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skywalker92 wrote:You are correct Starlionblue!
As A350 is not fitted with Trim tanks so it deploys flap to maintain the Center of Gravity within the limits. I think it is some thing like Aileron droop that happens during the flap extension and this small droop is not indicated in the displays.
AngMoh wrote:But after that, the hydraulic noise of what sounded like the flaps retracting was strange - it did not last very long and it sounded like the flaps were just extended by a little bit.
skywalker92 wrote:so it deploys flap to maintain the Center of Gravity within the limits.
hivue wrote:skywalker92 wrote:so it deploys flap to maintain the Center of Gravity within the limits.
How can flaps alter the CoG?
Starlionblue wrote:skywalker92 wrote:You are correct Starlionblue!
As A350 is not fitted with Trim tanks so it deploys flap to maintain the Center of Gravity within the limits. I think it is some thing like Aileron droop that happens during the flap extension and this small droop is not indicated in the displays.
IIRC aileron droop during flap extension can be seen if you look closely at the flight control page. However automatic flap extension during cruise is not shown.
The cruise flap extension system increases efficiency. It is not there to keep things within limits.
skywalker92 wrote:Starlionblue wrote:skywalker92 wrote:You are correct Starlionblue!
As A350 is not fitted with Trim tanks so it deploys flap to maintain the Center of Gravity within the limits. I think it is some thing like Aileron droop that happens during the flap extension and this small droop is not indicated in the displays.
IIRC aileron droop during flap extension can be seen if you look closely at the flight control page. However automatic flap extension during cruise is not shown.
The cruise flap extension system increases efficiency. It is not there to keep things within limits.
If the flap extension during cruise is not to keep the CG within limits, how does it cater with the shifting CG without Trim tanks?
kurtverbose wrote:Isn't there also gust aleviation - what control surfaces do that?
skywalker92 wrote:I was not arguing with you Starlionblue, I'm not that much genius![]()
Thanks for the crystal clear explanation and I thought that Trim tanks are solely to cater the CG shifts and never thought about improving efficiency.
Starlionblue wrote:skywalker92 wrote:I was not arguing with you Starlionblue, I'm not that much genius![]()
Thanks for the crystal clear explanation and I thought that Trim tanks are solely to cater the CG shifts and never thought about improving efficiency.
Concorde did in fact use tank trimming to cater for center of lift shifts because of the very large speed range. According to ConcordeSST.com, the CoP could shift six feet**. Also the tanks in Concorde were widely distributed along the length. On a subsonic airliner, while the center of lift does shift in the transonic range, the magnitude is not great, and besides most of the fuel is close to the middle.
The efficiency gain from tank trimming on the 330 is about 1%. The trim tank has the additional advantage of providing extra tankage and a simple means of CoG control at take-off. If we take on more than about 37000kg, some of the fuel goes in the trim tank.
I'm not a genius. I just have access to manuals and trainers keep "encouraging" me to study by asking questions I don't know the answer to.
** http://www.concordesst.com/fuelsys.html
AngMoh wrote:Starlionblue wrote:skywalker92 wrote:I was not arguing with you Starlionblue, I'm not that much genius![]()
Thanks for the crystal clear explanation and I thought that Trim tanks are solely to cater the CG shifts and never thought about improving efficiency.
Concorde did in fact use tank trimming to cater for center of lift shifts because of the very large speed range. According to ConcordeSST.com, the CoP could shift six feet**. Also the tanks in Concorde were widely distributed along the length. On a subsonic airliner, while the center of lift does shift in the transonic range, the magnitude is not great, and besides most of the fuel is close to the middle.
The efficiency gain from tank trimming on the 330 is about 1%. The trim tank has the additional advantage of providing extra tankage and a simple means of CoG control at take-off. If we take on more than about 37000kg, some of the fuel goes in the trim tank.
I'm not a genius. I just have access to manuals and trainers keep "encouraging" me to study by asking questions I don't know the answer to.
** http://www.concordesst.com/fuelsys.html
So is the fact that it was clearly noticeable a result of the turbulence? For example are the flaps fully retracted during the serious turbulence to reduce loads and then reset to the optimum position after exiting turbulence or settings affected by turbulence and then reset to normal. The turbulence was serious - by far the worst I have experienced in 30 years of regular flying. Also, I have never heard the effects of the trimming on the A350 before even though the hydraulic system is very loud.
longhauler wrote:Trust Airbus to use such advanced aerodynamics.
I recall when flying the A310-300 almost thirty years ago, that if the CGCC (the computer controlling the trim tank operation) was MELed inop, then fuel burn on an Atlantic crossing increased by about 1000 lbs. I was amazed then and using flaps today for the same function amazes me now!
It was fun explaining to people that moving 5000 lbs of fuel to the tail reduces the effective weight of the aircraft. (I won a lot of beers that way!)
However .... I was always mistrustful of the system, as the "what if" in me wondered about what would happen if the fuel ever became trapped back there. And it did happen on one of our flights flying YVR-AMS. They had to land in YFB with the aft MAC close to the limit. Personally, I would have preferred a hand control to open the valve manually to let the fuel trickle back into the centre tank. Some panel under row 30 or so, open it up, turn the handle and "thunk" fuel is released.
thepinkmachine wrote:Across the Atlantic there should be an airport available within 120min from pretty much anywhere - how long did the A/C fly with fuel stuck in the TT and how problematic has it become?
