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#22
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Bob Moore wrote in
46.128: wrote Also why do large aircraft fly much lower than their service ceilings? I assume they would be even more efficient if they flew close to service ceilings on long haul flights. A couple of reasons...........First, something known as "Optimum Altitude". As an aircraft climbs, its true airspeed (Mach Number) increases, and at high Mach Numbers, there is a rapid increase in Drag. This results in a higher fuel burn at cruise altitudes above Optimum Altitude. So as the aircraft climbs above optimum, there is an increase in fuel burn and a decrease in buffet boundry margins. At the aircraft's maximum altitude, there is literly NO buffet boundry margin, ie. Mach buffet equals Stall buffet equals Coffin Corner. Actually, at max, you still have your margin, whatever that may be,1.4, 1.25 or whatever, unless you go right up past that to the point where you get low and high speed buffet at the same time. It's not the high mach number increasing the drag. .80 is .80 whether you are at 260 or 410. The drag past optimum comes from the incipient buffet caused by the increasing mach of the air accelerating around the wing due to the increasing alpha. Splitting hairs, I know.. Second, time for an Emergency Descent. FAR 25.841 (copied below) limits the maximum useable altitude. The B-707 that I flew for 17 years was limited to FL410 just due to the time required for the idle power,gear down, speed brakes extended, max gear extended speed descent, while the Air Force flew them to FL420. We don't put the gear down for a blowout anymore. Don't know why. The gear doors are even less limiting than they used to be... Bertie |
#23
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On Jan 30, 6:11*pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
D Ramapriya wrote : We get cleared to an altitude and have to hold that altitude to avoid running into other airplanes. The autopilot does not just go where it pleases. My point exactly, No, it wasn't. you said that the AP will ensure that you keep flying at the programmed altitude throught trim and throttle changes. It won't. So the AP's FD Altitude Controls do what? The FD and the autopilot are two different things. Bertie Fair enough but I was talking (loosely, admittedly) of what the AFDS commands and gets done. Ramapriya |
#24
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D Ramapriya wrote in
: On Jan 30, 6:11*pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote: D Ramapriya wrote innews:d6cd3158-6cb0-4ffd-927c-5 : We get cleared to an altitude and have to hold that altitude to avoid running into other airplanes. The autopilot does not just go where it pleases. My point exactly, No, it wasn't. you said that the AP will ensure that you keep flying at the programmed altitude throught trim and throttle changes. It won't. So the AP's FD Altitude Controls do what? The FD and the autopilot are two different things. Bertie Fair enough but I was talking (loosely, admittedly) of what the AFDS commands and gets done. Uh, no you weren't You were talking about what you imagine they do based on what you've read in the latest issue of "Take Off!" Get the litle Spitfire finished yet? Bertie |
#25
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Dan wrote:
I've been on commercial flights up to FL410, and (I beleive) FL430. These were long-haul international flights. --Dan I've been on a commercial flight that was at ~FL600. |
#26
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On Jan 30, 6:36*pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
D Ramapriya wrote : On Jan 30, 6:11*pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote: D Ramapriya wrote innews:d6cd3158-6cb0-4ffd-927c-5 : We get cleared to an altitude and have to hold that altitude to avoid running into other airplanes. The autopilot does not just go where it pleases. My point exactly, No, it wasn't. you said that the AP will ensure that you keep flying at the programmed altitude throught trim and throttle changes. It won't. So the AP's FD Altitude Controls do what? The FD and the autopilot are two different things. Bertie Fair enough but I was talking (loosely, admittedly) of what the AFDS commands and gets done. Uh, no you weren't You were talking about what you imagine they do based on what you've read in the latest issue of "Take Off!" Get the litle Spitfire finished yet? Bertie Try and stop projecting, Bertie. Ramapriya |
#27
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D Ramapriya wrote in
: On Jan 30, 6:36*pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote: D Ramapriya wrote innews:efc9979a-39c2-404c-8460-9 : On Jan 30, 6:11*pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote: D Ramapriya wrote innews:d6cd3158-6cb0-4ffd-927c-5 : We get cleared to an altitude and have to hold that altitude to avoid running into other airplanes. The autopilot does not just go where it pleases. My point exactly, No, it wasn't. you said that the AP will ensure that you keep flying at the programmed altitude throught trim and throttle changes. It won't. So the AP's FD Altitude Controls do what? The FD and the autopilot are two different things. Bertie Fair enough but I was talking (loosely, admittedly) of what the AFDS commands and gets done. Uh, no you weren't You were talking about what you imagine they do based on what you've read in the latest issue of "Take Off!" Get the litle Spitfire finished yet? Bertie Try and stop projecting, Bertie. Yeah, an IKYABWAI poast. That'll fool 'em. Bertie |
#28
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Clark wrote in news:Xns9A354D69FC171ch2uswestnet@
64.209.0.90: Peter Clark wrote in : On Wed, 30 Jan 2008 02:44:29 -0800 (PST), D Ramapriya wrote: My point exactly, in response to WingFlaps' "When you fly across the Pacific the plane can only get higher as fuel is burned". The AP will anon go where it pleases too on the next-generation 'Buses, albeit in exceptional circumstances. From what I've read, if there's a TCAS warning, the decision will be taken out of the pilots' hands and the AP will command as needed to avoid a collision. Ramapriya Google "step climb". better yet, google cruise climb Different thing altogether. It;'s a speed selected to optimise the climb in order to get a speed that will give you a better performance, whether that be time point to point, or fuel economy. IOW you sacrifice a tiny bit of your ROC in order to get a disproportianate increase in speed. Works in anything to some extent or another. Bertie |
#29
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Gig 601XL Builder wrote in news:13q134hrfmbhv24
@news.supernews.com: Dan wrote: I've been on commercial flights up to FL410, and (I beleive) FL430. These were long-haul international flights. --Dan I've been on a commercial flight that was at ~FL600. Not technically commercial since it didn't make money! You were on a socialist flight! Bertie |
#30
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Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
Gig 601XL Builder wrote in news:13q134hrfmbhv24 @news.supernews.com: Dan wrote: I've been on commercial flights up to FL410, and (I beleive) FL430. These were long-haul international flights. --Dan I've been on a commercial flight that was at ~FL600. Not technically commercial since it didn't make money! You were on a socialist flight! Bertie Good point. |
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