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Thread: Take Off N1 Thrust question
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09-20-2007, 02:50 PM #11
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Thank you for that Themis! Looks like I need to dig out a couple of my manuals....
Bob Reed
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09-20-2007, 02:59 PM #12
Interesting. Actually the Dassault Falcon has a System A and System B braking system. As you hold pressure on the toe brakes and advance the throttles there is a point in which the system itself realized that system A cannot sustain the braking pressure, you feel a little jolt as system a releases and system B engages, Feels like your feet slip off the peddles and when you release the toe brakes the aircraft thunders down the runway!
Amazing feeling.. Like you cannot believe...________________________
Trevor Hale
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09-20-2007, 03:40 PM #13
Trevor, you've actually got to take off in a Falcon jet? Wow, that must have been really awesome. I would love to do the same in a LJ45. Actually, to be honest, I love flying in almost any aircraft. But, the one youre building is such a bonus to the experience!
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09-20-2007, 03:47 PM #14
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09-20-2007, 05:23 PM #15
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09-20-2007, 05:34 PM #16
Hi Themis,
Thanks very much for that info. If I understand the instructions correctly during taxiing on the active N1 should be around 40.
Once lined up I switch A/T on and manually advance the throttles to N1 and then engage THR (TO/GA). The a/p will then make adjustments to the throttles to ensure they don't exceed N1.
You haven't mentioned the brakes. Are they touched at all once the aircraft is lined up and before the throttles are advanced to N1?
Thanks.
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09-20-2007, 06:32 PM #17
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Hello Ray,
When you taxi you try to not speed up over 20knots Ground Speed. If you are close to manouvering areas (near airports buildings) you try to be at 10 knots . In real life I've seen taxi speed up to 40 knots when the Tower is not seeing you..
The N1 value on taxi is not something to be considered of. Depends on your weight. The 737 doesn't need huge amounts of thrust to taxi. Just an initial push...and it rolls and very easily a bit over idle.
When you reach holding point if there is traffic you can use the parking brake to fully stop the aircraft and not applying toe brakes as you waiting for clearance. In critical phases (holding point, line up) if you think that there is gonna be a delay before the clearance arrive, you can use parking brakes for safety that the aircraft would not "slip" on the runway. After you get the clearance and release the brakes you advance the throttles to taxi for line up and *when you feel comfotable* you advance the Throttles up to 40% N1 waiting for the engines to stabilize... then TOGA... autothrottle does the rest.
When you get used to the procedure you can advance the throttle to 40% starting from the holding point and not after lining up as the real experienced pilots do...
In short runways I'll use brakes at the stabilization period to gain some meters.
Themis
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09-20-2007, 08:06 PM #18
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Provided you program your parking brake lever to operate the pmSystems switch, not the FS one directly, the option code in the current 737 pmSystems logics handle the checking to see if you are pressing the pedals enough before engaging. I'm not so sure they currently offer automatic release on pushing the toe brakes, if that's what you mean, but that should be easy enough -- I haven't got that in operation here.
Of course the braking should, in any case, be dependent upon having sufficient brake pressure, but I've no dial for this in my cockpit so I've not got that implemented. For this to be truly correct the toe brakes should also be routed via pmSystems, which isn't so easy considering they are normally axes not buttons. Really I would need to add axis-disconnection facilities in FSUIPC, similar to those for other axes (for "fly-by-wire"), where the input axis value is supplied in a different offset but not applied to the real FS controls. Something else for my list I suppose.
Regards
Pete
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09-20-2007, 08:08 PM #19
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09-21-2007, 02:25 AM #20
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