Quick field report from Columbus OH. LINKS: Chris Brady 737 Technical Site: www.b737.org.uk/theruddersyste... Dutch Roll: • What is DUTCH ROLL? ASN: asn.flightsafety.org/wikibase...
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@nerdtalker23 күн бұрын
The fact that voice recorders are constantly getting overwritten in all these incidents lately, in the age of NAND in the TBs taking up virtually minuscule amounts of mass and volume, is absolutely ridiculous.
@advorak85293 күн бұрын
No, that is by design. Not necessarily out of ill will, but imagine pilots talking trash while on cruise could be called out weeks or months later for it. Not relaxing if you have a vindictive manager on your back. Maybe the data needs to be encrypted with a public key after some time (maybe 1-2 hours) with the only private key able to decrypt it held by the FAA or something - and every cockpit recorder has their own, unique public/private key pair. That way, only the FAA (or relevant national authority) can open the recorder data and they’ll only do so for serious events. Yes, you want a lot of redundancy in the storage and limited lengths of encryption snippets to reduce the chance of decryption failure due to memory errors and reduce the amount of damage if such an error occurs. PS: The recorders need their own dedicated power system so they keep working even if the plane gets a total blackout. And because you will want a beacon to find them easier after a crash, say, into the ocean. SOFAR bombs may be a problem due to explosives and airplanes, but certainly would have helped, if not disabled, to find Malaysia 370 - but sabotage and evil intent cannot be overcome with safety equipment designed for honest actors.
@GlutenEruption3 күн бұрын
@@advorak8529 there are already laws on the books that prevent the airlines ie managers etc from listening to CVR recordings not to mention they don't have the equipment to do so (the NTSB toyed with recommending changes in legislation to let airlines routinely monitor CVR conversations on nominal flights to check if pilots were obeying sterile cockpit rules, etc. in 2010 but it never went anywhere- as far as I know, the pilots union said absolutely not, but even the airlines themselves weren't interested as the extra labor involved to listen to millions of hours of conversations a year would be ridiculous), plus their are also laws against retaliation/discrimination against someone by their employer for what they said in a private conversation even if they did, not to mention ALPA would make sure that never happened and would raise holy hėll if they ever did. Everywhere else in the world has had 25 hours minimum for decades, and the benefits FAR outweigh any nebulous concerns about privacy that really don't actually exist in reality.
@RealMash3 күн бұрын
Doesn't the European agency EASA demand 25h recording time for the voice recorder? Us too cheap for that?
@change_your_oil_regularly42873 күн бұрын
@@advorak8529 Plenty of people are recorded for the entire shift every shift and in much less important rolls than a pilot. If a shelf stacker, checkout person, servo attendant etc etc can handle it a pilot can
@adrianklaver1133 күн бұрын
@@halmc8109 1) They should be on before engine start(if that is what you mean by light the torches. 2) No way are you going to see an exchange program. The paperwork(and by extension time) that would be required on each exchange is a show stopper. Then there is the whole chain of custody issue if the recorder is ever needed in an investigation.
@HisDudeness20232 күн бұрын
I love aviation and I know just enough to be dangerous to humanity. However, I am an engineer and spent my entire career in nuclear power, which which is complex . I watch your channel frequently. You do ask for input on occasion, but this video was very much different. You did something that is rare on KZfaq. I am extremely impressed. I don’t know how many people noticed. You stated when you did not have details of the max rotor system and asked for help from the professionals that watch your channel. You did not bloviate. You’re confident enough that you knew your limits and asked for data. That requires maturity, common sense, and confidence. I salute you, sir. I got to add a dig. Go Navy.
@kylekauffman777120 сағат бұрын
This is a very complicated case, Maude. You know, a lotta ins, a lotta outs, lotta what-have-yous. 😎
@paulhavis5163 күн бұрын
I only flew the 737 100/200 (guppy series) for PEOPLExpress in the early 80s. I was dispatched once from Florida to Newark with a YAW DAMPER INOP MEL. Holy shit! Even though we were restricted to a lower altitude by the MEL, the passengers in the back sure knew it was not a normal flight by the tail swishing around. I couldn’t feel it up front at cruise altitude, but I REALLY noticed the difference when I was hand flying and we went skidding right through the final approach course… and I realized that because of inop Yaw Damper I had to use the rudder pedals just like in a Cessna , which 737 pilots never do. It was an eye opening experience.
@sharedsailing47873 күн бұрын
Yeah I once had 737 with an MEL'ed YD and it was a puke fest in the back. We refused the plane after flying 1 leg.
@BrianMorrison3 күн бұрын
@@sharedsailing4787With different fuselage lengths the rudder moment arm changes, that suggests that the yaw damper needs to be tuned to the aircraft model. Is that a mechanical or electronic change?
@dougrobinson86023 күн бұрын
@@BrianMorrison Electronic. The Stall Management Yaw Damper control unit uses information from the Air Data Inertial Reference Unit accelerometers to judge the amount of yaw and apply the correct rudder deflection to counter the yaw. That's how the 737-Max does it. The first models of the 737 didn't have ADIRUs, so it was less precise.
@rael54692 күн бұрын
We check the SMYD computers at least every A check, which I think is about every 500 flight hours. We check the rudder system in every way. Each hydraulic system. The proper fault warnings when the yaw damper disengages. The standby system for proper operation. Measure the rudder movement at the tail measured against a permanent index plate mounted near the bottom of the rudder. We look for a minimum displacement when switching between systems (so the actuators aren't fighting each other. It's actually quite an exhaustive series of tests through the (SMYD) Stall Management Yaw Damper computers 1 and 2.
