Monday, 23 July 2012

BIPLANE

Hi to all. I've just begun reading 'Biplane', Richard Bach's second book. It's a little more difficult a book to read than 'Strander to the Ground', but I will master it, sure...

As the result of a business deal, Richard acquired the ownership of the only airworthy example of a Detroit-Park P-2A in the USA at the time (like the one in the pic), and planned to fly her coast-to-coast...

It's a really delight to read, but as always with Richard Bach books, you've got to have a pilot soul to fully understand and enjoy them...

One of the phrases in the book: 'To a pilot, the MOST important thing in the world is FLIGHT' So, if you fly from time to time, but flying is not the most important thing in your life, economics apart, you're not a pilot at all, believe me. You can enjoy a lot flying, but you're NOT a pilot...

Alright, dear? You're not a pilot at all...

Love you all

TWRman


FRIENDSHIP

You know, we all got friends. They are of different types. From the one you simply like at your workplace or having in the usual place the usual breakfast to the intimate ones.

To have a good friend relationship is really tough. And, you know?, what is most appreciated is that your good friends take care of you when you need it...

Well, the one I thought was a really friend of mine has completely failed on this Sunday. She has played excuses and, in her normal style, she's attacked me...

You know, when you don't have normal reasons to explain something, you can do just two things: either accept it an play guilty, or reject it and attack the one who expressed that just to know...

For the moment, my dear friend has elected the second election...

I love you, my dear

Sunday, 22 July 2012

Hi all. I fished 'Stranger to the Ground' on Friday evening...

The part of the story in which Richard faces a thunderstorm on his last leg to Chaumont Air Base it's simply more than thrilling. It's not an exaggeration at all: I perfectly know what thunderstorms can do to any type of planes.

In 1980, a B747 from the then Iranian Air Force crashed 15 minutes before arriving Madrid/Barajas AD, her destination, one of her wings completely teared off from the fuselage by a heavy thunderstorm over Cuenca province...

AVOID thunderstorms ALWAYS, whatever is your pressure to arrive at your destination. If you don´t, you will probably be killed. Richard Bach played with the Universe not turning back to safer skies. He was really pressured, who doubt it?, but a handful of documents in a bag stored in her plane's ammunition bay probably didn't deserve the loss of a human life, whatever important they may be, even at that time.

My first contact with a fighter, of the same type shown in the picture, but with a plain livery (a North American F-86F Sabre flying with the Ala 6 at Torrejón Air Base, near Madrid) took place when I was 12 or so...

I will never forget that afternoon... In some moment, I was sat down in her cockpit, with a lot of dials, switches and a few levers in front of me that I couldn't understand what they were for. But I perfectly knew, in advance, that it was a Jet Fighter, an F-86 Sabre... I learnt it from  a school magazine, in which a Sabre cutaway appeared about 2 years earlier...

Our host, an Ejército del Aire (Spanish Air Force) captain, Pablo Martínez Peral, standing on the wing and leaning on the left side of the cockpit, lean ahead a little bit more, flicked some switches on, and lowered the plane's flaps... They made some sound when lowering, of course, and my dear mother, who was standing by the plane together with some other relatives, almost fainted hearing that...

She really hated, and was very afraid of aircraft. That came from long time ago in her life...

Have a nice night. I love you all

Wednesday, 18 July 2012

Back on 'Stranger to the Ground' again...

Hi to all. Well, after having dealing with the BEA report on the Air France A330 accident 3 years ago in the past days, I've continued reading Richard Bach 'Stranger to the Groung' book...

It's amazing. There's been a gap of about 35 years between my two readings of the book. This one, the second one, is extremely more gratifying than the first one. Apart of barely remember the story in general and some special parts of it (like the 24-ship departure in a month of July for an airshow at their home base, being Richard's ship the last to take off), no special memories of it...

A lot of time have passed between the two readings. And several things have happened during this period:

A)  My English has improved a lot, to levels I couldn't have dreamed of 35 years ago. I can read the book now as if it was written in Spanish, my native language.

