In article ,
"C J Campbell" wrote:
I suppose you could also run the brakes off the same hydraulic system as the
gear, too. After all, if the gear fails you won't be needing any brakes. :-)
The B-24 I used to fly is like that. Brakes, flaps, landing gear and
bombbay doors all on the same system. There is one engine driven pump
(#3 engine), an electric pump and a hand-pump. There are also 2
accumulators. If you have pressure in the accumulators you will have
one shot at the brakes...release the brakes and you release the
pressure. The copilot will be pumping like crazy on the handpump about
then. G The gear will freefall into position (the nose gear has to be
manually thrown out), and the flaps can be pumped down using the
handpump.
I only had one problem with the hydraulics. The main feed line from the
engine driven pump cracked at an elbow filling the bombbay with
hydraulic fluid...took less than a minute to pump all the fluid out
rendering us helpless. Luckily we had just landed and were taxiing to
parking when it failed. Mixtures to "cutoff" and coasted to a stop.
Had just enough time to say "WHEW!" before the airplane started rolling
backward due to a very slight grade on the taxiway. NOT a good feeling.
G The crewchief was scrambling trying to get out to throw himself
under the wheel as a chock when we came to a stop. If the crack had
opened just a minute or two before I probablyl would've parked the
airplane in the same gas station Southwest did a few years back.
--
Dale L. Falk
There is nothing - absolutely nothing - half so much worth doing
as simply messing around with airplanes.
http://home.gci.net/~sncdfalk/flying.html