FN FAL
Freight Dawgs Rule
- Joined
- Dec 17, 2003
- Posts
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Are you refering to the surge in general?stingray said:Just get the dam thing check out by a qualified technician (mechanic). It should not be surging
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Are you refering to the surge in general?stingray said:Just get the dam thing check out by a qualified technician (mechanic). It should not be surging
mar said:Ok then. Here's a real life scenario for you.
We're about 1.5 hours into the flight when #4 "surges". Personally I observe, all four thrust levers moving slowly *towards* idle. I personally observe #4 N1 decreasing and I personally observed a slight roll to the right and the autopilot make a correction.
Naturally this all takes about one second.
The next thing I observe is the FE applying Max Continuous Thrust on all *four* engines and #4 N1 has recovered.
The FE thinks the auto throttles were making an uncommanded roll back towards flight idle. The Capt is asking for more information as he was checking a chart and just caught the roll back when the plane rolled.
I don't know what to think. I thought the autothrottles were making a normal adjustment. We were in level cruise so I wouldn't consider a compressor stall and certainly not a bird. Besides that the engine recovered and continued to operate normally for the next six hours.
My guess is no. He referred to "the Rt. engine" (singular) and "both engines", as in two. I don't think that description would fit the case of the KC-135. He also referred to "the left [fuel] system", another term inconsistent with the StratoTanker. It has (I'm stretching my memory a bit here) at least nine separate tanks from which to choose.![]()
That leaves the second of my hypotheses, the airspeed indication. A brief erroneous high airspeed indication would have resulted in a signal to the autothrottles to retard the thrust. I doubt anyone was looking at the airpseed during that brief time since your other senses (sight, sound, vestibular acceleration, seat pressures, etc.) assumed that to be constant. Perhaps you witnessed the first hiccup of an Air Data Computer.mar said:I'm not a very good reporter. The autothrottle movement (I think) was just coincidental to the "burp" on #4. But it's sort of a Red Herring because the FE (who's very good and *was* awake) mistakenly thought (in my opinion) that there was a malfunction in the autothrottle system and that's why he advanced all four.
The engines are CF6 so no EPR. I did see the N1 roll back. And I heard and felt the loss of thrust.
Clear night; no ice.
mar said:I'm not a very good reporter. The autothrottle movement (I think) was just coincidental to the "burp" on #4. But it's sort of a Red Herring because the FE (who's very good and *was* awake) mistakenly thought (in my opinion) that there was a malfunction in the autothrottle system and that's why he advanced all four.
The engines are CF6 so no EPR. I did see the N1 roll back. And I heard and felt the loss of thrust.
Clear night; no ice.
Tank configuration. Hard to say because that's all behind me but I'm assuming we were burning out of tanks 2 & 3 that early into the cruise. As for center fuel tank, I'm sure there was some but I honestly can't say how it was being used.
Interesting theory about cold fuel from the #4 reserve tank but I doubt that one for a few different reasons (too early, mixing in #4 main, fuel heaters, etc).
Fuel pump burp above FL280? I suppose, that's not impossible.
Just one of those things....![]()