twighead
Pan Pan
- Joined
- Feb 5, 2006
- Posts
- 281
I remember watching this video in training at Piedmont. Not sure if it was during new hire training or during a CQ.
They haven't played it at any of the 4 that I've been to.
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I remember watching this video in training at Piedmont. Not sure if it was during new hire training or during a CQ.
They haven't played it at any of the 4 that I've been to.
It sucks to know that everything from that video the Q400 does in non-icing conditions, such as elevator buffet and major pitch-down during flap movement from 15 to 35. If it does that when clean you can only imagine would it would do in bad icing conditions.
is it completely impossible that a sudden pitch down, vertical descent, down thru the bottom and a pull-out (if you will) and then crash (but now inverted) would could have caused the above orientation? To get it 180 degrees from the original heading is definitely a new twist to this case
I wonder if the wreckage will display clues as to being inverted or not at impact?
You want to keep it in the flying envelope. If the airspeed is too high it will tail stall. If the speed is too low it will main wing stall. Although the initial actions might include power to idle and nose up, you would want to add power and level after the tail stall is exited.Just want to make sure I got this right. To counteract a stall of the tailplane, one has to pull back on the yoke (according to the video). Now, the NTSB is saying that the stick shaker and STICK PUSHER activated shortly before impact. Seems to me there's a flaw in the design. Why would anyone want to have to fight a stick pusher during a tailplane stall, when the proper reaction is to pull back?
You want to keep it in the flying envelope. If the airspeed is too high it will tail stall. If the speed is too low it will main wing stall. Although the initial actions might include power to idle and nose up, you would want to add power and level after the tail stall is exited.
Just want to make sure I got this right. To counteract a stall of the tailplane, one has to pull back on the yoke (according to the video). Now, the NTSB is saying that the stick shaker and STICK PUSHER activated shortly before impact. Seems to me there's a flaw in the design. Why would anyone want to have to fight a stick pusher during a tailplane stall, when the proper reaction is to pull back?
I'm no where near being able to remotely call myself an aerospace engineer.........but here's my 2 cents...a common everyday stall is the norm
(therefore that's what you try to protect against, you can overpower a stick pusher). A tailplane only stall is a function of the a/c being redesigned by mother nature due to ice.... I wouldn't know how you could mechanically differentiate or detect between the two....
(and would it be cost effective for something so rare? I'm not being insensitive to the price of a human life, just saying that flight has some inherent risks involved....) that is why computers cannot fly a/c under all conditions. You obviously need a human mind calculating the best decision for a given event.
Tail stall occurs when the angle of attack goes excessively negative.
Main wing stall occurs when the angle of attack goes excessively positive.
The pusher only fires at high angles of attack. The pusher should not fire during a tail stall... however if a tail stall leads to an upset it is understandable at some point during the attempted recovery the angle of attack could exceed the amount required to fire the pusher.