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1. Radio altimeter <10' altitude or air/ground safety sensor in the ground mode.
2. I'm assuming you mean ground operation...
auto speedbrake:
-lever armed
-speedbrake armed light illuminated
-both thrust levers retarded to idle
-main landing gear spin up <60kts
-right main strut compressed opening the mechanical linkage to the ground
spoiler shutoff valve
-radio altitude <10'
actually, not true. The speedbrake will deploy automaticly when you deploy the thrust reverse.
what?!?!
What?!?! , What?!?!
If you forget to arm the speed brake, Boeing designed it to auto deploy. It is the same system that deploys them on a rejected takeoff without the lever in the ARM position.
I don't recall ever reading that. What's the point of arming them then if they'll auto-deploy anyway?
Apparently the Space Shuttle only needs around 9000' as well. Granted they don't land it in the rain and some distances were longer.
STS-1
April 14, 1981, 10:20:57 a.m. PST, Runway 23, Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. Rollout distance: 8,993 feet. Rollout time: 60 seconds. Landing Weight: 194,184 lbs.
STS-2
November 14, 1981, 1:23:11 p.m. PST, Runway 23, Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. Rollout distance: 7,711 feet. Rollout time: 50 seconds. Landing Weight: 204,262 lbs.
etc, etc...
I don't recall ever reading that. What's the point of arming them then if they'll auto-deploy anyway? I'm trying to find it in my manual. If it's true, just goes to show you learn something new everyday!
Let's back up just a second. There are TWO types of spoilers - Ground and Flight (speedbrakes).
The ground spoilers will deploy upon right main gear squat switch.
The flight spoilers will deploy upon main gear wheelspin.
Right crosswind landings are always rougher because you're getting all the spoilers to deploy at the same time. And old hat taught me to slip the aircraft in the flare to get the left main to touch juuuuuuuust a touch before the right.
The reason to ARM them is so they will auto-deploy upon landing and kill lift BEFORE the T/R's are activated. The T/R deploy is just a backup.
Gup
The year 1981 was way different than 2009.
Atmosphere, global warming, break pads, dirt runway, etc, etc...
The year 1981 was way different than 2009.
Atmosphere, global warming, break pads, dirt runway, etc, etc...
Apparently the Space Shuttle only needs around 9000' as well. Granted they don't land it in the rain and some distances were longer.
STS-1
April 14, 1981, 10:20:57 a.m. PST, Runway 23, Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. Rollout distance: 8,993 feet. Rollout time: 60 seconds. Landing Weight: 194,184 lbs.
STS-2
November 14, 1981, 1:23:11 p.m. PST, Runway 23, Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. Rollout distance: 7,711 feet. Rollout time: 50 seconds. Landing Weight: 204,262 lbs.
etc, etc...
Actually we're talkin' about NGs here, so probably only like 50 knots.The space shuttle also lands like around 100 knots faster than a 737 too.
Let's back up just a second. There are TWO types of spoilers - Ground and Flight (speedbrakes).
The ground spoilers will deploy upon right main gear squat switch.
The flight spoilers will deploy upon main gear wheelspin.
Right crosswind landings are always rougher because you're getting all the spoilers to deploy at the same time. And old hat taught me to slip the aircraft in the flare to get the left main to touch juuuuuuuust a touch before the right.
The reason to ARM them is so they will auto-deploy upon landing and kill lift BEFORE the T/R's are activated. The T/R deploy is just a backup.
Gup
While we're on the subject of spoilers, what would happen to them if they were deployed and hydraulic pressure was removed. Would they stay up for some period of time, stay up forever or drop more or less right away?