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I wont second guess, the Pilot, or the Support Crews for the aircraft. I will just try to present all the tools needed for Instrument conditions. and how they can cause a success or a failurein that first 5-30 seconds of flight.
Spacial Disorientation will kill a 4000Hr pilot just as easily as it will kill a 400Hr pilot. Unfortunately the pilot had it happen at the worst possible time. Take off and a few hundred feet above the Terrain. I estimate he had less than 20 seconds to figure out what happaned, and how to correct it. My guess he was less than 1/4 mile out and around 220-240 Knots and a 10-20 Degree Vertical error.
Most important. And the most dangerous at night and in the weather. Pitch, Roll, Rudder Trim not Centered. This will severely delay your reaction time. This is all based on the assumption that the aircraft will fly true. The last pilot that flew the jet may have trimmed for an inbalance of Fuel, Stores, and Style. To fly another pilots settings can be good or bad. You cant relieve a previous flights trend on your configuration.
Take off is the time that Trim is set and adjusted as well as the Following instruments are in working order:
Angle of attack Indicator: Tells exactly what the aircraft is doing in Pitch
Verticle velocity Indicator: Gives you your Feet Per Minute Climb/Decent schedule Trend
Attitude Director indicator: shows the Aircrafts positional information in 3 axis
Altimeter: Shows current Barometric Altitude indicator. Failure to adjust for Baro can be deadly, but are typically only 100-200 Feet of deviation from true Barometric deck data.
Airspeed Indicator: With Fixed power you can see the slow down trend in a climb,(dependent on Angle of Climb. Any acceleration on fixed power can be attributed to level Flight (less drag production) or a Decent) All traits will also be indicated in the Altimeter and can be seen in the Vertical Velocity indicator.
Standby compass: will indicate a turn
Heading Steer Indicator: Indicated Course and Heading Deviation (although Cross winds and Tracking control can provide false Indicators and are much slower to detect Course Deviation)
The HUD data information Incorportes many of these listed above.
Betty, Radar Altimeter etc...
Even if you were paying attention to all of the above, Something distracting you for Five seconds is the differnece between life or death. Map explosion, Comfort adjustment, Head out of the feedbag, looking for landmarks or getting ready to nav to a Beacon VOR/ADF, outer marker etc.... Looking at Departure Plates, Flight plan etc.
As a flight lead your compounded with your Wingmens flight profile as well. Thats a big Helmet load to carry in the cocpit.
"The power to Destroy the planet, is insignifigant to the power of the Air Force----Mudd Vader
Edited by - mrmudd on Jun 27 2004 08:41 AM
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