B)  My knowledge about fighter planes operations (of any age) has improved by 10, at least, during all these years, and

C) In this 35-year period I've read a lot of books by Richard Bach that have let me into his philosophy of life. This helps a lot...

I've tried to 'copy and paste' some phrases from this book, beautiful ones, just to show you them. Impossible. E-books from Amazon can only be shown up in your computer monitor  through its 'Kindle' software. And once opened a book, you cannot copy any word of it to the Windows Clipboard...

Anyway, if you're an Aviation freak, I strongly recommend this book. But, I insist, you've got to have a very sound knowledge of  the 'sixties fighters operation to really enjoy it

I love you all.

TWRman






Well. I've been thinking a lot about the AFR 447 crash, in the past, and just right now...

First idea that comes to my mind is that this accident could haven't happened to an old B747-200 or DC10-300... Why?

It's quite simple. Old 747's and DC10's didn't have in them the technology embedded nowadays on Airbus types or latest generation Boeing ones. No automatic protection of anything at all. You, PF, just fly the plane according to the manual. If you are on AP and A/THR (they had it), like most of the time, you just watched she doesn't deviate from the altitude/track/heading expected.

You didn't have to take care of systems, as in the cockpit was an extremely important member of the flight crew: the Flight Engineer. He/she watched permanently the engines parameters and the hydraulic/pneumatic ones. He/she assisted the Captain with the fuel management in the flight too

And then became, with the new airliners, the possibility of just only a Flight Crew of two. The tasks of the flight engineer could be taken by the automation of the systems... What an error, IMHO! There were rivers of ink at that time, some defending the new possibility (the industry, of course: less employees and a clear saving in wages) and the regulatory bodies, who didn't do their homework... Flight Engineers  should have never disappear in the Long Haul planes and routes...

Another issue is, like expressed long time ago worldwide, that present pilots with a CPL or even an ATPL lack almost completely the concept of what airmanship is. The feelings in the body of what the plane, be an ultralight or a massive longhauler, is telling us is almost forgotten. Pilots are became nowadays aircraft managers, which is really terrible...

Have a nice night. I love you all

TWRman

BEA Conclussions

I cannot resist to 'paste' here the conclusion BEA extracts from its investigation on the probable causes of the accident. They are a lot, but worth to read them, in my opinion:

 "Thus, the accident resulted from the following succession of events:
Temporary inconsistency between the airspeed measurements, likely following the obstruction of the Pitot probes by ice crystals that, in particular, caused the autopilot disconnection and the reconfiguration to alternate law;
        Inappropriate control inputs that destabilized the flight path;

   The lack of any link by the crew between the loss of indicated speeds called out and the appropriate procedure;

   The late identification by the PNF of the deviation from the flight path and the insufficient correction applied by the PF;

□ The crew not identifying the approach to stall, their lack of immediate response and the exit from the flight envelope;

  The crew’s failure to diagnose the stall situation and consequently a lack of inputs that would have made it possible to recover from it.

These events can be explained by a combination of the following factors:
  The feedback mechanisms on the part of all those involved that made it
     impossible:
--  To identify the repeated non-application of the loss of airspeed         
     information  procedure  and to remedy this,
    --  To ensure that the risk model for crews in cruise included icing of the        
          Pitot probes and its consequences;

  The absence of any training, at high altitude, in manual aeroplane handling and in the procedure for ”Vol avec IAS douteuse”;

  Task-sharing that was weakened by:
   --   incomprehension of the situation when the autopilot disconnection   
         occurred,
--  Poor management of the startle effect that generated a highly charged emotional factor for the two copilots;
--  The lack of a clear display in the cockpit of the airspeed inconsistencies identified by the computers;
--  The crew not taking into account the stall warning, which could have been due to:
--   A failure to identify the aural warning, due to low exposure time in training to stall      
     phenomena, stall warnings and buffet,
--  The appearance at the beginning of the event of transient warnings that could be    
     considered as spurious,
--  The absence of any visual information to confirm the approach-to-stall after the loss
     of the limit speeds,
--  The possible confusion with an overspeed situation in which buffet is also
     considered as  a symptom, 
--  Flight Director indications that may led the crew to believe that their actions were
    appropriate, even though they were not,

  The difficulty in recognizing and understanding the implications of a     
     reconfiguration in alternate law with no angle of attack protection."

