Deep Stall

Deep stall is a dangerous condition that effects certain aircraft designs, notably those with a T-tail configuration. In these designs, the turbulent wake of a stalled main wing 'blanks' the horizontal stabilizer, rendering the elevators ineffective and preventing the aircraft from recovering from the stall. Although effects similar to deep stall had been known to occur on many aircraft designs, the name first came into widespread use after a deep stall caused the prototype BAC 1-11 to crash, killing its crew. This led to changes to the aircraft, including the installation of a stick shaker in order to clearly warn the pilot of the problem before it occurred. Stick shakers are now a part of all commercial airliners. Nevertheless the problem continues to periodically haunt new designs, in the 1980s a prototype of the latest model of the Canadair Challenger business jet entered deep stall during testing, killing one of the test pilots who was unable to jump from the plane in time.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
independent social democratic party of germany
history of poland (1918 1939)
occasionalism
janitor
partition of a set
mena suvari
john trumbull
chartered management institute
professional institutions in management
cmi
uk classical chart
windorah, queensland
deggial
pre established harmony
the waterboy
confluence
eduard bernstein
elephantine
electron ionization
johan theron
bac 1 11
irish language in northern ireland
stick shaker
pentagonal number theorem
urethane
karl kautsky
le meridien cyberport hotel
slow flight
totem
august bebel
the spike
blancs d'espagne
ludwig immanuel magnus
edict of toleration
list of nickelodeon shows
hans bellmer
macarthur foundation
theodor liebknecht
harry potter and leopard walk up to dragon
jati
watts riots
jogo do pau
artistic licence
doctor of the church