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During a cruise, just pressing on one of the rudders should make an
aircraft turn horizontally in that direction, when no ailerons are used. Reducing power in the opposite engine should logically accelerate such a turn. Makes me wonder why then was it is that, in the crash at the end of 2001 just outside of NY, the A300's rear bulkhead came loose when the pilot used the rudder to correct a yaw induced by probably a wake vortex ? Ramapriya |
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"Ramapriya" wrote in message
oups.com... During a cruise, just pressing on one of the rudders should make an aircraft turn horizontally in that direction, when no ailerons are used. Reducing power in the opposite engine should logically accelerate such a turn. With respect to rudder input: rudder is used to coordinate a turn. You can turn a plane with rudder alone, but not nearly as efficiently or quickly as when you bank with aileron and use the rudder to keep the turn coordinated. Rudder control input creates a force that is then transmitted to the airframe, which then reacts according to various other forces at play, along with the inertia of the airframe, to create a change in yaw (one hopes). Makes me wonder why then was it is that, in the crash at the end of 2001 just outside of NY, the A300's rear bulkhead came loose when the pilot used the rudder to correct a yaw induced by probably a wake vortex ? The accident you're talking about, the vertical stabilizer itself came off. It came off because the aerodynamic force applied to it exceeded the strength of the structure. That force exceeded the strength because the rudder was fully deflected back and forth multiple times, to the point where the yaw angle was so great that an opposite rudder deflection exerted too much force on the structure. The accident has little to do with how one turns an airplane, whether or not you accomplish the turn solely with the rudder. If you are asking "why did the rudder input simply not just turn the airplane?" the answer is simple: the first rudder input(s) did. But at some point, the yaw angle was so great and/or the rate of yaw was so great in one direction, that a full opposite rudder deflection created so much force relative to the inertia of the airplane, that the vertical stabilizer separated, rather than being able to transmit that force to the rest of the airframe (and thus causing the commanded yaw). Same thing could potentially happen in a boat, by the way. Any aerodynamic or hydrodynamic control surface, whether it's the rudder for an airplane, a boat, or something else, has to create a force that is then applied to the vehicle structure. Even if the vehicle had almost no inertia (i.e. mass), there would be a force large enough to break the structure (though the control surface may or may not be capable of creating such a large force). As the vehicle's inertia goes up (and in an airliner, you can see inertia is quite large indeed), the force itself required to break the structure attaching the control surface to the vehicle actually goes down. In the case of the Airbus accident, the control surface was capable, under the right circumstances, of creating a force greater than the strenth of the attachment structure, and because of the inertia of the airplane (again, because of just the right circumstance) that force could not be relieved before the structure broke. If the vehicle structure cannot change its momentum quickly enough to relieve an applied force that is greater than the structural strength before it breaks the structure, the structure will break. Simple as that. As for why the aircraft was not designed so that the structure was not strong enough to withstand the strongest force the control surface could create, that's a reasonable question. However, the general answer is that aircraft design is a compromise. More than in any other kind of vehicle, weight is a serious issue, and if a structure can be made weaker (and thus lighter) without creating what someone feels is a serious safety issue, it will be. In this particular accident, I'm sure that the question of who knew that the airplane shouldn't have been flown the way it was flown, and whether they told the right people, will be something that the lawyers argue about for years to come. But the fact will always remain, if you make an airplane strong enough that it simply cannot break under any circumstances, it may be too heavy to get off the ground. Pete |
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![]() "Ramapriya" wrote in message oups.com... During a cruise, just pressing on one of the rudders should make an aircraft turn horizontally in that direction, when no ailerons are used. Reducing power in the opposite engine should logically accelerate such a turn. Langewiesche's book "Stick and Rudder" goes into a lot of detail on this. The basic idea is that what makes a plane turn is a combination of banking which induces a horizontal lift vector in the direction of the turn and the rudder inducing a weathervaning effect into the relative wind. It's actually a rather complicated thing. Butthe easiest way to think about it is, "the rudder does not make the plane turn." It does, but not the way most people think. In fact, you'll hear a lot of CFIs here argue that many private pilots trained these days don't really understand the rudder or use it properly. Langewiesche himself argued that the rudder was a design artifact that would be unnecessary on a properly-designed airplane. If this discussion is at all interesting to you, I recommend buying and reading the book. It is written for the novice and is still in print. -cwk. |
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