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#21
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"Robert M. Gary" wrote:
at first Boeing didn't believe it really happened until they sent their engineers out. They explaination is that the body itself generates so much lift it could still fly. If this account is true, then what does this say about the engineers of this aircraft? Isn't the lift generated by the body itself taken into account by these engineers? -- Peter |
#22
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Leonard Milcin Jr. wrote:
Jim Macklin wrote: http://www.strangemilitary.com/content/item/110099.html Besides being both very good and lucky pilot he risked his life to save machine that will be written off anyway. But I suppose he wasn't aware of that at the time... They put a new wing back on... |
#23
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![]() "Peter R." wrote in message ... "Robert M. Gary" wrote: at first Boeing didn't believe it really happened until they sent their engineers out. They explaination is that the body itself generates so much lift it could still fly. If this account is true, then what does this say about the engineers of this aircraft? Isn't the lift generated by the body itself taken into account by these engineers? -- Peter Yeah, but... At first glance, the engineers probably looked at first order issues - can the airplane fly straight and level with most of one wing missing? I'm sure they had enough data in their files to say... At a certain speed, the good wing generates X pounds of lift and a rolling moment of Y pound feet. The remaining aileron can generate a rolling moment of Z pound feet to counter the rolling moment from the wing. The answer was probably that Y Z, so the aircraft would be uncontrollable. As Dudley pointed out, there was probably a significant yaw induced due to the asymmetric airframe. This would have reduced lift on the existing wing, reduced the rolling moment, and allowed the wide fuselage to generate enough lift at 250 knots to bring the airplane home. It is very doubtful that the engineers had data for that flight condition at hand to override the initial analysis based on the data they did have... KB |
#24
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Besides being both very good and lucky pilot he risked his life to save
machine that will be written off anyway. .... and also to prevent it from impacting randomly. Jose -- There are more ways to skin a cat than there are cats. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#25
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Given enough power, almost anything will fly. Controllably? That's another
story. Pretty exciting stuff. -- Bob (Chief Pilot, White Knuckle Airways) "Jim Macklin" wrote in message news:caLOg.22772$SZ3.8382@dukeread04... Bumblebees can't fly either. I'm most amazed, not that it could fly, but that the pilot recovered control. "Dudley Henriques" wrote in message ink.net... | | "Jim Macklin" wrote in message | news:2dFOg.22744$SZ3.2566@dukeread04... | http://www.strangemilitary.com/content/item/110099.html | | | | Friend of mine, a General in the SAAF, sent this along to us a while back. | Amazing really. | I think they tossed it around a bit down at Navy TPS at Pax and I believe | someone finally came up with a computer model that worked for the scenario. | The fuselage around the intake area apparently created a great deal of lift | as the airplane went to a natural yaw angle with the one wing gone. Don't | remember exactly what the cross over airspeed was to get that yaw angle, but | I'm guessing it was extremely high. | I think he brought it in at over 250kts. Of course he was a bit light on | fuel :-)) Anyway, if I recall correctly, the MD engineers were mightily | impressed with their hardware :-)) | Interesting incident. I seem to remember an F4 driver going off the Midway | with the wings folded as well. I think he made it as well but I don't | remember the details of the story. | Dudley | | |
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