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They said it was a freak gust of wind; He circled around and landed at the same airport 10 minutes later. That must've been fun for the passengers..dimwit wrote:My guess is that the investigation will question what the pilot was doing trying to land a plane under such extreme weather conditions. Sounds like a case of 'getthereitis'.
dimwit wrote:My guess is that the investigation will question what the pilot was doing trying to land a plane under such extreme weather conditions. Sounds like a case of 'getthereitis'.
kurohinge1 wrote:Well done to the pilot, I say.
Crosswinds were within demonstrated limits for the A320, the flight was just unlucky to get one wing picked up by a freak gust of wind near the ground. I've experienced crosswind landings on similar jets but with tail mounted engines (=more difficult as the CG is further back) in tougher higher crosswinds than this... granted, these were flown by highly experienced test pilots with gazillions of hours on type, but your statement that the pilot was exceeding the plane's limits or his own is quite simply not true. Improper technique by the pilot flying by not using enough bank when decrabbing, maybe. But that remains to be seen.dimwit wrote:My guess is that the investigation will question what the pilot was doing trying to land a plane under such extreme weather conditions. Sounds like a case of 'getthereitis'.
Tsuru wrote: Improper technique by the pilot flying by not using enough bank when decrabbing, maybe. But that remains to be seen..
Tsuru wrote:You're sure the 155mph wasn't the speed of the aircraft itself?
Tsuru wrote:I wouldn't lose too much sleep over aircraft engines taking several seconds spinning up to takeoff thrust... each one has two or three large rotating masses weighing in at nearly a thousand pounds, so that's what they do. Bigger aircraft engines (747, 767) have the equivalent of a family saloon spinning around at several thousand RPM in each engine, and the rotating mass of the A380 and 777 engines is again twice this size. Inertia and all...
I would be very surprised if it turns out the engines were really that slow off the mark... on landing the jet engines on most aircraft aren't rolled back all the way to ground idle for this very reason. If you need to go around you need power that very second, not in four seconds... I do know from aircraft with the very same engines (737) that if you slam the throttles on approach, you have power available almost immediately (< 1 sec). This is because the situation is very different than on takeoff as the forward motion of the aircraft means the engines get air pushed in the intake practically for free and don't need to get their sucking action up to speed first, the engines are already spinning at flight idle minimum (~50% RPM on the outer shaft with the bleed air and fuel systems braced to deliver go-around thrust ASAP, versus ~20% RPM and lean fuel flow for ground idle), so all FADEC needs to do when the throttles are slammed forward is close the rings of valves that bleed air from the compressor to stop the engines from accelerating in these conditions, push as much fuel in as the engine can handle, and off you go. Hardly any need to wait for your family saloon to spin up.Charles wrote:Interesting about the crosslinked pilot/copilot sticks, I didn't know.
The thing about inertia is, when your wing is dragging, you need thrust NOW, not in 2 or 3 seconds. That's what puzzled the pilots, he seemed to have the thrust when he needed it, maybe he aborted and powered up just before the gust.
Have you been to Europe?Now what I really want to know is, why someone was out on the end of the runway with a video camera in the first place. Was the weather bad enough that he was hoping to tape a crash?
Tsuru wrote:I would be very surprised if it turns out the engines were really that slow off the mark... on landing the jet engines on most aircraft aren't rolled back all the way to ground idle for this very reason. If you need to go around you need power that very second, not in four seconds...
...Have you been to Europe?
Charles wrote:...What, do you have planespotters at the end of every runway?
It actually isn't. This kind of thing is rehearsed so many times during training performing a real, actual go-around when the proverbial shit hits the ventilator is almost down to pure instinct for pilots. And of course the computers help too to work out the details such as giving enough pitch-up to get off the ground, but not so much that you scrape the tail. And to get as much thrust from the engines as is available, but not so much that they surge.Charles wrote:Actually no. I don't know what you mean. What, do you have planespotters at the end of every runway?
The 1 sec powerup makes sense, he seems to have power just after he regained a bit of control. I can't imagine what it's like for a pilot to have to struggle for control and have to manage the powerup too. This really is doing calculus in your head, realtime.
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