Simulation Study of a Commercial Transport Airplane During Stall and Post-Stall Flight
2004-01-3100
11/02/2004
- Event
- Content
- As part of NASA’s Aviation Safety and Security Program, a simulation study of a twin-jet transport aircraft crew training simulation was conducted to address fidelity for upset or loss-of-control flight conditions. Piloted simulation studies were conducted to compare the baseline crew training simulation model with an enhanced aerodynamic model that was developed for high-angle-of-attack conditions. These studies were conducted in a flaps-up configuration and covered the approach-to-stall, stall and post-stall flight regimes. Qualitative pilot comments and preliminary comparison with flight test data indicate that the enhanced model is a significant improvement over the baseline. Some of the significant unrepresentative characteristics that are predicted by the baseline crew training simulation for flight in the post-stall regime have been identified. This paper presents preliminary results of this simulation study and discusses key issues regarding predicted flight dynamics characteristics during loss-of-control flight conditions.
- Pages
- 13
- Citation
- Cunningham, K., Foster, J., Shah, G., Stewart, E. et al., "Simulation Study of a Commercial Transport Airplane During Stall and Post-Stall Flight," SAE Technical Paper 2004-01-3100, 2004, https://doi.org/10.4271/2004-01-3100.