@martinm21782 күн бұрын
Ah, PEOPLE Express! Those were the days. A lot of duct tape to hold up food trays and keep the overhead luggage compartment doors closed. But what did you want for $29 from Newark to Boston.
@badgerallen3 күн бұрын
At this point I wouldn’t even be surprised to find out that this is something Boeing has been aware of for while already.
@m.choudry48982 күн бұрын
Yeah, like the other half of the MCAS system controlling the rudder. Lol.
@cpmow83117 сағат бұрын
@@m.choudry4898oh they know for sure.
@SteamCrane2 күн бұрын
Watching this, I realized what a great FAA Administrator Juan would be. Knowledgeable, committed, and truly focused on getting things right. Juan wouldn't need to fire the incompetent ones, they would just quit out of fear.
@user-fe8bf2lj2y2 күн бұрын
For all you fellow aviation geeks out there, according to William Cook in his book The Road to the 707, the yaw damper was invented by Ed Pfafman, an engineer at Boeing during the flight testing of the XB-47 - the USAF's first swept wing jet bomber. The test pilots noted a continuing Dutch Roll in '47 and Ed came up with a solution. Brilliant guy. A yaw damper has been standard equipment on swept wing jets ever since.
@georgemartin14363 күн бұрын
Saw the headline but decided to just wait until Juan talked about it instead of looking then.
@windwatcher113 күн бұрын
Same.
@youtbe9993 күн бұрын
Just in time!
@zsoltszabo64823 күн бұрын
Literally had an email in my draft to ask him to cover it :-)
@alanreid30633 күн бұрын
Its a pleasure to here a "reporter" actually know what he is talking about
@DaddyRecon13 күн бұрын
Ditto 😂
@UnshavenStatue3 күн бұрын
"On Jun 13th 2024 The Aviation Herald learned that two ribs, that the stand by PCU is being mounted to, were damaged as well as the mounts of the stand by actuator. A temporary repair was done in Oakland replacing the damaged PCU, the aircraft was then ferried to Everett to replace the damaged ribs."
@blancolirio3 күн бұрын
Wow!
@billrichard44383 күн бұрын
They have not said, but I think so much force was applied by the captain to regain straight and level flight, that damage to the structure mentioned by you occurred.
@user-vu8nt7tx3z3 күн бұрын
Uh oh
@dickfitswell34373 күн бұрын
@@billrichard4438so he basically warped the structural integrity saving their lives. I mean silver lining is they are alive. Wow.
@Citroeniste3 күн бұрын
I’m a little puzzled that the standby actuator and mount could get damaged. Normally hydraulic system A and/or B would be powering main rudder PCU and the standby actuator would basically just be along for the ride so to speak. The primary Yaw Damper uses system B hydraulics so I’m wondering if they were on standby rudder power or was some part of the system on MEL or ?? It’ll be interesting to see what the NTSB investigation reveals.
@NCrdwlfКүн бұрын
As a flight attendant of 28 years, responsible for the 737 in all of its iterations, thank you for this . I guarantee we will hear nothing of this in our annual training . I will share it with my co hearts . A very well done presentation.
@johnnunn8688Күн бұрын
ALL of it’s iterations? It first flew 67 years ago!
@NCrdwlfКүн бұрын
@@johnnunn8688 I’ve been on everything all the way back to the 200. Right now my company has 4 models . Perhaps I would have said current if had know you were going to be so particular.
@MrUranium238Күн бұрын
Thank you for your service
@johnnunn8688Күн бұрын
@@NCrdwlf you said, ‘all’, how am I supposed to take that?
@stephenholland5930Күн бұрын
@@johnnunn8688 Nope. Try 57 years ago.
@RamJetJockeyКүн бұрын
One of the things we do in simulator training is a Dutch Roll demo at high altitude. We disarm the Yaw Damper and turn off the autopilot. The results of displacing the rudder in this condition causes a Dutch Roll that can be really dramatic in swept wing jets and hard to recover. Props to the pilots in this case who managed to recover from this incident.
@michaelmoorrees35853 күн бұрын
Electrical engineer here. Great explanation, of an unstable system, with phase shift contribution !
@alanmorton683 күн бұрын
Same here. Got a chuckle out of the damping vs. dampening comment!
@klam773 күн бұрын
truly ! excellent! also EE. especially the yaw leading to the roll combined dynamics.
@roderickcampbell21053 күн бұрын
Physicist here. This was very well presented. I am impressed by all the EE's around.
@COIcultist3 күн бұрын
Check out films of the time lag on the Tesla Cybertruck fly-by-wire steering system. Then shake your head very slowly. Do make sure you have your hands to either side of your head to stop the possibility of any interference cycle where you might get into a loop and shake your own head off!
@MrCarGuy3 күн бұрын
@@COIcultistNon-issue when driving at speed. Those demonstrations are done when stopped. Also the electric steering requires much fewer input turns lock-to-lock
@FutureSystem7383 күн бұрын
Thanks Juan. As a retired 30k hour heavy jet captain, I find it absolutely bizarre that cockpit voice recorders have not been able to record literally many tens of hours, and should have been able to do this for many years. 30 mins, or in this case just two hours is ridiculous. Even my phone can do that- it’s inexcusable.
@bobcook3 күн бұрын
Union issue!
@mattmoreira2103 күн бұрын
@@bobcookplease care to elaborate.
@spoonmanTX3 күн бұрын
Or video which the union has fought for years.
@Carlos-im3hn3 күн бұрын
Electrical Engineer here with a bit of ground experience on USN experimental aircraft engine runs, and an Airworthiness certificate. I always go to Juan since the dam issue in Northern Cal above Sacramento. I really appreciate Juan's take, and contribute to Blancolirio Patreon. Re this topic about lack of voice recorders...maybe the major carriers and manufacturers...just don't want to know ! Like Jack Nicholson said in that court scene with Tom Cruise.
