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#1
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Hi there,
Is a non-aviator airing a doubt ok with you folks? I know cars and trucks tend to skid even at low speeds in sleet and on ice, with braking often proving ineffectual. This leaves me wondering why is it that we don't ever hear of aircraft skidding and going off-track while taxiing or even during takeoff/landing? Is the lack of such incidents only because of the meticulousness of ice clearance by airport authorities? Look forward to a comment on this from you experienced folks ![]() Cheers, Ramapriya |
#2
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![]() "Ramapriya" wrote in message om... Hi there, Is a non-aviator airing a doubt ok with you folks? I know cars and trucks tend to skid even at low speeds in sleet and on ice, with braking often proving ineffectual. This leaves me wondering why is it that we don't ever hear of aircraft skidding and going off-track while taxiing or even during takeoff/landing? Is the lack of such incidents only because of the meticulousness of ice clearance by airport authorities? Look forward to a comment on this from you experienced folks ![]() Cheers, Ramapriya |
#3
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![]() why is it that we don't ever hear of aircraft skidding and going off-track while taxiing or even during takeoff/landing? Is the lack of such incidents only because of the meticulousness of ice clearance by airport authorities? It is because no pilot would dare take off or land on an icy runway, and yes they are meticulously cleared at major airports. |
#4
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"Ramapriya" wrote in message
om... I know cars and trucks tend to skid even at low speeds in sleet and on ice, with braking often proving ineffectual. This leaves me wondering why is it that we don't ever hear of aircraft skidding and going off-track while taxiing or even during takeoff/landing? Is the lack of such incidents only because of the meticulousness of ice clearance by airport authorities? These things do happen, though mostly to small planes and not generally fatal so they're not big news items. Why doesn't this happen with airliners? I'll hazard the following guesses: 1. Thrust reversers provide braking power even if the tires have no grip at all 2. Landings are made in a straight line on a flat runway. It's curves and hills that cause trouble on icy roads. 3. Weight-to-tire-area ratio: I'm guessing here, but it seems to me that airliners put a lot of weight on a relatively small amount of tire area compared to cars. This would improve traction. 4. Operator skill: Trained pilots vs. idiot/unskilled drivers In my (limited) experience, you're lucky if the runway is cleared of snow/ice better than the highways, especially during/after a large storm. -cwk. |
#5
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"Ramapriya" wrote in message
om... Is a non-aviator airing a doubt ok with you folks? Sure. I know cars and trucks tend to skid even at low speeds in sleet and on ice, with braking often proving ineffectual. This leaves me wondering why is it that we don't ever hear of aircraft skidding and going off-track while taxiing or even during takeoff/landing? Perhaps you just aren't receiving your information from sources that would mention such an event. Is the lack of such incidents only because of the meticulousness of ice clearance by airport authorities? At some airports, yes. Generally, the more important an airport is to the national transportation system (and all airports are important at least to some degree), the better quality of maintenance, including keeping the pavement clear of snow and ice. Some of the largest airports even have heated runways, I believe. Even so, once in a very long while, an airliner does wind up skidding off the runway or taxiway somewhere. I don't know the exact frequency, but probably on the order of once a decade or so. At smaller airports, this happens more frequently, but as with cars, it rarely involves more than some bent sheet metal. Accidents are likely to be low speed (almost all taxiing happens at relatively low speeds...5-10mph at most), and those that happen on landing (i.e. at higher speed) often don't wind up in the news because they happened at the airport, rather than somewhere that would make for something that sells ads on the evening news (like a residential neighborhood). Another factor is that airplanes have more to control them than just the tires. In particular, the faster the airplane is going, the more likely the same surfaces used to control the airplane in the air can also be used to control the airplane on the ground. Just as a "for example", I landed at the Reno, NV airport once on a VERY hot day, while flying a small four-seater single-engine airplane. I landed on the same runway that the big airliners use, and touched down in the same spot that they do. Well, it turns out that when they touch down, each one leaves a little rubber. By the time I'd arrive, there was a WHOLE LOT of rubber, at a very high temperature. It was as slick as any ice, perhaps slicker. I had no braking whatsoever. But I didn't lose control of the airplane, because I still had plenty of rudder control to keep me going in the right direction. I simply "flew" the airplane while on the ground, until I got to the pavement that was clear, made a normal stop and taxied off the runway. This same effect helps prevent takeoff accidents...long before the airplane leaves the ground, the tires are no longer required to keep the airplane aligned with the runway. Rudder control is perfectly sufficient, especially on a runway that is nice and flat. Of course, all of the things that "cwk" mentions are relevant too. The bottom line is that it's not actually true that airplanes don't have trouble with ice, but it IS true that there are reasons those issues come up less frequently than they might with automobiles. Pete |