Have a nice night all. I love you.

TWRman

Tuesday, 17 July 2012

The Inter Tropical Covective Zone (ITCZ)

Sunday evening I finished reading and studying the French BEA's Final Report on the Air France A330-203 crash into the Mid-Atlantic on July 1, 2009... Well, I was left with a feeling of deep sadness and the acre flavour in my mouth that this could had happened to any crew flying modern planes everywhere... The ITCZ crossing is done every day by dozens of airplanes, without problems, though I've been told by some friends, ATPL pilots who fly, or flew in the past, with Iberia, it's always a tricky thing.
Not dangerous, but tricky.

In this convective area, around the equator in the Atlantic ocean, very active clouds developing vertically (Cumulonimbus, Cb in MET reports) are found, sometimes topping to 50,000 ft. This type of clouds must always be avoided at any height, 'cos they present a clear hazard to the flight safety.

Crews evaluate the situation in their route through the ITCZ, both in advance (strategic study) and when approaching the zone (tactical study). Sometimes the do not change their plane's flying path, sometimes they do.

The conditions for the ITCZ A330 crossing  the night of the accident were not unusual. Turbulence was light, and the Captain did not considered any special change on the plane's path. He went to have a rest a couple of minutes before all started...

Captain was relieved by the second First Officer, who sat in the left seat in the cockpit, but he made not clear who of the two First Officers was the Relief Captain...

As I said before, at 0210 and 14 secs, the Auto Pilot (AP) disengaged. Some seconds later, the Auto Throttle (A/TR) disengaged too..., and a crew of two First Officers had to deal to a situation for they've never been trained...

Terrible.

I love you all.

TWRman

Monday, 9 July 2012

This is the 'work place' of the flight crew of an A330-200. Nothing to do with a Boeing 747-200 one, but, in the end, dealing with much more sophisticated systems.

The trick is that, in modern airliners, most of the processes are usually hidden  to the crew, being the cockpit layout a lot cleaner than in old airliners.
If you need to know, or if a malfunction appears, you can have at hand all the information you need.

I've progressed a lot through BEA's Final Report (I'm midway or so at the moment), but, for the time being, I cannot get out of my mind some basic facts:

1.-  Flight departed Rio do Janeiro/Galeao airport at about 0020 UTC.

2.-  At 0210 UTC, the Autopilot (AP) and Autothrust (A/THR) disengaged, flying at FL350 (they couldn't climb higher due to the TAT outside, higher than expected)

3.-  The reasons for the disengagement were the lack of accurate airspeed readings from at least 2 pitot probes of 3 available, probably due to accumulation of crystal ice. The airspeed reading failure lasted less than 2 minutes (the time the pitots de-icing system took to deal with the ice crystals).

4.-  Four minutes later the aircraft, working perfectly, crashed into the ocean surface..., killing almost 300 people...

Sorry. I cannot understand...

Love you all

TWRman

Sunday, 8 July 2012

This is the A330/340 FCU (Flight Control Unit) panel. It's placed between the two pilots just below the upper shade rim of the front instruments panel. It has three areas: the two lateral ones are exactly the same, affecting each one at the flight instruments on the PFD (Primary Flight Display) of its side. The central one is common, with buttons and knobs to set APs and A/THR (Auto Pilots and Auto Throttle) on/off, the FDs (Flight Director) mode and other settings, such as altitude to maintain by the AP engaged (curiously, you have to 'push' the 'altitude to maintain' button to level off at it when captured...)





To fly the plane in Normal Law, with one AP and the A/THR engaged (99,99% of the cases), at least two of the three outputs from the three ADIRUs should be valid. In the event there's only one valid, the system considers it invalid too. The consequence is that the AP and A/THR are disengaged, the FDs crossbars disappear from the PFDs, and the flight control law switches automatically to Alternate.