@dickfitswell34373 күн бұрын
I have a Garmin GPS 4k/audio and video and it will literally record everyday for two months with 6hrs driving everyday min. That is in a dashcam half the size of a pack of ciggies and a decent size SD card. How they don't have something similar is beyond me. They should have dash cams as well
@idontw4ntahandle3 күн бұрын
I had some incredible instructors in the USAF. When you do these breakdowns it really reminds me of the quality airmanship passed down to us and expected by us. I have immense respect for instructors like yourself. I always enjoy the nostalgia.
@andredarin89663 күн бұрын
I second that. It's not difficult to see why for years the majors only looked at you if you had cut it as a military pilot. I knew an F.E. on 737s, former USAF, who was not impressed by the training he received at EAL (Eastern). He said he saw more in a sim-check for the C-141 in 15 minutes than he did through months of training at Eastern--and EAL was hardly unique,
@TinLeadHammer2 күн бұрын
@@andredarin8966On 9 May 2012, a demonstration flight directly struck Mount Salak in Indonesia, killing all 45 on board (Sukhoi personnel and representatives of various local airlines). The TAWS was ignored by the pilot. The subsequent investigation concluded that the flight crew was unaware of the presence of high ground in the area and ignored warnings from the terrain warning system, incorrectly attributing them to a system malfunction. The captain of the jet was Alexander Yablontsev (57), a former Russian combat pilot, test pilot, and cosmonaut. He had been involved in the Buran space program, and was the pilot for the first flight of Superjet 100 in 2008.
@barbaravyse660Күн бұрын
Like you not like yourself 😊
@SI-lg2vp3 күн бұрын
I experienced a total loss of the PCU in a SWA 737-200 on a flight from SAN to PHX. At touch down we lost all hydraulics of the A,B, and Stby system. They claimed that it was not possible to loose all hydraulics through the PCU, but it did occur. This occurred around the time of the crash of the United 737 that crashed in Colorado Springs from a PCU fault.
@wilfordfootball793 күн бұрын
Wow you lucky some things on untied 737 sadly those people were killed now we have 737 max almost same thing this crazy why is always 737 🤦🏿♂️
@richardlewis42882 күн бұрын
@@wilfordfootball79 It’s not only the 737.
@JonnyJetPilot2 күн бұрын
Yikes!
@rael54692 күн бұрын
It was potentially a problem with Airbus too. A potential problem was identified where both Yellow and Green hydraulics could be lost if the fluid was lost in one system and the PTU just ran until it failed trying to make up the pressure. So a mod was done that when fluid was lost in one system the PTU would time out and shut down before it caused the other system to fail also.
@rael54692 күн бұрын
@@richardlewis4288 "It’s not only the 737." True. It was a potential problem on the A320 line also but a modification greatly reduces that risk today.
@MinnesotaGuy8222 күн бұрын
Re: "Boeing has lost our trust". A guy I was talking to once told me something one of his NCOs in the Army had told him: "Trust is like a drinking glass. If you break it, you might be able to glue it back together, but it will never be the same."
@genebohannon882014 сағат бұрын
Starliner? Yeah NOPE.
@stephenduncan39163 күн бұрын
Thank you, Juan. “Yaw damper,” not “yaw dampener.” I’ve been harping on that one for years.
@TheSaturnV3 күн бұрын
Now we have to work on irregardless.
@thaiexodus29163 күн бұрын
@@TheSaturnV Best double negative, a bumper sticker: If you aint a cowboy you aint sh*t. Observed in Bakersfield Calif.
@sundance20053 күн бұрын
yeah, like turbIN not ine
@Aimless63 күн бұрын
If the shocks in your car leak, they become moisturizers. 😇
@user-tz1zo6nu3n3 күн бұрын
@@sundance2005 Like the Sikh headgear?
@cloudstreetjourneys62613 күн бұрын
Hey Juan. I thoroughly enjoy your videos and all the in-depth research you do. I just watched the video about the 737rudder issue that happened recently. I am a tech instructor for both the A-320 and B737 Max for an airline. To answer your question, the Max uses the same rudder control system as the NG. Incidentally, after the RSEP (Rudder System Enhancement Program) which was mandated in the early 2000's, a new main PCU was installed (I did a few of them while I was turning wrenches). That said, the classics then had the same type of rudder system as the NG and the Max after the modification was incorporated (RSEP). The Force Fight Monitor was a big part of this upgrade. The Force Fight Monitor is installed in the main rudder PCU and once it detects a difference of 3600 psi for a minimum of 5 seconds (one system pulling one way while the other system pulls the other way), it will automatically turn on the standby hydraulic pump and activate the standby PCU which will control the rudder. One disclaimer is that I DO NOT work for the airline that had the problem but am aware of it via the news and your channel. Hope this helps and keep your awesome content coming!
@bbgun0613 күн бұрын
Is it possible that one of the PCUs or hydraulic systems was MEL'd, and then a failure of the other left the airplane without the yaw damper? Or is that not an MEL item on the 737?
@gailcates88263 күн бұрын
Such a strange story. Dutch roll felt by the pilots at Fl34. Failure of yaw damper? Pilots regained control per FAA but cause structural damage to the ribs, standby pcu damaged- what does that even mean- physical damage to standby pcu-how does that even happen. Pilots then continue flight like nothing never happened. But something serious did happen. Can’t wait for the NTSB report. Ribs of airframe structurally damaged. Incredible.
