BNH4221 said:A couple of questions come to mind:
1. If the aircraft lands on the one gear, will that gear straigten out the craft on the runway or does the pilot have to do it? The gear only rolls one direction, right? so I would think it would have a tendency to whip the plane straight? Is the weight of the airplane too much for it to do this?
There is a side load, but for the most part the gear is still moving forward, and hence the tires will spin up at touch down
BNH4221 said:Another inane question - I read somewhere that the act of the tires spinning when they contact the ground causes the thrust reversers to activate. Any truth to this? I always assumed they were pilot activated. Steve
Jakebud said:Regarding PC's thoughts, if it was autoland certification, that would explain landing in a crab. The 747 I fly can autoland, and it does so in a crab. However, there is a 10 knot cross wind limit to do that. The landing in those videos appear to have a good bit more than 10 knots of cross wind however.
On the 747, the reversers will not unlock until there is weight on the gear. When that happens, you pull on the reverse levers, the reversers then unlock, and when the green reverser operating light comes on, you can get full reverses. The E-4B (747-200) I fly has GE Cf-6-50s on it, and in an emergency you can use the reversers all the way to a stop, though we usually have them stowed by 60 knots.
We have a few C-5 guys in the squadron, and if my memory is right, those guys could use idle reverse in flight on that thing, but don't quote me on that one.
SPIKE
The 707 I believe, can use reversers in flight to act as speed brakes since it is so aerodynamically clean.
NPloysa said:Ok, sorry, but had to post this. Some of you may be getting tired of my aviation video links. I promised Crobertson1 these videos, but thought you guys would like it.
It's a 4-piece video of crosswind landings, a 777-200, 747SP (Special Purpose) and two more 777-200, the last one being my favorite. Watch for the rudder delfection!
http://www.metacafe.com/watch/39256/crosswinds/
Nick