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Hi Chogy
i have seen various commercial airplanes cockpit videos. during flare I have not noticed that the pilot has "PULLED" the yoke significantly. I wonder why is that. does he pull that so little that it cannot be seen.
I want to know if in a war scenario the pilots carry a sidearm while going on a sortie and which one is it? Normally how much ammo do they carry for the sidearm?
There will always be some measure of asymmetric drag but even with the old analog computer assisted mechanical FLCS, and we are talking about decades old, that asymmetry will be transparently compensated by the FLCS computer.Does the aerodynamics of an airplane change significantly after you fire a missile? What if you fire such that one side of the plane has more missiles than the other?As far as I know no measurable change will occur. Assuming you are talking about sides that means sidewinder missiles then such missiles relatively have less mass than the aircraft body so it doesnt mean much to aerodynamic profile**. However; there occurs some very bulky missiles which mostly are resided within the fuselage e.g if a Bear Bomber ejects all of its 16 Raduga cruise missile (16*2.5=40ton) it will drastically lighten up the airframe which may positively affect the fuel economy but still strictly nothing be of much variation in aerodynamics ~mostly drag aspects.
** I am not talking about those [now rare] bulky missiles fitted under wings; such as B-52 carrying a HoundDog missile [though it was a missile it can be used as an additional takeoff engine for B-52 & then re-fuelled in air through fuel channels embeded in B-52 wings]
The flight controls laws are proprietary. Not only that, each set are usually highly customized because, for this asymmetric drag example, the degree of compensating surface deflection is governed by the aircraft's own aerodynamic characteristics. Another example is the F-16's off centerline cannon. When it is fired, it will create a yaw-ing effect and the rudder deflects appropriately to keep the aircraft straight. The F-15 also has an off centerline cannon but its location is further from center than the F-16, so there will be different compensating algorithms.Do you have the mathematical description of some of these flight control laws?
To bring it back to life, here's my question:
In WW 2, there have been instances of POW pilots stealing fighters and escaping. Is something like that possible today, to just jump in a never-seen cockpit and take off ( and land)?
If a PAF pilot who has been flying Mirages and J-7's gets his hands on an Israeli F-15, can he fly out with it? ( please PAK members, this is an example only, don't start with the jingoistic and religious stuff here)
Not in all cases, but many Air-to-Air missiles can be fired.Bring back this thread to life !
Can a fighter jet fire missiles while flying inverted? Some missiles seem to drop down for a bit and then it ignites forward. So will that work when the jet is upside down?
Most guns are 30mm caliber. A jet flying at 2 Mach has speed of about 680-700 m/s. The muzzle velocity of 30mm is 1,385 m/s, which is about 4 mach, twice as faster as the jet.Can a jet flying at Mach 2 fire its guns? Or will it overtake the bullets and perhaps get shot down by itself?