@stevenrobinson23813 күн бұрын
@@gailcates8826 inadequate supporting structure for the PCU. Which in itself is saying something-the PCU is a pretty robust piece of equipment & given it's role in primary control of the aircraft-one would tend to question the basic design of the structure itself........
@stevenrobinson23813 күн бұрын
OUTSTANDING response. However-a difference of 3600 PSI ? Considering System A & B as well as Standby operate at 3000 PSI ?
@cloudstreetjourneys62613 күн бұрын
@@stevenrobinson2381 Yessir! Think of it as a tug-of-war type event. The system A servo valve pulls one direction while system B pulls the other creating an actual pulling force between the system servo valves of greater than 3000 psi. Also, when there are rudder inputs made from left to right and vice versa, the point where the rudder changes direction makes a pressure bump but it's so short-lived that it's not considered a force fight. That's why it is set up to require a period of five seconds minimum in which it would be an actual force fight. Hope this helps clarify it
@russell71403 күн бұрын
Was at the Columbus Airshow today and I thought that voice sounded familiar. You and all the announcers did a great job today.
@blancolirio3 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@RichardDCook3 күн бұрын
My sister was there, I saw a selfie of her and Juan. I asked her to ask Juan what "goat rope" meant!
@justanotheraviator23572 күн бұрын
@@blancolirio Did you Also, hear about the SWA incident in Hawaii
@therealthreadkilla2 күн бұрын
@@justanotheraviator2357 Good Q, and that's what I thought this was going to be about.
@dohabandit2 күн бұрын
@@RichardDCook In texas we used "goat roper" as a derogatory term for a wannabe cowboy. If you were a child, you started to learn how to throw a lariat using hay bales or roping goats, before moving up to roping cattle.
@naturalverities3 күн бұрын
As a passenger in a 777 on climbout from Shanghai Pudong I experienced a dutch roll due to wake turbulence from a 747 ahead of us. It damped down quickly but left us passengers wondering until the flight deck informed us what had happened. It wasn't frightening but was certainly out of the ordinary and felt like an evasive maneuver.
@bobmoretti48933 күн бұрын
Former Crew Chief on a USAF KC-135 (59-1507) and experienced firsthand in the late 80s a Dutch roll on a TDY trip. Not a good feeling I must say. Subsequent local sorties pilots were experiencing the same on this particular jet. Boeing came up to Loring AFB (our home base) and started changing out parts. Aircraft was grounded for a while but eventually the Red X's were signed off and the jet flew again without anymore incidents. Crazy times. Kudos to the test pilots and Boeing engineers.
@ajs16913 күн бұрын
What was the cause?
@bobmoretti48932 күн бұрын
@@ajs1691 I honestly don't know. The story around the flightline was Boeing changed out a lot of stuff over a month or so and then one day it no longer did Dutch Rolls. Yeah. I'm sure Boeing knew, but by that time i was transferred to another tail number 58-0093 and the jet in question 1507 went to Tinker for the R-mod conversion.
@sbrewski273 күн бұрын
Total "Hull Loss" is a phrase you never want to hear :/
@barbaradavis3933 күн бұрын
I remember one happened on approach to PIT, Pittsburgh.
@MichaelOfRohan3 күн бұрын
Cant believe they recovered this one
@CaptainRon19133 күн бұрын
Duh
@CasualObserver-jx4zh3 күн бұрын
It’s right up there with “Rapid Deconstruction” ie SpaceX jargon.
@toddcitron78693 күн бұрын
Or simply W/O for written off. Ugh
@pauldrusch18053 күн бұрын
Juan, 11k hour NG/MAX driver here, unfortunately or fortunately depending on your perspective, I’m inclined to posit human error on this one. One of the pilots “stuffed” a rudder accidentally and either the YD was overwhelmed or they (the pilot) tried to override the YD to correct his/her misstep. Similar to loss of control of Lantam 787, with inadvertent seat movement. FWIW.
@SeanAwning-er4ww2 күн бұрын
The usual explanations don't mention how the Dutch Roll gets started up at cruise. I'm very grateful for Brownie's mention of turbulence as one possible cause. Thanks for sharing another possible cause. Lucky that the plane was designed and assembled well enough that she was able to continue flying and land safely.
@bryanthaxton9705Күн бұрын
Did they lose altitude or declare an emergency and why would that cause damage to the PCU? If they knew why it happened why would they report it to the NTSB as a unknown cause?
@fractaljack3 күн бұрын
Never have I seen modified charades so expertly explain the physics of a Dutch roll. Well done, Juan!⚡👊🏼⚡
@jeffreybussie50873 күн бұрын
Thanks Juan, have been waiting for you to explain this in the only way you can. Have a great time in Dayton.
@zekeonstormpeak41863 күн бұрын
Back when the 707 was fairly new, Brannif was taking delivery of a new aircraft . It was a test flight with Boeing test pilots, and Brannif pilots. The pilot flying the plane induced a Dutch roll which ended up tearing off the engines, and resulted in a catastrophic crash. Luckily only a few people died.
@davesemak3 күн бұрын
yes, there's a youtube video
@gailpeterson374722 сағат бұрын
You should add that the test pilot was fairly inexperienced and at that portion of the test, they had disabled the yaw damper (as a part of the test flight) which heightened the effects experienced.
@Elizabeth-tg7jo3 күн бұрын
Thanks Juan. I was waiting for your input when I saw this on X this morning.
@johnwatson95183 күн бұрын
It is a problem with the Rudder Yaw Damper. Had it happen to me on a B737-500 over Palms Springs at FL330 enroute from LAX to CLE. Lost 6000' before getting aircraft back to straight and level. Thank God for my Navy aerobatic training.
