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Bryan and "no name" ask:
<< How would the lack of accurate airspeed indications
make the attitude
indications of the Chelton system not reliable?>>
<<What I don't get is why the airspeed would get more
attention than the EFIS which would presumably say you are straight and
level.>>
It is NOT the hardware. It IS the pilot. The display was accurate (I
have the data that shows that) but the pilot did not believe or
understand it. A trusted standby instrument may have focused attention
away from airspeed. You must consider the totality of the situation,
NOT just individual
displays or sensors. You are flying along and you hear the "STALL,
STALL" Bitchin' Betty audio warning. You CONFIRM that a stall is
imminent by looking at the airspeed tape. Yep, it is low. You
crosscheck
your standby and it agrees with your primary. You believe you have
three pieces of information that all agree, because they do. You fail
to recognize that all three are the result of a single inaccurate
sensor. There is no direct "you are not stalling" indicator. You must
infer your actual status from your attitude, engine power and airframe
status (flaps, gear, ice) and because that takes significant mental
effort you react by lowering the nose. What can it hurt? You will "fly
the airplane" and then diagnose the problem.
When lowering the nose does not fix the problem you are surprised and
you fixate on that problem. You are stuck in a "fly first , diagnose
later" do loop. You stop flying the airplane and start flying the
airspeed. It is a fatal mistake. It is not uncommon. Airliners have
crashed because of it. A standby AI in the scan would have emphasized
the attitude status.
Most AHRS systems synthesize attitude information using accelerometers,
and rate sensors. Typically the accelerometers have an internal beam
element (diving board) that deflects due to the forces induced by
gravity and acceleration. Rate sensors measure rotation rates and use a
vibrating beam or ring to measure the Coriolis forces. Both types of
sensors are not perfect and have drift. In order to maintain an
attitude indication with good fidelity to reality you must "aid" the
attitude with magnetometers, air data and / or GPS.
Gyroscopes operate on the principle of of conservation of angular
momentum which produces "rigidity in space" of the spinning element.
The gyro display shows the difference in alignment between the spinning
mass element and the AI housing. The gyro also has aiding in the form
of balance weights that erect the gyro to the apparent gravity vector.
In a turn the apparent gravity vector is the vector sum of the gravity
vector and the centripetal force of the turn. This is why when you stop
a long duration turn your roll attitude indication is off.
Gyroscopes and AHRS use different physics to do the same thing so if
they agree then you are probably looking at the truth.
In the comfort of your computer chair you can calmly and rationally
consider a serious situation and you will usually arrive at the
correct remediation. Can you do the same trick in a room that is on
fire during and earthquake when you are seeing and hearing conflicting
information, you know your life is at risk and you are amped up on
adrenaline? Can you make the right decision in 20 seconds?
You best chance for survival is to have your primary and standby
instruments IMMEDIATELY available and part of you normal scan. You also
need to train, train, train with a competent instructor who focuses on
unusual and emergency situations.
Statements like "Little plastic home made airplanes do not belong
in hard IMC conditions even with a big engine and piles of expensive
avionics!" expose an all too common combination of ignorance and
arrogance that manifest as a "blame the hardware" attitude. The data is
unequivocal, it is the pilot, not the hardware at the core of safety.
Blaming the hardware focuses attention away from the true problem. IMHO
pilots of that school are the most likely to suffer ego related
fatalities.
I have extracted flight information from six crashed aircraft. in all
cases the accident was the result of poor pilot decisions. None were a
direct result of a mechanical failure. I am sure that each of these
poor souls was just as confident as you that it could not happen to
them.
"Can't happen to me" you say? Bullshit!
This accident investigation stuff is not fun. The picture below is of
a recovered Chelton display (no, I won't identify the aircraft).
Wearing double gloves, surgical mask and safety gasses I had to dig
through the broken glass and rotting biohazards to extract the flash
memory ICs that contain the flight log files. After this I analyze
the intimate details of the last moments of a member of our fraternity
and draft a factual report for the investigators. I do this gratis. If
you don't know why then you won't understand an explanation.
I can say with experience and grim confidence that someone reading this
post
will be dead due to an aircraft accident within the year. That
accident will be the result of poor builder / pilot decisions. Having
the thoughts like "not me" or "the hardware will keep me safe" puts you
at the top of the list.
The Naval Aviator's saying that "everyone is trying to kill you"
applies to the PIC as well. Humility and fear my friend, humility and
fear.
Regards
Brent Regan
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