PhatAJ2008
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jun 24, 2005
- Posts
- 218
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Do they steer on the ground with the wheel to the captains left? or is this something else? Just wondered thanks
Tiller (on the left) or good old rudder, brakes and THRUST.
Wheel gives you 82 degrees with both hydraulics on, and rudder 17 degrees. And the answer to your next question is, " 9 times the square root of the tire pressure. "
I think you are mixing some automotive concepts in here. I do not think that works. The weight distribution is different. The main landing gear carries most of the weight in most airplanes. The point at which the nosewheel(s) start to scuff and fail to track a turn would be hard to predict. Even on a hard dry surface they will begin to slip at rather low speeds as the cornering angle is increased if the turn is commanded with nosewheel steering alone. The "G" force would be nil. On contaminated surfaces the cornering angle would be close to nil also, the wheels will just slide.So what kind of max cornering G does the MD-80 throw down on the skidpad? Is there any tendency to oversteer or understeer?
So what kind of max cornering G does the MD-80 throw down on the skidpad? Is there any tendency to oversteer or understeer?
I've probably gotten around .80 coming off a high-speed. It's pretty neutral but it does have the tendency to break loose at the limit with little warning. God help you if you get one of those European high-speeds with a decreasing radius turn!
It's not like a 911 where if you stay on the power, you can hold it. When an 80 goes, you're a passenger! TC