Re: British Ban the 737 Max
Entirely possible.
"...The anti-stall system on the Max 8 uses payload weight, center of gravity location and airspeed, and under certain combinations of those conditions will modify the pitch trim under high angle of attack conditions (e.g. low stall margin) to modify (increase) the stick force feedback to the pilot, to signal the pitch down..."
Takeoff involves high weight (max fuel quantity), high angle of attack, low airspeeds at minimum altitude. Exactly the situation where one most wants to avoid an excessive angle of attack approaching a stall. Maybe certain configurations on takeoff invoke the anti-stall pitch down, in accordance with whatever "laws" the MCAS is programmed to execute. Perhaps that is a software error. I'm sure it will eventually come out.
But once again, if the behavior of the aircraft under the influence of the computers is inappropriate the pilots should be disengaging/disabling them because the 737 can be flown without them by any competent pilot.
One of my brothers is a Boeing 787 pilot. He has flown a lot Boeing/McDonnell Douglas aircraft, including the 737, 767, MD-11 and the F-18 Hornet. He made the observation that many of the Airbus pilots had difficulty transitioning to the Boeing systems when in the 787 simulator. These two families of airplanes have completely different philosophies as to the pilot's role and interactions in the airplane. Boeing expects the pilot to be an integral part of the entire aircraft systems architecture. Airbus expects the computers to protect the airplane from the pilot doing stupid things. There's no finer example of that philosophy difference that examining what happened to AF447.
Originally posted by jk
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"...The anti-stall system on the Max 8 uses payload weight, center of gravity location and airspeed, and under certain combinations of those conditions will modify the pitch trim under high angle of attack conditions (e.g. low stall margin) to modify (increase) the stick force feedback to the pilot, to signal the pitch down..."
Takeoff involves high weight (max fuel quantity), high angle of attack, low airspeeds at minimum altitude. Exactly the situation where one most wants to avoid an excessive angle of attack approaching a stall. Maybe certain configurations on takeoff invoke the anti-stall pitch down, in accordance with whatever "laws" the MCAS is programmed to execute. Perhaps that is a software error. I'm sure it will eventually come out.
But once again, if the behavior of the aircraft under the influence of the computers is inappropriate the pilots should be disengaging/disabling them because the 737 can be flown without them by any competent pilot.
One of my brothers is a Boeing 787 pilot. He has flown a lot Boeing/McDonnell Douglas aircraft, including the 737, 767, MD-11 and the F-18 Hornet. He made the observation that many of the Airbus pilots had difficulty transitioning to the Boeing systems when in the 787 simulator. These two families of airplanes have completely different philosophies as to the pilot's role and interactions in the airplane. Boeing expects the pilot to be an integral part of the entire aircraft systems architecture. Airbus expects the computers to protect the airplane from the pilot doing stupid things. There's no finer example of that philosophy difference that examining what happened to AF447.
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