#6
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![]() In article , Ramapriya wrote: Is a non-aviator airing a doubt ok with you folks? Depends on the doubt. Some "doubt"s sound like trolls. I know cars and trucks tend to skid even at low speeds in sleet and on ice, with braking often proving ineffectual. This leaves me wondering why is it that we don't ever hear of aircraft skidding and going off-track while taxiing or even during takeoff/landing? Is the lack of such incidents only because of the meticulousness of ice clearance by airport authorities? Good question. In fact it does happen on occasion. Sometimes airlines run off the end of the runway, the equivalent of a (very expensive) fender bender, with few injuries. It doesn't happen often because the main difference between airplanes maneuvering on the ground and road vehicles is that airplanes are going much slower, so the brakes remain relatively effective (add extra distance for the stopping distance). At higher speeds when taking off and landing, they're getting their drive and control from aerodynamic forces. A number of years ago when the world was younger, a buddy who was/is (lost touch with him) a Greek national, who's mother work(s|ed) for the airline told a story of sitting in the jump seat of a 747 leaving NY. It was the first plane out after a closure (usually, the first airline out "sweeps" the runway) The copilot, who didn't have any winter driving experience (not a lot of winter driving conditions in Greece) turned onto the runway, applying too much power, spun out. No damage, except to pride. Normally, when that happens, you go back to the end of the line (there will be a long line of delayed planes waiting to leave under those conditions). The pilot of the #2 aircraft "politely" let them try again anyway (so he got the freshly sweeped runway). Morris |
#7
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In article ,
"Greg Butler" wrote: It is because no pilot would dare take off or land on an icy runway, and yes they are meticulously cleared at major airports. I was going to argue this point with you, but realized that when I did my landings and takeoffs from the surface of a frozen lake it wasn't a "runway". It was icy however. G -- 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 |
#9
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![]() "Ramapriya" wrote in message om... Hi there, Is a non-aviator airing a doubt ok with you folks? I know cars and trucks tend to skid even at low speeds in sleet and on ice, with braking often proving ineffectual. This leaves me wondering why is it that we don't ever hear of aircraft skidding and going off-track while taxiing or even during takeoff/landing? Is the lack of such incidents only because of the meticulousness of ice clearance by airport authorities? Look forward to a comment on this from you experienced folks ![]() Cheers, Ramapriya They WILL skid but don't ordinarily. Many of the older aircraft did very well without brakes. You taxi slowly and don't generate any centrifugal force in a turn. If you take off in a straight line, which aircraft do, 99% of the time there is no force which can cause the aircraft to skid. You use rudder and aileron to correct against any force, like the wind or torque of the propeller, to keep your takeoff under control. I see skid marks on our runway all the time. Tires skid as soon as they touch down. It takes them a few feet to spin up. Sometimes a pilot will get on the brakes a little too heavy and skid, but that's either because he's had poor training or is about to run out of runway on landing rollout. The brakes on my old airplane from the forties are very poor and only effective enough to allow me to turn during taxi by differential braking. Otherwise I never use them except when landing on a very short field when I can see the bark on the trees ahead. |
#10
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1. Ground vehicles rely on their tires for propulsion, which can lead to
loss of control on slick surfaces. Airplanes use propellors or turbines which push air around for propulsion. 2. Ground vehicles rely solely on their tires for directional control, which lose traction on slick surfaces. Airplanes can utilize thrust (including differential thrust) and flight control surfaces (rudder) for directional control on slick surfaces. 3. Ground vehicles rely solely on brakes and tires for stopping. Many airplanes have thrust reversers to help them stop. Single engine piston airplanes have the same problem as ground vehicles when it comes to stopping. As you can see, airplanes possess a number of advantages over ground vehicles for manuevering on slick surfaces. They aren't completely immune to the problem, but less prone to loss of control. Dean "Ramapriya" wrote in message om... Hi there, Is a non-aviator airing a doubt ok with you folks? I know cars and trucks tend to skid even at low speeds in sleet and on ice, with braking often proving ineffectual. This leaves me wondering why is it that we don't ever hear of aircraft skidding and going off-track while taxiing or even during takeoff/landing? Is the lack of such incidents only because of the meticulousness of ice clearance by airport authorities? Look forward to a comment on this from you experienced folks ![]() Cheers, Ramapriya |
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