AirplanesSuck
Malevolent Matriculator
- Joined
- Sep 17, 2006
- Posts
- 21,969
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RIP Sara and James.
There's absolutely no reason that the 31, 60 and 45 shouldn't have had a dragchute like their predecessors.
1) Correct... if the T/R relay box receives "air" signals from squat switches.
2) Not completely correct... the hydraulic pressure for brakes comes from the nose gear down line. However, the anti-skid function is controlled by individual squat switches. The only way you can guarantee effective brakes (with squat switches in "air mode") with the gear down is turning the anti-skid off or using emergency braking.
Not trying to nitpick, but the question was "will you loose brakes if a squat switch is damaged?" No, you will not, you could loose the anti skid function, but you still will have full brake pressure.
3) Not completely correct... The squat switch relay box uses signals from both switches, and as long as one is in "ground mode," the relay box is in "ground mode." However, many systems bypass the relay box and get signals from both squat switches individually (anti-skid, for example).
True, some things are controlled off of individual switches. But I was trying to answer specific items. You cannot speed up the engines with the piggy backs up and the T/R's closed, and you do not loose total brake pressure either.
4) Correct. Aborts do not rely on autospoilers... they are to be fully deployed manually.
Edited so as not to offend anyone who writes more than he/she reads.
Why would a 45 need it? Awesome brakes.
RIP Sara and James.
There's absolutely no reason that the 31, 60 and 45 shouldn't have had a dragchute like their predecessors.
My suggestion would be to GET A NITROGEN TIRE GAGE AND START CHECKING your tire pressures yourself.
Is there such a thing as a Nitrogen Tire Gauge? I never thought of it before, but wouldn't any high-quality calibrated tire gauge work? Pressure is pressure, right?