macedk Posted October 28, 2019 Posted October 28, 2019 Never understood how that RDAF-mishap actually happened. I mean, from what I could see from the imagery, it looked like the entire drag-brace had broken off the bulkhead it was connected to. Even for old jets like the ones that the RDAF and RNoAF has, that really shouldn't be something that happens, let alone go unnoticed through preflight and/or maint'. True... Haven't found any official report on it. OS: Win10 home 64bit*MB: Asus Strix Z270F/ CPU: Intel I7 7700k /Ram:32gb_ddr4 GFX: Nvidia Asus 1080 8Gb Mon: Asus vg2448qe 24" Disk: SSD Stick: TM Warthog #1400/Saitek pro pedals/TIR5/TM MFDs [sIGPIC][/sIGPIC]
Fjordmonkey Posted October 28, 2019 Posted October 28, 2019 Don't think we will, unless they pull the jet from the sea AND release the findings. Given that it was an operationally flying jet, I doubt they'd release that info. I read through many of the older mishap-reports we had at Squadron while I served. While interesting, they contained a lot of information that hasn't been pulished. Regards Fjordmonkey Clustermunitions is just another way of saying that you don't like someone. I used to like people, then people ruined that for me.
bbrz Posted October 28, 2019 Posted October 28, 2019 ..it looked like the entire drag-brace had broken off the bulkhead it was connected to. Even for old jets like the ones that the RDAF and RNoAF has, that really shouldn't be something that happens, let alone go unnoticed through preflight and/or maint'. I doubt that a fatigue fracture can be detected during preflight or regular maintenance. i7-7700K 4.2GHz, 16GB, GTX 1070
Fjordmonkey Posted October 28, 2019 Posted October 28, 2019 I doubt that a fatigue fracture can be detected during preflight or regular maintenance. That would depend highly on quite a number of things, but given that the drag brace of a Viper is are substantial pieces of metal, and that the attachment-point to the bulkhead is a rather beefy piece of metal, it shouldn't be THAT hard to detect even to the naked eye. Of course, the brace would be held tightly against the attachmentpoint due to the weight of the aircraft itself, and might have broken once the wheel lifted off the ground and it was subjected to the airstream proper. It could also have broken once gear-retraction was commanded. Without actually fetching the wreckage from the sea and seeing the investigation reports and conclusion, all we can do is speculate. Regards Fjordmonkey Clustermunitions is just another way of saying that you don't like someone. I used to like people, then people ruined that for me.
regards Posted October 29, 2019 Posted October 29, 2019 well, i discover that the falcon does not have any fuel dump system to reduce landing weight in emergency, differently from ad example the f18......any reason for that?:joystick::joystick: In case of emergency I would jettison both the external tanks and as much as possible the bunch of freedom and democracy that you carry underneath the wings.
regards Posted October 29, 2019 Posted October 29, 2019 Severe airframe vibrations? That's a new one on me (sounds very T-38ish though). Man, this jet must've been a hangar queen. :lol: If I have to reduce gross weight prior to landing, there is nothing wrong with using burner and boards. Just keep the airspeed below 300 KCAS with the gear (any of them) down. Such happened many years ago (1990) above the Netherlands. RNLAF 315 sqd F16 pilot 'Puke' flew back to EHTW after a dogfight training above the north sea. Viper began to shake, pitching up and down, banking left and right. Pretty annoying it was and after 10 minutes of fighting against the angry bird he was forced to eject.
PaulDPearl Posted June 23, 2020 Posted June 23, 2020 Sure it does. Burner and boards. I had the opposite question... Why does the F-18 need a fuel dump button? e.g. when would it be used?