@johnwatson95183 күн бұрын
@OfficialBlancoliriogt it's your channel. Do as you wish. It's my experience. Had a B737 U.S. Air Check Airman in the JS when this happened. My F.O. the Check Airman, and myself were all in agreement about what we experienced.
@justu2bnit173 күн бұрын
What a great example of human factors. We, as humans, can take some very limited information and make absolute conclusions based on the most fallible and ever changing element of our psyche called MEMORY. Only time, investigation and forensic reconstruction offers any hope of a certain cause to this event. Your post is a perfect example of how we all process information to fit our views to resolve any internal conflicts.
@johnwatson95183 күн бұрын
@justu2bnit17 you sound like an NTSB clown who initially blamed Captain Sully for ditching in the Hudson. In the incident I described, after passengers were deplaned in CLE, the aircraft was towed to the hangar, doors closed, hidden from sight. FAA investigators questioned the First Officer but never the Captain. Guess why...
@mitchmellons3 күн бұрын
Why?
@justu2bnit172 күн бұрын
@@johnwatson9518 Wow.. another quick to judgement response.. from your Navy aerobatic training that you were able to utilize in a B737-500, do you remember the phrase “all thrust, no vector”? My point is that a professional should know enough to know when they don’t know enough. The news outlets do a great job of spreading sensationalistic unverified drama. They need no help from professional aviators such as yourself.
@charlestosi51993 күн бұрын
Brilliant, instructive and crystal clear examination of the phenomenon. Thanks again, Juan. You cranked it out of the park, once again.
@toadelevator3 күн бұрын
Juan, I watched your call of the STOL races at RENO (streamed online LIVE) and really enjoyed your work on that! It brought the excitement while making the races very approachable for someone like me who hadn't seen that type of racing before. Your fine work was understandably overshadowed by the tragic mid-air that same afternoon, but I wanted to let you know what a great job you did! They're lucky to have you.
@blancolirio3 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@emiliovicari4863 күн бұрын
I searched for the most recent "dutch roll" videos as soon as I saw it in the news, and wasn't disappointed. That being said, the algorithm also provided another video next to yours: "how to roll a dutch" by a guy who didn't really look like an aviation expert, but definitely knows how to fly high. Thanks Juan, amazing content as usual!
@mikefendel2 күн бұрын
Yet another excellent description of this event and the related A/C systems. Thanks Juan and keep up your wonderful support of the aviation community!
@benmccullough78203 күн бұрын
Love your content Juan. I'm an ARFF firefighter for an airport in Ohio and happened across your channel shortly after I started. Love the videos you do on aircraft incidents since it is something I could possibly be involved in responding to..
@ShawnGray13 күн бұрын
I need to thank Juan for this one. I thought I was old until he mentioned if you're old enough to remember flying the C141. All the sudden I feel young again! Kudos Juan!! haha
@davepowers24692 күн бұрын
Juan, Found you many years back during the Orville Dam disaster. What a pleasant surprise to hear you announcing the STOL drags today, June 15th, at the Columbus Air Show. Thanks for your interest and good work! Long time subscriber, Dave Columbus, Ohio
@vancetilley79423 күн бұрын
In your next video about this incident you might want to discuss recovery from Dutch Roll. In the 2010’s I was flying a cargo DC-9-10 into hot, high elevation airports in Mexico. The -10 series had a short fuselage, no LE slats, and an anemic yaw damper system - all aggravating its wing’s known tendency to Dutch Roll. Training in recognition and recovery from Dutch Roll was absolutely necessary to fly that airplane - not so much now with the more modern airplanes. So, maybe a couple minutes on recognition and recovery would be good refresher for some viewers. I’ve since immigrated to NZ and all my sailplane buddies here try to “tall poppy” me with comments like, you airline guys don’t know how to use the rudder….I just smile and chuckle every time I hear that old trope. 🤣
@typhoon28273 күн бұрын
I think that's just a Kiwi thing. You can always tell a Kiwi but you can't tell them anything.
@davidtaylor3512 күн бұрын
Ok, but unless i've missed something. They were referring to airline pilots. Not nationalities. It's banter between aviation people.
@typhoon28272 күн бұрын
@@davidtaylor351 yes. My reply is just banter too, you supercilious prick 🤣
@ElmerCat2 күн бұрын
I just had to look it up: "Dutch Roll was the term used for skating repetitively to right and left on the outer edge of one's skates. By 1916, the term had been imported from skating to aeronautical engineering."
@Stanley_Furley2 күн бұрын
Juan, you are the best pilot debriefer on the internet. Keep up the great work!
@robertleslie24673 күн бұрын
Best explanation of a Dutch roll period. Much as gracias Juan.
@KO-pk7df3 күн бұрын
Once more Mr. Brown great information we have trusted for straightforward explanations to so many aviation difficulties these days. After hearing this one on the news my first thought was the Yaw Damper and or rudder faults of previous 737 crashes and handling problems. Thanks for the ever-increasing roll you play in bringing these cases to ours and the aviation world's attention.
@Maverick71543 күн бұрын
Your explanation of the how the rudder peddles are connected is great! It gives a lot of insight into how these systems work.
@bobdaniel50322 күн бұрын
Pedals not peddles. Are you AI??
@JohnChuprun3 күн бұрын
Love the 30 day deadline for the preliminary report - as stuff like this can't wait 2 years to come out. Thank you NTSB for all you do.
@Largecow_Moobeast2 күн бұрын
for real, anything related to a Boeing quality concern should be a 2 week SLA.
@j_taylor2 күн бұрын
@@Largecow_Moobeast Why would you have them stop investigating after two weeks? That sounds like a perfect setup to slow roll the investigation (sorry out sick) until your 2-week deadline arrives.
