benny88 said:Can anyone with more knowledge on flight or emerg procedures tell me what went wrong on landing? His approach speed was fairly high but with one engine that's a given because of the risk of stall, but he still went off the end of the runway. Did he make a mistake or was that just the way the cookie crumbled?
SupersonicMax said:The airplane will stall at the same speed, regardless of the number of engines working. The issue there is the fire spreading around. He's trying to over oxygenate it so it stops or at least doesn't spread too much. That's the reason he lands at a higher speed (he actually verbalise that in the video)
Max
benny88 said:Oh right on, I missed him saying that. I know it'll stall at the same speed but I thought with an engine flameout the approach speed was kept higher in case an abort was called and the a/c had to go around. I never knew about the "over oxygenate" prodcedure, but that makes total sense, thanks Max.
Aden_Gatling said:If he did hammer on the brakes that hard, wouldn't the tires have gone first?
FoverF said:Keep in mind that the brakes have to absorb (as heat, via friction) pretty much all of the kinetic energy of an airplane as it slows down.
FoverF said:Most jets (probably the F-15 included) have anti-skid brakes. This will stop the tire from locking up, but won't stop the brakes from melting.
Keep in mind that the brakes have to absorb (as heat, via friction) pretty much all of the kinetic energy of an airplane as it slows down. Just to put some round numbers to it, to slow a close-to-MTOW F-15 from 260 kts to 210 kts (as in this case) means the brakes had to absorb somewhere around 11,000,000 J of energy (give or take). In the course of about 8ish seconds. A quick back-of-the-envelope calculation (feel free to do your own) figures that's enough to heat up your 20 kg (WAG) worth of steel and carbon fibre brakes by around 1000 degrees (minus whatever they can radiate in 8 seconds).
I'm not privy to the F-15s brake design, nor am I an accident board, but a guy touched down about 100 kts too fast, and ran right off the end of a 12,000ft runway. If he had a catastrophic hydraulic failures (in a plane with powered flight controls) he probably would've gotten out of there tout sweet. Not to mention that he had enough juice to get his gear down, and maintain flight controls. My guess is there's Flintstones-style heelprints all the way down that runway.
CDN Aviator said:Lets no generalize here. Not all airplanes use breaks for the majority of their "slowing down" once they hit the pavement.
Aden_Gatling said:Unless everything I've been taught is a lie, the vast majority of speed decay is caused by aerodynamic drag, not brake friction! Given the properties of drag, this relationship would be even higher with excessive touchdown speed.
Aden_Gatling said:Brake Fluid will boil (causing a loss of braking action, as well as excessive pedal travel) before the pads will "melt"... I would be very concerned about losing a tire (or tires) ... (especially given that he has the arrestor cable)
My guess is that he was just too fast and ran out of runway (albeit fast with good reason).
FoverF said:The wing was unloaded (at a few degrees negative alpha) for very little induced drag, and as you can see in the video, without brakes and relying on aerodynamic drag alone this guy blew right through 12,000 ft of runway and barely missed a beat.
Aden_Gatling said:This still doesn't make sense to me: on the ground (actually near the ground) induced drag is near zero: induced drag has very little to do with stopping an aircraft.
... the vast majority of speed decay is caused by aerodynamic drag, not brake friction! ...
FoverF said:An Aurora on a slow approach, with spoilers, flaps, and 4 negative pitch props at full power could probably have stopped at Whiteman without brakes at all.
FoverF said:Ever watch a large delta land? (Concorde is a good example; BIG delta at high alpha produces big drag, ground effect or not) But you're right in that it probably wouldn't have made a huge difference here. I was just trying to point out that this guy had no airbrake, no flaps, no chute, and no angle of attack, so he didn't really have any major drag factors in his favor.
As I'm sure CDN Aviator was hinting at, this depends entirely on the airframe. An Aurora on a slow approach, with spoilers, flaps, and 4 negative pitch props at full power could probably have stopped at Whiteman without brakes at all. Yet we all saw with our own eyes just how much energy this clean (except the gear) F-15 lost on the ground from aerodynamic drag, and it was pretty close to SFA.