It seems the aircraft, near TASIL intersection on her route, encountered at its FL350 cruising level a 'cloud' of ice micro crystals, quite common in the weather conditions at the area, and not able to be detected in the plane's weather radar. At least two (maybe the three ones) pitot probes ingested some amount of these crystals, and became partially blocked. Their readings became invalid... This led to the facts described in the above paragraph.

What happened then is a matter of Human Factors only... The pitots ice-blocking problem lasted for just 1 or 2 minutes, but led a big airliner to plunge into the ocean in a stall situation, with her nose slightly above the horizon (about 6º pitch attitude), a small left bank angle (less than 15º), full N1 rpm in both engines, and a vertical descent speed of about 15000 fpm!...

Next report when I finished the reading/studying BEA's Final Report .

Have a nice night.

NOTE: To Grasshopper, if you read this. If you understand more or less the meaning of all the above text, you're not completely lost to the Aviation World...


TWRman
The Air Data System get its information through 10 external sensors installed in the plane fuselage skin: 3 Pitot tubes (or probes) to get the Total Air Pressure (static plus dynamic), 6 Static Ports (to get air static pressure only) and 1 Outside Air Temperature (OAT) sensor. The Pitot probes and Static ports are connected to several Air Data Computers (ADC) as this diagram shows:



NOTE: I think there's an error in the labelling. From this diagram you get that the plane has only 3 Static ports: 1 (Captain), 2 (Copilot) and 3 (Standby). I think all sensors on the left should have been labelled as Captain and all sensors on the right should have been labelled as Copilot. In this way there are 1 Pitot probe + 2 Static ports in the port side of the plane's skin, 1 Pitot probe + 2 Static ports in her starboard side plus a Pitot probe and a Static port in the port side (both Standby) and a Static port in the starboard side (Standby too). The OAT sensor is not shown.

Abbreviations:

ADM: Air Data Module. It's a specialised transducer that converts pressure values to electric current.

ADIRU: Air Data Inertial Reference Unit. From the electrical inputs of the ADM's plus the Inertial Reference got from the aircraft INS (Inertial Navigation System) calculates all Air Data referred previously plus the wind vector in each moment

ISIS: Integrated Standby Instruments System. Gets its air data information directly by a pneumatic way from the standby sensors, Pitot probe 3, Static port 3 (captain) and Static port 3 (copilot)... 
The A330-200 that crashed in the South Atlantic on July 1, 2009
Picture © Philippe Jeandy

I am progressing very slowly into the reading and understanding of BEA's Final Report of the Air France A330-200 accident  on July 1, 2009, while she was enroute from Rio do Janeiro/Galeao airport to Paris/ Charles de Gaulle one.
Moder airliners are full of automatic systems, so to understand the probable causes of an accident of one of these you have to understand, at least in a simple way, the working of the systems related to that causes.

From the very beginning, and due to the ACARS transmissions from the plane, it was almost evident that Flight AFR 447 crashed due to problems with her airspeed. Thus, the report dedicates a lot of pages to explain how important air data such as Mach number (M), Calibrated Airspeed (CAS), True Airspeed (TAS) and True Air Temperature (TAT) are calculated and presented to the flight crew...




Hi. I went yesterday noon to Robledillo aerodrome. I had a couple of things to comment in site with the President and Vice-president of the Aeroclub de Guadalajara Board of Directors (I'm a member of this Board).

The President, José Luís, did not show up, but the Vice-president, David, was there...

After a cup of coffee in the canteen, we've checked the signalling of a terrain zone not available for the moment for planes taxiing in it, due its very rough surface. Then we examined a piece of concrete chunk (in the form of a small beam) that we're trying to use as a piece of a centreline taxiway in the terrain, parallel to the runway...

Just moments before leaving up the field, I knew that it, my beloved Robledillo de Mohernando airfield, had been desecrated Friday evening... and, suddenly, all the extremely good memories accumulated there since mid August 2009 were wiped out in a second... I couldn't believe it...!


Some people have a complete lack of sensitivity and loyalty to certain facts.

Bye

Picture: An Evektor EuroStar departing RWY 01 at Robledillo AD with the snow covered Ocejón pike in the background.