@user-vh8gc6hh1f3 күн бұрын
Keep up the good work. I love your videos. They are the most complete while easy to understand!
@azcharlie20092 күн бұрын
Your stuff is always the best, Juan... Thank you!
@pmconaway28613 күн бұрын
Welcome to CMH Juan. Glad you are in town. Enjoy the air show. I live in a suburb.
@islandwatch3 күн бұрын
My college controls professor said "you dampen a sponge. You damp a mechanic system." Still can't believe how many educated folks get it wrong.
@elkhunter86643 күн бұрын
Merriam-Webster definition: Dampen: (transitive verb) To check or diminish the activity or vigor of : DEADEN
@milantrcka1213 күн бұрын
Damping factor vs. "dampening factor" ?
@Larry-mk9ry3 күн бұрын
@@elkhunter8664 Online or printed? Online English dictionaries are not often not good for the technical senses of words. I find they're just not very good, period. They're free and you get what you paid for.
@robertpierce19813 күн бұрын
The same people on Facebook marketplace list cars with new breaks.
@oldguyrides3 күн бұрын
@@robertpierce1981 That they must sale today.
@user-cn6cw6os3s3 күн бұрын
Thanks for explaining the dutch roll as evperienced on the 737 as compared to the training manuver I remember from my student pilot days!
@duanesee73043 күн бұрын
The maneuver practiced by students is not really a "Dutch roll." In a true Dutch Roll the roll and yaw are out of phase: the plane is rolling one way, but yawing the opposite. By the time the plane's dynamic stability brings the yaw into line with the roll, the plane has already rolled back the other way, and the yaw is still contrary to roll. In the practice maneuver the idea is to not let the nose move: it should remain fixed, i.e. NO yaw, while the plane rolls side to side. An uncoordinated turn is more akin to a Dutch Roll, in that initially yaw is opposite roll.
@davidbailey16892 күн бұрын
Thank you for that very concise description of the Dutch Roll.
@MADHIKER7773 күн бұрын
I learn so much from Juan! Glad the SWA flight landed without incident
@davecorley5514Күн бұрын
My USNA roommate’s son, Tyler Clark, is #3 Thunderbird. He’ll be with the ‘birds in Columbus, along with his Mom, Dad and family. His Dad and I were nuke submarine officers. I was an aero major with bad eyes, wanted to be an astronaut but fate and Admiral Rickover intervened. I “flew” on three nuke fast attacks. Tyler’s Dad served aboard two SSBNs.
@evanm67393 күн бұрын
Really appreciate these technical analysis
@guitargeeknwa3 күн бұрын
Thank you for doing these videos, sir. Very insightful. Best regards
@MCMXI13 күн бұрын
Great explanation of why the Dutch Roll occurs
@mestep5113 күн бұрын
Amazing how you set down in a hotel room and prepare this. Complex technical subject in your precision language and I easily follow and understand.
@petertarantelli3 күн бұрын
Great breakdown Juan!
@jdbrown36953 күн бұрын
Thanks for the very detailed explanation of how the system works, Juan!
@Chris-Nico3 күн бұрын
Good job explaining the 737 rudder PCU systems which the yaw damper is integrated with. Couple of things: I’m a retired 737 Mx guy and worked on them both in airline world and when I was at Boeing working 737 safety. The NG and MAX rudder PCU systems are identical. The only changes to flight controls of course was the MCAS and FBW spoilers. When I hear things like PCU was damaged, I think ok was Mx working on the system prior to this flight or previous flights? These units are located in the tail section. So damaged, how? Then hearing structure issues? Was the jet ground damaged and not reported? These systems are extremely reliable on the 737NG/MAX. FYI, manual reversion is a requirement during for Mx test flights and Boeing production flights… in my many years of experience very seldom did we encounter any problems from that test. Going to be an interesting NTSB report. Thanks Juan
@Stoney3K20 сағат бұрын
Which means, that if there is an issue with the PCU, it could also affect the NG. This does look like a quality control-related defect though.
@user-nu1sq2fz8sСағат бұрын
@Stoney3K nothing new for Boeing
@flyerdon31163 күн бұрын
I read somewhere that 3 ribs were damaged including the one or two the PCU is attached to and that is why it was being ferried to Washington, for repairs. Apparently SWA has a contract maintenance facility there.
@blancolirio3 күн бұрын
Wow!
@cavsh00ter3 күн бұрын
THATS WHERE THEY ARE BUILT?
@benz-share90583 күн бұрын
@@cavsh00ter Built (final assembly) in Renton Washington, with major fuselage structures supplied by Spirit Aerosystems of Wichita. Some will eventually be built in Everett Washington but that new assembly line is still a way off.
@Starfish21453 күн бұрын
@@benz-share9058, yeah , Spirit is just a bad as Boeing!
@flyerdon31163 күн бұрын
SWA has had a contract for MRO services with ATS, at Paine Field, for years.
@boitoiful3 күн бұрын
As always Juan, thanks for this fine report to those of us who don't have a clue. J
@PadoinkyКүн бұрын
Not a pilot nor an aviation expert, but always enjoy the content on this channel
@doneB8303 күн бұрын
It’s a shocking situation when if we ask Boeing a question we don’t know if we will get the correct answer.
@wlbrycemt2 күн бұрын
So funny you brought up the C-141! I was a jumper on a C-141 Starlifter and we got the crazy figure 8 roll! By the time it was done I was extremely eager to jump out of the aircraft! I was young and it was scary!
