Hope this wasn't one of our own.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/today...scrapes-runway-during-texas-landing/73075784/
http://www.usatoday.com/story/today...scrapes-runway-during-texas-landing/73075784/
Strong cross winds and swept wing planes don't like each other........
You call that a swept wing???? J/K.. It probably has a few degrees of sweep. After flying the C750 for several years, nothing is swept other than the 747.
We had about 5 & 7 degrees pitch/bank on landing. Anymore we scraped a wing. "Kick it & Stick it" ruled the day.
Anything more then a 90 degree wing.. It is SWEPT....... And, without Googling it, my guess is that RJ is swept as much as a Citation 10 / C750.. If not more...
Prove me wrong sir...
You're right about anything more than 90 at the mean chord being swept.
You're not in the ballpark about it being close to the Citation X.
OK.......
Make all the rolling eyes you want. The sweep on the X is at least 37 degrees. Some books say 40. The horizontal stab must be swept more than wings, and vertical more than hirizontal. The horizontal stab was roughly 50 degrees. The wing tips were *almost* behind the tail. The airplane actually will fly at .92 Mach. It was an incredible machine. I miss it.
I agree... It does seem hard to believe. For many years Cessna/Citation was laughed at for being straight wing slow airplanes. They built the X, with engineering from Boing, to show they could do better.There are few at KJAC now.. I will go over and measure.. But 37-40 degrees is VERY hard to believe.... ..
As a side note.. The 750 prototype came through here several years ago and I have a nice conversation with the test pilots flying it... it is the one with the extended Pitot tube out the front..
That one broke the barrier at mach 1.052.... And lived to fly another day....
I agree... they are an outstanding plane...
Let's just say the swept'ness had naught to do with this. And the idea swept wings don't do well in cross winds is silly too.
Let's just say the swept'ness had naught to do with this. And the idea swept wings don't do well in cross winds is silly too.
I sort of agree with you... A crosswind landing with a super-swept wing airplane is not much of a problem, just a different technique.
You are exactly right. That's why I don't use that technique.I respectfully disagree.....
Nose high.... Wing low for a cross wind..... and the tip will hit ALOT sooner with a swept wing...... It is aft of the main gear and lower to the ground... Simple geometry.....
Just look at the pic of that RJ.....
You are exactly right. That's why I don't use that technique.
As I said earlier, in the X we had roughly 5 degrees up and 7 bank before we scraped. The math worked where you could flip that to 7 up / 5 bank. We then got the winglets which reduced it closer to 5/5.
We NEVER intentionally dipped a wing. We used a "kick it & stick it" technique.
That's my point.
You know, I'm sure there are other airplanes with the trait...
Seen the problem with engines more than wing sweep. Bank a KC-135 over 4 degrees and you're scraping the inboard.
I respectfully disagree.....
Nose high.... Wing low for a cross wind..... and the tip will hit ALOT sooner with a swept wing...... It is aft of the main gear and lower to the ground... Simple geometry.....
Just look at the pic of that RJ.....
No matter that argument on how much a wing is swept back, or how much bank can be held before scraping a wing, the subject now is how quickly was the pilot fired and how soon until (s)he will get the next job?
if the rumors are true they will be fired.
what are the rumors?
I don't know of this is what he meant, but I read on another board that they didn't fess up and either tried to blame the crew before or the next one.
I don't know of this is what he meant, but I read on another board that they didn't fess up and either tried to blame the crew before or the next one.
I'm not sure about a wing strike, but I've heard of tail strikes going unnoticed.
Oh my, okay. If that's true they may be fired.