Friday, 6 July 2012


Hi to all. The French Air Accidents Investigation Board (BEA) released yesterday July 5 their Final Report on the accident of an Air France Airbus A330-200 that plunged into the South Atlantic ocean a couple of hours or so after departing Rio do Janeiro/Galeao airport as flight AF 447, inbound to Paris/Charles de Gaulle airport, on July 1 2009.

I've downloaded this report from BEA's website. It's available in French (the official one) and in English. I've begun reading it and it promises a lot. 224 pages plus 12 annexes. The picture on the left is the cover of the document.

For those of you interested in Air Safety, just to say there are some important latent faults in the roots of the event, and that some of the barriers established (the Ransom Model) didn't work at all in this case: procedures and training.

You can get your copy of the report and annexes in English at:


You can get it too in French, if you wish (who uses French nowadays for aviation matters? It's simple: the French themselves, and nobody else... :-)))

I love you all. Have a nice night.

TWRman
Picture © aeroman3



This picture shows the front instrument panel of a Republic F-84F 'Thundrstreak', like the one flown by Richard Back from France in the past century 'sixties, and which is, together with Richard, the characters of his book.

As it's said in the book, 24 dials to watch (some in this panel and the rest in the two side consoles and the two auxiliary panels) and an immense amount of switches and warning lights.

It is a typical instrument panel for the fighters designed from the mid-'forties to the mid-'seventies. Modern fighters (from the F-16 up) have a very different instrument panels

This pic shows a pair of Republic F-84F Thunderstreaks in flight, like te one flown by Richard Bach in Europe in the past century sixties... These ones seem to be part of the Montana ANG...

The Republic F-84F Thunderstreak was a though plane to fly, and Richard tells a lot about it in his book. It was smaller and lighter than her contemporary North American F-86 'Sabre', the hero in the Korean War, but not as succesfull in air combat...

Get through the book, if you have an aviator soul and have some knowledge about aircraft systems and operations. Fighters, in some way, are not much different than airliners when not fighting... You will be delighted with it...

Have a nice night.

TWRman

Good evening to all. I've begun using this evening my new e-book's reader. And I've begun with Richard Bach first book, 'Stranger to the Ground'. The book was published for the first time in 1963. By that time, he was an F-84F Thunderstreak pilot with the New Jersey ANG (Air National Guard). His unit, 141st Fighter Squadron, 108th Fighter Wing, was deployed to Europe in TDY (Temporary DutY) in 1960, having his home base in France (not Belgium, as stated before), at Chaumont Air Base.

He's scheduled one evening  to fly to RAF Wethersfield in Essex, East Anglia, UK, just to pick up a locked bag weighing 39 lbs, containing some Top Secret documents, and drop it off at his home base...

The event was real, and Richard tell us in his book all the feelings he felt during this flight...

NOTE: As always, I deeply recommend to read this book to anyone with an aviator soul... The book is mainly technical, relating all just how to operate an F-84F and fly it across the European skies... Unfortunately, not everyone will be able to understand all the technicals... As I said before, you have to be a pilot, and know a lot about fighters, to enjoy the book. Due to it, I strongly don't recommend to read the Spanish edition, 'Ajeno a la Tierra'. I've don't read it in Spanish, but according with the quality of the translations of Richard's books into Spanish, I'm completely sure is rubbish...

Love you all...
TWRman

Thursday, 5 July 2012

By the way, the device came with about 100 titles in Spanish installed... I have reading material for almost my whole lifetime here!...

Bye...
Well, I've entered today in the e-book's universe. I've bought this morning an e-book reader. Well, it's not exactly an e-book reader. It's a small Android tablet (7 inch screen), with a colour touch capacitive screen, that suits perfectly my needs. 149 EUR...

I've download and installed in it the Amazon Kindle App for Android. Works perfectly well, so I've bought two Richard Bach's books there. I read one of them long time ago: 'Stranger to the Ground'. The other is new for me: 'Biplane'...

My aim is to have in electronic form most of Richard's books, even the ones I have in paper...

Have a nice night all of you. I love you all...

TWRman

Wednesday, 4 July 2012

The required walkaround before the flight was not a simple one. First of all, you have to look carefully for rips in her fuselage and wings fabric. No rivets at all, of course, but a lot of fabric everywhere...

