another reason a co pilot should sit on their hands

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Now that sounds like a scary design flaw.Actually, this is entirely possible. The door switch on a 737 is next to the rudder trim switch, and it rotates in the same manner. In a swept wing jet, rudder trim will cause a huge rolling moment, in addition to yaw. The trimmer is so powerful, that it can overpower the autopilot roll commands. Result? Aircraft upside down
That's a pretty stupid comment.AirMail wrote:http://travel.sympatico.ca/TravelNews/A ... flips_over
another reason a co pilot should sit on their hands
Design flaw ? Not reallyCpnCrunch wrote:From another forum:
Now that sounds like a scary design flaw.Actually, this is entirely possible. The door switch on a 737 is next to the rudder trim switch, and it rotates in the same manner. In a swept wing jet, rudder trim will cause a huge rolling moment, in addition to yaw. The trimmer is so powerful, that it can overpower the autopilot roll commands. Result? Aircraft upside down
Unless of course you were a pax on this flt.atpilot wrote:That's a pretty stupid comment.AirMail wrote:http://travel.sympatico.ca/TravelNews/A ... flips_over
another reason a co pilot should sit on their hands
The comment stereotypes all co-pilots as being incompetent when there are plenty of good FO's out there. Let's not paint all co-pilots with the same brush.tsgas wrote:Unless of course you were a pax on this flt.atpilot wrote:That's a pretty stupid comment.AirMail wrote:http://travel.sympatico.ca/TravelNews/A ... flips_over
another reason a co pilot should sit on their hands