@Jay109.919 сағат бұрын
welcome to Columbus. great to see you at the airshow. what a performane by tne thunderbirds. thank you for explaining dutch roll . i always struggled with that
@billcasso54283 күн бұрын
Excellent report Juan! I retired from your airline almost 20 years ago and I'll admit it I have used damper and dampener interchangeable over the years I'm going to blame it on dyslexia.
@gerardmoran95603 күн бұрын
Great analysis Juan! I have over 6 years and nearly 4K hours on the C-141. Every time I sit in a swivel chair it brings me back.
@johnnunn8688Күн бұрын
😂😂
@cjbotkin13 күн бұрын
Hi Juan. My dad was in charge of all maintenance at Rickenbacker AFB in 72-75. They had 12-b52s and 12-kc135s and a few ardvarks F111s that I knew about when I was 9-10 yo. Going to work with your dad was really special back then. FYI. Dad was also in charge of the base renaming from Lockbourne to Rickenbacker. Of course we all loved Eddie. But the usaf frowned when Eddie’s Eastern Air sort of took over the celebration event. Life and times remembered. One 60 yo usaf brat. Always and forever.
@cjbotkin13 күн бұрын
Oh yeah. Dad was a load master on the c141 and then finally a flight engineer. Much like yourself. Thank you for your service !
@user-nu8sx2nd5q3 күн бұрын
Thank you again for your insight and explanations. My favorite pilot/you tuber!
@michaelbaim50602 күн бұрын
Great episode, Juan. I read those articles but never really understood what Dutch roll was (I’m not a pilot, obviously) This is why I always eagerly wait for your videos.
@johnnorth93553 күн бұрын
Transparency please Boeing. The road to redemption depends upon truth and openness.
@VeteranofthePsychicWars3 күн бұрын
Why don’t we wait for the findings before pointing blame?
@cowarddonnie-ji5yz3 күн бұрын
Yeah what's wrong with you, even their CEO is waiting until his golden parachute is fully vested
@EmpReb3 күн бұрын
Won’t happen until the whole board is replaced along with management.
@dustinsmith40683 күн бұрын
@@VeteranofthePsychicWarsFindings to which of many recent accidents?
@Neal_Sporin3 күн бұрын
I'm worried Boeing may be beyond redemption. When their Starliner space craft went up last week, I was half-expecting the hatch to blow off! Sad, but true
@johnnichols45323 күн бұрын
Great video, Thanks!!!! I'm not a pilot and have no plans to fly, but the information is great & helps understand when hearing about crashes on other KZfaq channels!!!!
@Carlos-im3hn3 күн бұрын
Thank you Juan for covering this important topic.
@skyepilotte113 күн бұрын
Thx Juan...excellent explanation of the 737 rudder control system. Have fun in Dayton.
@davidmerwin77633 күн бұрын
Well done Juan. Great explanation. I hear your frustration over AI assisted news, not good!
@eucliduschaumeau88132 күн бұрын
As soon as you mentioned the trouble with the PCU, it reminded me if the three incidents in the 1990s with the 737’s, where the PCU caused two bad crashes and one incident with another plane, which was able to land safely.
@billbeyatte2 күн бұрын
Great technical stuff. Keep it coming.
@mpetry9123 күн бұрын
Just the person that I wanted to hear hold forth on this. Thanks JB.
@timjones30943 күн бұрын
Thanks again for the great analysis
@rjmjr4103 күн бұрын
Hi Juan! I've followed you for sometime now but never posted a comment. Just wanted to thank you for everything you've taught me. Every episode is like being in a classroom. You have great clarity and objectivity and you really are a great teacher. Whenever an aviation incident occurs I don't watch or read any other media about it, I just wait for you to give us the facts. I also enjoy the Husky flights and the Dad time you share with us when your son is with you. Always look forward to your next post. Thanks again!
@HankHillspimphand3 күн бұрын
Thanks JUAN for keeping us informed!.....i can bet you have saved lives by teaching about issues and what to do when things go to shiit.
@chipwillis3 күн бұрын
Welcome to CBUS! Have a good weekend and be safe!
@edjarrett31643 күн бұрын
As a previous KC135 guy, I lived with Dutch roll, esp in the A model which didn’t have a dedicated yaw damper. When you lost the rudder axis on the autopilot, it became a, long flight crossing the Atlantic or Pacific. The R model incorporated a full time yaw damper which was a godsend. I’m kind of surprised this would happen on a modern day jet.
@cassandratq9301Күн бұрын
Pretty sure it shouldn't.
@tomuhlig70772 күн бұрын
I wish I knew you were in Columbus! I worked on those KC-135’s you see on the ramp! I live close by and would have liked meeting you in person! Long time subscriber of your channel!
@TheGospelQuartetParadise3 күн бұрын
Thanks for answering my questions Juan.
@pthompson80582 күн бұрын
Thanks for the honorable mention of the C-141. I'm sure you remember the C-141A flew along in a tiny dutch roll movement and when the plane was lengthened (with air refueling added and designated a C-141B) that the slight dutch roll was eliminated with a new digital yaw damper. A more stable feel of the aircraft was a welcome change. Keep up your great analysis THANKS !
@m777howitzer43 күн бұрын
BlancoLirio roughly translates to “best in the business”
@behindthen0thing5253 күн бұрын
Means white lirio
@randallmarsh11873 күн бұрын
@@behindthen0thing525 Nope, White Lily.
@ProctorsGamble3 күн бұрын
It’s been rumored that he stole the name from his wife 🤔
@007Mugs3 күн бұрын
Props to Juan for teaching his students in GA aircraft the ole "Dutch roll" maneuver! Good stuff!