And a lot of nuts around her too to check. No flaps, but hinges everywhere... And a lot of wires and rods, with nuts and bolts... Without checking the engine (only the oil level), you spent more than 40 minutes checking all that stuff...

In the end you climbed the rear seat (the one from which light biplanes are normally flown - just a matter of CoG -) and made the initial checks before start-up.

They were extremely simple: the plane didn't had an electrical system in its own (just the engine ignition system, that was autonomous), so just to set some levers in their right places, set the altimeter, check the fuel quantity, prime the engine (this is, pump manually some gas into its cylinders), both magnetos on, throttle half opened and shout: "Clear Prop"!... Someone on the outside 'gave you a prop', this is, swinged the propeller in a way the engine started at the first attempt... Dear Manolo, how many times you swinged props for me at that time...! We'll meet again, sure...

I love you all...

TWRman
You all  know, ladies and Aviation don't usually match... What a pity...!


I love you all, my friends (including the one who don't want to be my friend now...)

Mine was E3B-486. It was her military registration, and as this appears in my Logbook.

My first flight on her took place on August 19, 1974. My last flight was on January 3, 1975. Next time I went to the Aeroclub to flight her I found that a stupid and very incompetent pilot had destroyed her in a crosswind landing, having been advised previously not to flight that day... Good bye, my beloved Bücker...

I'm completely sure one day I will own one...

I put it now a couple of pics, two of them in formation at July last year FIO exhibition and a close-up of her classical rear seat instrument panel... Ahhh!, those times... The best in my whole life (no ladies fucking off  at all then...)


Tuesday, 3 July 2012

I once had a biplane too. I didn't own she, of course, but from the moment her engine was started, with me strapped in her back seat, she was mine until, back on the airfield, engine stopped, strapped off and jump off her seat...

She was exactly like the one in the pic, except she had not the roundels painted, neither in her fuselage nor in her wings. The grey overall colour scheme was exactly the same, with the St. Andrews' Cross painted in black over a white background in her rudder ...

She was a CASA 1131E Jüngman, build under license from the Germans but with an engine made here: an ENMASA Tigre of 125 hp. The Spanish Air Force (Ejército del Aire) was taking them off from active service, as an elementary trainer. By 1974, they offered all the Airclubs around the country one or two of them, in a lend scheme. Aircraft were completely overhauled, airframe and engine. They offer them at no cost at all and for 400 hours flying time or aircraft destroyed, whatever it came first... I heard just a few of them, less than 10, were given back to the EdA. The rest of them were destroyed in accidents, mainly on landings,,,
Two Final Reflections...

First one, from 'Illusions': "Here is a test to find whether your mission on Earth is finished: If you're alive, it isn't"... Think about it...

Second one from my own: " The Universe writes straight on twisted patterns"...

I love you all

TWRman
Good evening to all. Though I've kept on reading 'Illusions' today, it's quite late now to reflect anything on this reading...

Anyway, I cannot stop from posting the phrase in the picture:

If you love someone, set them free. If they come back they're yours; if they don't, they never were

She took off at 2120 UTC last Friday, and disappeared into the night sky...

Don't know whether she will come back or not, but this is her choice, not mine. I will wait, for sure...

Love you all, but specially you, Grasshopper... 

Sunday, 1 July 2012

These are two pictures of the Air Traveller 4000, the biplane Donald Shimoda, the Messiah, flew in his barnstorming deals in the Richard Bach's book 'Illusions'

Compared with the Fleet Richard flew it's a very different kind of a biplane. This one is clearly larger and heavier than the Fleet, being her MTOW (Maximum Take-Off Weight)  almost twice the Fleet's. Her advantage was she was a three-seater. Donald could fly two passengers in each flight. The drawback, she needed longer landing strips, not very easy to find out...
                                                   
I've not been able to be through 'Illusions' today, so I'm not going to comment anything about it now. And besides, I had an extremely awkward experience yesterday night (in fact, at about 0045- 0:45 AM Saturday) that still has my mind a little bit 'frozen'. Sorry about that...

Love you all

TWRman