1 / 18

NA-08 (OCF) T- 45 FC

NA-08 (OCF) T- 45 FC. Explore Out of Control Flight Characteristics. ORM. Operational Requirements / Limitations Crew Rest / Crew Day / Work Week R&I IP Currency (SOP) Warm Up Eligibility Previous Flight Incomplete? Determine Graded Items. Human Factors

Download Presentation

NA-08 (OCF) T- 45 FC

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. NA-08 (OCF)T- 45 FC Explore Out of Control Flight Characteristics

  2. ORM • Operational Requirements / Limitations • Crew Rest / Crew Day / Work Week • R&I • IP Currency (SOP) • Warm Up Eligibility • Previous Flight Incomplete? Determine Graded Items. • Human Factors • Life Stressors / External Factors / Personal Problems • Medical Status (Rest / Nourishment / Hydration) • Hazards and Controls • Routine • Weather • Current Observations and Forecasts • Crosswinds • Fuel Considerations • Mission Specific

  3. TTO • Who will call a TTO? • What situations will the TTO be called? • Safety • Confusion / Misunderstanding • IP Responsibilities • Recognize need for TTO • Explanation / Instruction as necessary • Documentation on ATF • When and how will training resume? Skip to Flight Brief

  4. Admin (Mission Card) • A/C - ATC C/S - Tactical C/S - Crew • Brief / Walk / Marshal / Takeoff / Land Times • ATC Clearance / IFF • Range Info / Restrictions • Line / T/O / Abort / RPM • Comm Plan - Tac • Nav Plan • Joker / RTB

  5. Admin • Launch • Weather / NOTAMS / TFR / BASH • Preflight / Start / Marshal / Taxi • T/O • Transit • RadAlt Usage • RTB • Recovery • Diverts

  6. Conduct • Practice: • Takeoff • High AOA / deep stall investigation / rudder induced departure • Low airspeed recovery (70 degrees) • Low airspeed recovery (110 degrees) • Lateral stick adverse yaw departure • Recovery to pattern • Precautionary approach • Field landing activities • VFR landing pattern • Crosswind landings (conditions permitting)

  7. Brief • QOD • NATOPS • EP • SOP • Departure/spin procedures • NATOPS Chapter 11

  8. Departure / Spin Procedures • WHY • Controls- Neutralize (forcibly center rudder pedals) • Take out input that caused you to depart, provide smooth airflow over the airframe, prevent rudder blow out • Speed brakes – Retract • Provide smooth airflow over the stabs, decrease chance of yaw • Throttle – Idle • Best compressor stall margin • Check altitude, AOA, airspeed, and turn needle • Altitude is like stopwatch for time remaining; AOA (is it pegged at 0 or 28 and above) if not, you are not yet in a spin; airspeed (fairly steady below 160 for steady state spin) need 150 or greater before recovering; turn needle (only reliable indication of direction of spin). Continue updating instruments over the ICS throughout the recovery (Think CRM)

  9. Departure / Spin Procedures • WHY (cont) • If spin confirmed: • INVERTED (AOA pegged at 0 units) • Rudder pedal – Full opposite turn needle • Want to stop the yaw rate • Lateral stick – Full opposite turn needle • Longitudinal stick – Neutralize • Stick movements based on engineering data and test pilots, hit the “I believe” button • UPRIGHT (AOA above 28 units) • Rudder pedal – Full opposite turn needle • Want to stop the yaw rate • Lateral stick – Full with turn needle • Longitudinal stick – Neutralize • Stick movements based on engineering data and test pilots, Hit the “I believe” button

  10. Departure / Spin Procedures • WHY (cont) • If recovery indicated (recovering AOA, reducing roll and yaw, increasing airspeed) or airspeed increasing through 160 KIAS • Lateral Stick – Neutralize • Above 160 KIAS, the anti-spin input of the stick starts to become pro-spin and will try to drive you deeper into a spin • When recovery indicated • Rudder – Smoothly center rudder pedals • Want to slowly take out pedal force as the yaw rate decreases. NO SUDDEN MOVES AT SLOW SPEED / HIGH AOA! • If out of control passing through 10,000 ft AGL • EJECT! • If no signs of recovery by this time, you will not have sufficient altitude to quit spinning and pull up.