Sarge55 Posted June 23, 2020 Posted June 23, 2020 I had the opposite question... Why does the F-18 need a fuel dump button? e.g. when would it be used? To get down to landing weight when landing on a carrier. Harrier has the same. [sIGPIC][/sIGPIC] i7 10700K OC 5.1GHZ / 500GB SSD & 1TB M:2 & 4TB HDD / MSI Gaming MB / GTX 1080 / 32GB RAM / Win 10 / TrackIR 4 Pro / CH Pedals / TM Warthog
Steel Jaw Posted June 24, 2020 Posted June 24, 2020 Because the Viper has no maximum landing weight. "You see, IronHand is my thing" My specs: W10 Pro, I5/11600K o/c to 4800 @1.32v, 64 GB 3200 XML RAM, Red Dragon 7800XT/16GB.
RaisedByWolves Posted June 24, 2020 Posted June 24, 2020 Severe airframe vibrations? That's a new one on me (sounds very T-38ish though). Man, this jet must've been a hangar queen. :lol: If I have to reduce gross weight prior to landing, there is nothing wrong with using burner and boards. Just keep the airspeed below 300 KCAS with the gear (any of them) down. TOMCATS!
Zohardv Posted June 24, 2020 Posted June 24, 2020 You'll have to ask General Dynamics. I remember emailing them about it back in 2002. Just out of curiosity. Still waiting for an answer.
Cupra Posted June 24, 2020 Posted June 24, 2020 You do not put a fuel dump function just because virtual pilots are unable to land a heavy jet 30 years later in a simulation ;) There is still no need for such a function. DCS F-16C Blk. 40/42 :helpsmilie: Candidate - 480th VFS - Cupra | 06
dchriest Posted June 24, 2020 Posted June 24, 2020 well, i discover that the falcon does not have any fuel dump system to reduce landing weight in emergency... Sure it does. Burner and boards. LOL yep that'll dump fuel pretty quick :smilewink: My Hangar: | A-10A | A-10C | AJS-37 | AV-8B II NA | F-14B | BF-109 K4 | C-101 | F-15C | F-5E II |F-86F | F/A-18C | FW-190 D-9 | KA-50 | L-39 | M-2000C | MI-8MTV2 | MiG-15bis | MiG-21bis | P-51D | SA342 | Spitfire IX | SU-25 | SU-25T | SU-27 | SU-33 | UH-1H | My Playgrounds: | Caucasus | Nevada | Persian Gulf | Normandy | Cockpit: | i7-4790K | EVGA Z97 | NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1060 3GB | Samsung EVO SSD | Saitek Pro Flight X-55 Rhino H.O.T.A.S. System | TrackIR 5 |
deadpool Posted June 24, 2020 Posted June 24, 2020 In case of emergency I would jettison both the external tanks and as much as possible the bunch of freedom and democracy that you carry underneath the wings. Check your procedures, you might want to run the external tanks empty and keep them as cushions depending on what's sour. Belly landing the F-16 comes to mind.. Because the Viper has no maximum landing weight. It does, but the maximum takeoff mass doesn't exceed it. So colloquially: What goes up, you can take down. Immediatly if need be. Lincoln said: “Nearly all men can stand adversity, but if you want to test a man's character, give him power." Do not expect a reply to any questions, 30.06.2021 - Silenced by Nineline
VampireNZ Posted June 24, 2020 Posted June 24, 2020 Yep pretty much as has been stated - any aircraft, jet fighter or otherwise that has a max landing weight less than max internal fuel takeoff weight requires a fuel dump capability. Everything else such as the Viper is not required to reduce internal fuel weight to reach max landing weight, so not required. Also even with a dump facility it is usually prudent to reduce weight as much as possible for landing if you have a problem - was standard practice in the P-3 to drop the gear and fly around at max gear speed of 300 knots to reduce weight as fast as possible as it was not possible to dump from the main fuel tanks, just the fuse bag - and if you had already transferred all the fuel out of it into the main ctr tank you couldn't dump anything at all. Vampire
probad Posted June 24, 2020 Posted June 24, 2020 You do not put a fuel dump function just because virtual pilots are unable to land a heavy jet 30 years later in a simulation probably the best answer imagine being so conditioned by game dev psychology that you start to regard and question the world from the standpoint of video game logic its honestly an alarming af phenomenon
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