FlyByWire22
Well-Known Member
Another noob question, but do big jets or regionals for that matter still require use of rudder when making turns? Just curious due to the previous feet on the floor comments...
Another noob question, but do big jets or regionals for that matter still require use of rudder when making turns? Just curious due to the previous feet on the floor comments...
Aileron plus coordinated rudder, just like every other airplane you've ever flown...The ATR goes bananas when you try flying with rudder.
No the yaw damper system is not the best. We were told it was made for smaller aircraft and ones that drive the rudder directly.Aileron plus coordinated rudder, just like every other airplane you've ever flown...
Oh yeah ours is pretty crappy too.No the yaw damper system is not the best. We were told it was made for smaller aircraft and ones that drive the rudder directly.
The Dash on the other hand is so amazing to hand fly. The perfect balanced controls with just the right amount of feedback.
Another newbie question, but it would seem to me that the newer turbo-fan jets would have gyroscopic turning tendencies unless the mass of the jet itself made them irrelevant.
AFNA said:The critical control requirement for the multiengine airplane is the condition of asymmetrical power since spinning is not common to this type of airplane. The single engine propeller airplane may have either the spin recovery or the slipstream rota-tion as a critical design condition. The single engine jet airplane may have a variety of critical items but the spin recovery require-ment usually predominates.
I can't speak much to jet operations, but maybe I can give you some insight into a single engine prop aircraft on initial roll out. The predominant effect is typically that of the slipstream, as it's effects increase as forward velocity decreases. The faster you go the more the spiral is stretched, like stretching a slinky, and the less chance it has to impact the rudder. In other words, slipstream will be a dominating effect at low air speeds.
Torque is a roll and plays little part, gyroscopic effects exists only when AOA is changing, and p-factor can be ignored at low AOA. Since on roll out AOA is not changing and is very low, both p-factor and gyroscopic effects can be ignored. Further, pitching up causes a gyroscopic right yawing tendency.
So what does all this mean as it applies to a jet? I'd suspect a jet has very little, if any issues with turning tendencies for three reasons: Jet's accelerate the slipstream as accelerating air is how they produce thrust, minimizing the most dominant effect on roll out. Many jets have a slipstream that does not impact the vertical tail at all, completely neutralizing any possibility of slipstream effect. Finally, as the previous paragraph points out, the other effects in a propeller aircraft can be ignored for roll out considerations; I suspect that holds true for a jet as well.
I leave you with a quote from AFNA on the bottom of page 294, speaking to control requirements for the rudder:
I've been to type school on three different jets. Not once have I heard the words "you really gotta watch the (left/right) turning tendencies on this one...they're worse than anything else you've ever flown."
In other words, if they're happening, I'm certainly not feeling it, and even more certainly couldn't care less if there's some minute amount occurring.
FM had turning tendencies but those were from crappy rigging.
I hadn't even thought about slipstream effect, but your absolutely right.
Wouldn't Vmc speed have a bigger consideration on rudder size than anything else?
I was assuming multi's with the thread title.Not in a single.Apologies for not clarifying that in my latest post. Vmc is typically the design requirement in a twin, yes. In a single it's usually slipstream or spin recovery.
Do you happen to have anything that says otherwise with regard to torque effect causing more friction on the left main tire? Does this even seem plausible?
fish314 said:Torque effect is basically the equal and opposite force applied to the aircraft from a propellor that is turning the air that it flies through. Put more simply, because we've spun the air in one direction, there must be an equal and opposite "spin" applied to the airplane. In a jet engine you have fan blades that do apply a spin to the air as the fan goes by each set of blades... but after each set of fan blades you have a set of "stator" blades that basically take the spin back out again. (Actually what they do is turn the air again in the opposite direction, which helps to compress the air... but it also 'takes the spin' out).
So there ought not be much of any true "torque" effect since the jet engines do not apply much if any NET rotation to the air (unlike a prop, or a turboprop). When the air comes out the back of the engine, it really isn't spinning very much. Hence, no torque (or very little) on a turbine engine or a turbofan.