  11. Spin Modes

  12. OCF Checklist • On the way to the area, complete the OCF departure checklist • Departure checklist • Stall/aero checklist – complete • Lap belts – tighten • Helmet visor – tighten down • Rudder pedals – adjust aft for full throw • Shoulder harness – locked • Landing gear, flaps / slats – up, speed brakes – retracted • BATT switches – on • CONTR AUG - SBI • Turn needle, airspeed, AOA – check operation • ICS – hot mic • Throttle friction – set • Stall / aero checklist will be reviewed complete before the start of all subsequent maneuvers

  13. High AOA / Deep Stall • Altitude above 20,000ft; Throttle to idle • Slow to 17 units, input rudder • Will notice more yaw than roll and takes a little pressure to move the rudder. Basically, just what you would expect • Slow to 21 units, input rudder, roll to 30 deg AOB each direction • Steady state will be approximately 10 degrees nose high, 145kias • Do not use lateral stick, find that the aircraft rolls nicely using only rudder • Roll to 45 degrees AOB and you will see the nose drop and airspeed increase, decreasing AOB will bring the nose back up and the airspeed back down • Slow to 24 units • Will initially be stable, then start getting wing rock. Use the rudder vice lateral stick to fight the rolling of the aircraft. As the aircraft slows, you will get into pitch-buck. If you hold the pull, you will notice the nose position continue to drop and the airspeed continue to increase. If you want to bring the nose up, ease the pull and reset to 21 units. • Pull for 28-30 units • Use the rudder to keep you upright, at anytime throughout the entire high AOA maneuver you hit 90 deg AOB, consider that the departure point and recover. If still upright, input full rudder and depart.

  14. 70 / 110 Deg Nose High • 70 Degree nose high departure • Altitude at least 16,000 ft and airspeed at least 300 KIAS • Pull 15-17 units to 70 deg nose high • Between 150 and 180 KIAS, throttle to idle • Consider 50 KIAS your departure point, start the recovery • Will take approximately 8,000 ft to recover • 110 Degree nose high departure • Altitude at least 16,000 ft and airspeed at least 350 KIAS • Pull 15–17 units through pure vertical to arrive at 110 deg nose high • Between 150 and 180 KIAS, throttle to idle • Consider 50 KIAS your departure point, start the recovery • Will take approximately 8,000 ft to recover • May see Oil Pres light, Fuel Pres light, or Low Fuel light; should go out with positive G on the aircraft

  15. Lateral Stick Adverse Yaw • Altitude at least 20,000 ft and airspeed at least 250 KIAS • Bring the nose 10 deg nose high, pull the throttle to idle, roll to 70 deg AOB and start to pull • Looking to build the AOA fairly quickly; with the aircraft loaded up, try reversing by rubbing the stick across the front of the ejection seat, if you do not depart, try one more reversal then recover • If at any time, you are pulling one way and the aircraft rolls the other, that is a departure and you should recover The accelerated stall maneuver in Fams taught you that if you pull hard enough, you can stall the aircraft at any airspeed. In this maneuver, you are pulling close to the stall point and by introducing a rolling moment, you are effectively changing the relative AOA of each wing. The down going wing sees a lower AOA and is happy, but the up going wing sees a higher AOA and eventually stalls, causing you to roll opposite of your pull. Neutralizing the controls will immediately recover the aircraft, although you may have built up enough rolling moment to snap roll the aircraft once or twice.

  16. Emergencies Abort Rwy Dep / Gnd Ejection Radio/ICS failure Loss of Navaids Lost Plane System Failures Disorientation Bird strike/ Midair SAR procedures Ejection Aircrew Coordination Contingencies Fallouts Weather BASH Contingencies

  17. Recap • Overall Flow • Questions

  18. STANDARD DEBRIEFING FORMAT • The Flight Lead or Pilot-in-Command is responsible for ensuring all flight or crewmembers are thoroughly debriefed on the conduct of the mission utilizing the “S-P-B-E-MS-LL” format outlined below. (Refer to the CTW-1/CTW-2 Expanding Debriefing Guide for specific objectives). • Safety • Planning • Brief • Execution • Mission Success • Lessons Learned

More Related