[SPAM] Re: Fail-safe settings for control surfaces

Paul Horan phoran at vvm.com
Tue May 17 11:06:19 AKDT 2005


Rick,
    I was lucky, the altitude was about 75 feet above the trees and the terrain was sloping down.  The plane was already at ~ 1/3 throttle.
I know it was in failsafe since it went to idle and I had no control.  My caller said hold the antenna vertical,  I did that and went to full throttle.  Once the power came back I flew it back and landed it.  Wow one free airplane.   
    At the time of the failsafe lockout I was flying straight and level about 700 feet out and parallel to the runway.  
Paul
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Rick Kent 
  To: discussion at nsrca.org 
  Sent: Tuesday, May 17, 2005 12:58 PM
  Subject: Re: Fail-safe settings for control surfaces


        You're one of the luckier ones then. What was the plane's attitude at the time of lockout?
        Point to ponder: Do you think you'd have noticed that "I ain't got it" revelation sooner with the surfaces set to hold or set to a spin? The engine throttle-back could be misconstrued  as a flameout, so I don't think that's too reliable an indicator of lockout by itself.
        Just curious. I would think it depends what you were doing with the controls at the time of lockout.

        Rick


        -------Original Message-------

        From: discussion at nsrca.org
        Date: Tuesday, May 17, 2005 12:28:33 PM
        To: discussion at nsrca.org
        Subject: Re: Fail-safe settings for control surfaces

        Rick,
            My Prophecy went into failsafe (idle and hold for all other channels) and came out after about a second ( it seemed like an hour ).  I suspect interference but was not able to find any one month later using the district 6 scanner.
        Paul
        ----- Original Message ----- 
        From: Rick Kent 
        To: discussion at nsrca.org 
        Sent: Tuesday, May 17, 2005 9:08 AM
        Subject: Re: Fail-safe settings for control surfaces


              It would be interesting to see statistics on how often a plane comes out of failsafe and the pilot regains control before meeting with Mother Earth. It's never happened for me, but admittedly, I don't use the feature often. Had two sport airplanes go into lockout when I did use it, and I watched both spin in.
              I agree a spin recovery isn't the easiest thing to execute down low when you're in a panic, but I'd venture to say it would buy you more time than being in a vertical dive while in lockout would--IF the receiver recovers signal in time. I think it just comes down to dumb luck really, in what attitude/altitude the plane is in when the lockout occurs. The question is what are the odds that your plane would only go into lockout in level flight vs. the middle of a snap, roll, inverted dive, etc. Assuming worst case scenario, i.e., no signal recovery, the spin at least puts the plane back on the field so you can find it, and hopefully the spin would serve to somewhat lessen the descent speed at impact. Maybe a flat spin would be better in that regard.

              My luck with such things dictates that it doesn't really matter what I plan for--the plane's going in, and hard.

              Rick
             
             

       
               
       
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