GravityHater
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 12, 2004
- Posts
- 1,168
Thanks, still looking for a pic as I havent seen them up close b4.There....clear as mud?
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Thanks, still looking for a pic as I havent seen them up close b4.There....clear as mud?
I used to fly with a guy in a Sabre 40 that deployed them in the flare on really short runways. Worked really well in that aircraft. A no-no in the 60.
There are as many TR techiniques as there are aircraft. Use what works best for yours.
In the 2000, there is a sw on the nose gear, so it has to be down.
Exactly what do you think would happen if only one bucket opened while airborne?
quote]
Witnessed that as well, nothing shocking. On that particular airframe, they are close enough to the centerline, and the fuse is short enough, that one reverser deployed with no power equated to about one inch of rudder pedal.
I've had only one bucket open on that airplane way too many times.......
As to the reversers blocking the rudder some how, I say poppy cock. With about 15,000 landings in DC-9's in Northern Wisconsin, Michigan and Minnesota with wild crosswinds on icey runways I can assure anyone the rudder works just fine with lots of reverse applied. After the Little Rock accident American's school house came up with that lame excuse and the NTSB and Boeing bought it. If it had not been an MD-80 it would have departed the side of the runway long before the end with the technique that was used. No auto-brakes armed, no auto-spoilers armed and steering the ailerons like a car. ARG! Rant over.![]()
Exactly what do you think would happen if only one bucket opened while airborne?
Also 400A, in regards to "it depends on the runway length". Landing distance is not even including T/R's. So how could you justify an accident to the FAA if you lost directional control b/c you didnt have the nosewheel down.
Again, we are risk managers and I can't find a reason to take that risk.
V2500 not a JT8D right?
and now they are capable of being deployed in flight.
Do we know what the flight characteristics of any of these a/c are, with reverse selected?
Brick attached to an anchor? Uncontrollable?
There have been no in-flight deployments in an Astra (other than flight test) that I'm aware of. They say the sim is a pretty faithful replication - it's nothing that can't be handled by pulling back the power on the offending side. There was one dual deployment in a Westwind on short final going into ILG a few years ago. I know one of the pilots involved - he chooses not to repeat the experience.Do we know what the flight characteristics of any of these a/c are, with reverse selected?
Brick attached to an anchor? Uncontrollable?