Is there any report available for this incident?
Starlionblue wrote:Maybe we're arguing semantics, but for me "keep within limits" implies that it risks going out of limits. The A350 CG will be within safe limits if left as is. The fuel is all in the wings and the center tank, nicely located close to the CoG. Fuel burn won't affect the CoG very much. The cruise flap extension logic shifts the Center of Pressure forward, closer to the CoG. This means the stabiliser must produce less downward force, and thus fuel burn is decreased. However the stabiliser easily has enough authority to keep the CoP where it needs to be for safe operation
The 330, on the other hand, has a trim tank. Here also, the trim tank is not there to keep the CoG within safe limits. The CoG will be safe as is. At 25500 feet, the system starts transferring fuel to the trim tank. This shifts the CoG backwards, closer to the CoP. The effect is the same. The stabilser must produce less downward force, and thus fuel burn is decreased. The fact that the Aft Transfer Valve is an MEL item shows that the trim tank is not essential to CoG control.
longhauler wrote:That is a bit of a "gotcha" with respect to long, domestic flights. In theory an enroute alternate need not be available nor above minima. Take, for example, a flight from St. John's, Newfoundland to Vancouver, British Columbia. It is scheduled at around 7 hours and the aircraft flying it need not be ETOPS certified!
This flight had already spent over 5 1/2 hours over land and was southeast of YFB when the ECAM MAC caution sounded. YFB was the nearest suitable landing site, but YYR, KEF and SNN were the ETOPS alternates.
There was an internal report and our SOPs changed as a result of the this incident. At every flight plan waypoint, not only did Fuel on Board need to be recorded, but current MAC as well. I'd have to dig around to find a report in the public domain. As a brand new and junior A310 Captain, I flew the "rescue" flight ... YYZ-YFB-AMS
DocLightning wrote:Starlionblue wrote:Maybe we're arguing semantics, but for me "keep within limits" implies that it risks going out of limits. The A350 CG will be within safe limits if left as is. The fuel is all in the wings and the center tank, nicely located close to the CoG. Fuel burn won't affect the CoG very much. The cruise flap extension logic shifts the Center of Pressure forward, closer to the CoG. This means the stabiliser must produce less downward force, and thus fuel burn is decreased. However the stabiliser easily has enough authority to keep the CoP where it needs to be for safe operation
The 330, on the other hand, has a trim tank. Here also, the trim tank is not there to keep the CoG within safe limits. The CoG will be safe as is. At 25500 feet, the system starts transferring fuel to the trim tank. This shifts the CoG backwards, closer to the CoP. The effect is the same. The stabilser must produce less downward force, and thus fuel burn is decreased. The fact that the Aft Transfer Valve is an MEL item shows that the trim tank is not essential to CoG control.
I haven't heard this explanation before. The explanation I heard is that the A350s cruise flaps can alter the lift distribution span-wise across the wing to optimize it towards the ideal elliptical distribution, which decreases lift-induced drag. I've always thought of the flaps as shifting the center of lift aftward a bit by extending the area of low pressure above the wing during flight towards the trailing edge.
Can you clarify a bit? I'm not challenging you (I'm not that foolish!), but I am interested in making sure I have my information right.
thepinkmachine wrote:longhauler wrote:That is a bit of a "gotcha" with respect to long, domestic flights. In theory an enroute alternate need not be available nor above minima. Take, for example, a flight from St. John's, Newfoundland to Vancouver, British Columbia. It is scheduled at around 7 hours and the aircraft flying it need not be ETOPS certified!
Ah, the old 'adequate' vs 'suitable' discussion!
longhauler wrote:That is a bit of a "gotcha" with respect to long, domestic flights. In theory an enroute alternate need not be available nor above minima. Take, for example, a flight from St. John's, Newfoundland to Vancouver, British Columbia. It is scheduled at around 7 hours and the aircraft flying it need not be ETOPS certified!
glen wrote:Are these ancient rules or specific canadian domestic rules?
longhauler wrote:There is no where in CARS that states that an overland flight must be within 60 minutes of a legal alternate at all times.
BravoOne wrote:787 has a similar flap extension feature which has nothing to do with fuel, other than the fact that computers know where the CG is at any given moment.
zeke wrote:Probably the sound of removing the newspapers that stopped them from seeing outside and the WX radar.
WPvsMW wrote:zeke wrote:Probably the sound of removing the newspapers that stopped them from seeing outside and the WX radar.![]()
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Biggest chuckle I've had this week. Thanks.
And, t.net at its best... the CoG vs. CoL discussion. Learned alot. Thanks StarlionBlue. Your trainers must think "He's coming in for recurrent. Time to conjure up something new."
WPvsMW wrote:zeke wrote:Probably the sound of removing the newspapers that stopped them from seeing outside and the WX radar.![]()
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Biggest chuckle I've had this week. Thanks.
And, t.net at its best... the CoG vs. CoL discussion. Learned alot. Thanks StarlionBlue. Your trainers must think "He's coming in for recurrent. Time to conjure up something new."