioned.
I find it interesting that in this thread, and other like it, the folks that explain that the simple procedure is to "get with it" because this stuff is "so simple" haven't flown an aircraft that weighs over 15,000 lbs.
Interesting that people that have never flown anything bigger than a Metro can give tips to 767 drivers about how to perform a maneuver. I mean I'm glad that they've got that kind of knowledge base, but I dunno, I generally tend to listen to the guys in my training department that have 10,000 hours in the type of aircraft they're giving instruction in.
But maybe I'm old fashioned.
Of course, how could I be so foolish.
My plane may not be as fast as your but its almost as heavy...
Of course, how could I be so foolish.
Wait, I made your ignore list! Awesome! I'm so happy!Sorry, my mistake, guys.
I hadn't realized the forum software got rid of my ignore list. With some quick updates, this thread is back to making sense again.
Carry on.
Don't forget that there has to be recognition of a stalled condition before anything else. There are cases where that isn't nearly as cut-and-dried as we might like to think.
Now take that train of thought to the Air France accident. I'm working from my phone at the moment so can't type a lot now...This is an incredibly cogent point. The approach to a stall shouldn't take the pilot off guard though, the sluggishness of response, the slow speed, deck angles out of whack with what is "normal" should all add up to the stall being something that the crewmember expects. Not that that's the way it always goes.