Frank JK Posted Thursday at 11:01 AM Posted Thursday at 11:01 AM I wanted to share a recent AvBrief feature covering a flight trial of our Absolute AoA system. It goes into detail on real-world use, including calibration, stall behavior, and performance across different flight conditions. Might be relevant for anyone exploring AoA or safety-enhancing avionics: https://avbrief.com/holy-micro-absolute-aoa-flight-trial/ 1 1
facthunter Posted Friday at 01:14 AM Posted Friday at 01:14 AM I can confirm that this Kind of information is very valuable to the Pilot . Every largish plane has it in some form or other. It's good confirmation of the real situation regarding the wings AoA. that the airspeed alone can not give. Nev. 1
onetrack Posted Friday at 08:49 AM Posted Friday at 08:49 AM I reckon I know of some Air France Airbus A330 pilots currently residing at the bottom of the Atlantic, who could've done with one of those devices, to counter their lack of hands-on skills. 1
Student Pilot Posted Friday at 09:00 AM Posted Friday at 09:00 AM 7 hours ago, facthunter said: I can confirm that this Kind of information is very valuable to the Pilot . Every largish plane has it in some form or other. It's good confirmation of the real situation regarding the wings AoA. that the airspeed alone can not give. Nev. Dunnooo about bigger machines but AOA can be felt the way the aircraft feels and handles in smaller stuff. Very mushy high AOA and tight responsive low AOA. 3
Garfly Posted Friday at 11:23 AM Posted Friday at 11:23 AM (edited) 2 hours ago, Student Pilot said: Dunnooo about bigger machines but AOA can be felt the way the aircraft feels and handles in smaller stuff. Very mushy high AOA and tight responsive low AOA. Yes, good point, SP ... and what the article (above) reckons is that it can sometimes help to know just how much mush is left before a wing walks off the job - and, conversely, the moment that it's ready to return to work: "We also like AoA indicators because they make it clear when the wing is flying again during stall recovery and can help minimize altitude loss in the recovery, which may mean the difference of climbing away with a system-load of adrenaline instead of diving into the ground when trying to make sure that there won’t be a secondary stall during recovery ... AoA indicators are also a big help when dealing with low aircraft energy situations such as a go-around, clearing obstructions after takeoff, and hazardous conditions such as wind shear or maneuvering to avoid terrain, and allow the pilot to take advantage of maximum wing performance near stall AoA." (But anyways, SP ... aggie and firey flyers like y'self, living out whole careers down low by way of rudder, stick and feel; you all have got to grow your own AoA sense just to pull it off ;--) Edited Friday at 11:39 AM by Garfly 2
facthunter Posted Saturday at 01:21 AM Posted Saturday at 01:21 AM Seat of the Pants helps if you're very familiar with the Plane but those indicators take the Guesswork out of being close and they don't get tired late in the day. Nev 1
Garfly Posted yesterday at 04:00 AM Posted yesterday at 04:00 AM Speaking of sticks and rudders, this vid is a reading from the gospel according to Langewiesche (snr): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n8yiGhnysIU (Despite its trashy thumbnail the video turns out to be a thoughtfully made [20 min.] review of Stick & Rudder's main points.) 1
facthunter Posted yesterday at 06:06 AM Posted yesterday at 06:06 AM Yeah This is stuff everyone should know and UNDERSTAND and it's not a complete coverage. WHO does Level Figure 8's perfectly or a Power off wingover? Stalls are a Joke in how they are dealt with in Most training, except It's NOT a Joking Matter. Nev 2
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