ultrarunner
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 26, 2001
- Posts
- 4,322
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pretty much said the FO crashed the airplane due to AA's AAMP. it also stated that the ntsb interviewed other AA CA's who had flown with the FO and stated he was aggressive with the rudders with them also.....
I found that an interesting comment also. In what context was this guy "agressive" with the rudders??? Flying the line? Training environment?
Last time I used a rudder with any authority was flying a tail wheel airplane. I'm thinking the yaw damper is smarter than me most of the time.
i don't know, this is all the special said those interviews stated. they stressed the AAMP was stressing the rudder, especially in the simulator training and the FO simply reverted to this.
looking at the NTSB recreation i see no reason why to use the rudder (even according to the AAMP video, but who knows what AA's instructors were saying in the sim). some have suggested the data doesn't record "who" (ie implying perhaps turbulenece or some air phenomena moved it) moves the rudder, but i think that perhaps is a little disingenuous.
AAMP was good training with the focus on how to best fly an airplane out of a situation requiring advanced maneuvering. One of the points was that the rudder is the most effective flight control at high AOA. The missing piece of information was the manufacturer's knowlege that the tail could be overstressed by rudder reversal at or below Va. If read the entire NTSB report, you might come away with more questions than answers (in contrast to the TV show).
AAMP was developed in the context of several transport aircraft mishaps that might have been avoidable with more training.
AAMP was good training with the focus on how to best fly an airplane out of a situation requiring advanced maneuvering. One of the points was that the rudder is the most effective flight control at high AOA. The missing piece of information was the manufacturer's knowlege that the tail could be overstressed by rudder reversal at or below Va. If read the entire NTSB report, you might come away with more questions than answers (in contrast to the TV show).
AAMP was developed in the context of several transport aircraft mishaps that might have been avoidable with more training.
An American Airlines captain who flew several times with the first officer on Boeing 727s told investigators that during one flight sometime in 1997, the first officer had been “very aggressive” on the rudder pedals after a wake turbulence encounter.
you guys left out some acronyms, I think...
:erm:
Sincerely,
B. Franklin
What is top rudder? Excuse my ignorance.
when an airplane is banked 90deg the rudder is basically your elevator. you step on the top rudder (ie 90deg banked to the right, then top is left and vice versa) to keep the nose up.
With all due respect, that's a bit simplistic. What top rudder does, especially with some swept-back wings at high AOA, is create a powerful rolling moment. If the jet was 90 degrees right bank, then left rudder will in theory force a roll back to wings level, but only if the AOA remains high; the wings must be loaded up. No AOA, no rudder roll, and at 90 degrees of bank, that nose is headed towards terra firma; nothing you can do about it.
In other words, unless you are in some exotic acro aircraft doing a knife-edge, if you roll to 90 degrees and push slightly forward to reduce AOA, the nose is going to drop like a rock despite all the top rudder in the world.