@txkflier3 күн бұрын
The "Rudder Coordination Exercise" teaches you how to use the rudder to keep adverse yaw from swinging the nose back and forth through a point on the horizon as you bank the plane 45 degrees to the left and right repeatedly. It's great fun..
@reggiericoКүн бұрын
Hi Juan, thanks for the in-depth post and explanation. If anyone has ever seen or been in a larger aircraft while the pilot is getting aerial refueling training, you've seen or experienced dutch roll. During this evolution, the pilot often causes the dutch roll via a PIO or pilot induced oscillation while trying to stay in position behind the tanker. Remember that, Juan? Cheers!
@SteamCraneКүн бұрын
Great explanation about why swept wings aggravate the problem!
@Primus543 күн бұрын
Hi Juan. Welcome to Columbus! My family and I will be attending the air show on Sunday… my nephew bought one of the VIP tables so we should have a close view of the goings on. Perhaps there will be an opportunity to introduce myself. Cheers! ~ John
@blancolirio3 күн бұрын
Come say Hi! I'll be up on announcer stand during STOL Drags.
@brianmcd143 күн бұрын
Saw ya guys this afternoon... Great show!!!!
@Primus543 күн бұрын
@@blancolirio Will do… See you Sunday!
@DashiellParr4113 күн бұрын
Even out of the world command headquarters, still better than any major media source!!
@qzy1233 күн бұрын
Man, I spend 34 years in Columbus, and the two weeks I go on vacation, Juan Browne comes to town. Made it to the airshow last year, it was a lot of fun.
@kevinknight4703 күн бұрын
Thanx Juan, informative as always, good job.😃
@peterarmstrong8613Күн бұрын
Yaw damper was invented for the early development problems of the 707 back in the early 60’s with the legendary test pilot Tex Johnston.
@billbabbs38713 күн бұрын
I have 36 years on the 737 by itself and four years being on the 737 Max, I haven't seen any differences in this rudder system, I believe it's the same on the 737 Max as it was on the earlier model 737 's . I've seen if the input rods on the main rudder PCU are out of rig it will induce the force fight monitor system to kick on the stby rudder pump on and thus the stby rudder actuator and life goes on., Why the damage to the stby rudder actuator I have no idea, never seen this kind of issue before, hope this helps.
@mrkc103 күн бұрын
Good video Juan. Yet again another MAX head scratcher. It’ll be interesting to see in time if an AD is issued. Have a great weekend 🫡🇺🇸
@markerickson42733 күн бұрын
Thank you Capt. Browne for the info.
@robertstrickland21213 күн бұрын
My favorite bug when I was a flight sim tech on the 141’s, was to pop the yaw damper breaker when they started their decent.
@lisanadinebaker51793 күн бұрын
You have a terrible sense of humor. But I bet you got their attention.
@robertstrickland21213 күн бұрын
@@lisanadinebaker5179 it actually hard to figure out what’s going on, teaches them to fly the airplane while they run the procedures.
@dfens6663 күн бұрын
Looking at FOM 2 (Max vs NG), it is almost identical with respect to Yaw Damper architecture and operation (with minor variations in some of the older NG tails). One of the first lessons when I learned to fly the 727 (from a Boeing trained demo/test pilot) was that the rudder pedals on large jets are not to be confused with rudder pedals on a “regular” airplane. They became ENGINE OUT pedals once the aircraft is airborne (+ crosswind pedals). Fighting (helping?) the turn coordination of the Yaw Damper could result in PIO and in some cases aggravate dutch rolling tendencies. Think feet on the floor (of course you will still guard the pedals with no pressure) unless you are controlling for X-wind or engine out- PERIOD. This lesson is very often missed today… The 72 had a more aggressive sweep than the 73. It was more challenging in a x-wind (dutch roll tendency) and had 2 split rudders and 2 yaw dampers. The dutch roll recovery maneuver in the sim was… aggressive? Lol. Feet on the floor and snapping maximum aileron/roll spoiler input opposite the roll. High altitude made it much worse, although I know someone who lost one of the yaw dampers and he said the approach was yaw unstable even with the one working. At the expense of cruising speed, the 73 is more stable (less sweep) and has very limited dutch rolling tendency (provided the pilot understands what the rudder pedals are properly used for- see the above paragraph). Unfortunately, the 737 (all variants) still require the Yaw Damper to be reengaged with every IRS alignment.
@j_taylor3 күн бұрын
So the rudder pedals aren't used to coordinate turns?
@ianhart3563 күн бұрын
737 pilot's Dad speaking. Son says, "Just aileron inputs to turn, don't touch the rudder pedals" The yaw damper takes care of turn coordination. Pilot input upsets the precise coordination. Need the rudder for landing...
@j_taylor3 күн бұрын
@@ianhart356 Thanks for explaining. Yet one more minor difference between a 737 and a sailplane, then. 😀
@lisanadinebaker51793 күн бұрын
Thank you for sharing this.
@dfens6663 күн бұрын
@@j_taylor From FCOM Vol 2 "Either yaw damper is capable of providing dutch roll prevention, gust damping and turn coordination. Yaw damper operation does not result in rudder pedal movement. The pilot can override either main or standby yaw damper inputs using either the rudder pedals or trim inputs."
@doughooks74113 күн бұрын
Retired C141 wing Stan/eval flight examiner pilot here and I also was a FCF pilot, so I am quite familiar. Great explanation.
@CosmosNut2 күн бұрын
As usual amazingly informative for a non pilot! (me) Thank you very much for your videos.
@roscozone80923 күн бұрын
“Dual concentric” rudder PCU design was found to be the probable cause of the two hull loss accidents (UA585, N999UA, 1991-03-03, Colorado Springs and US427, N513AU, 1994-09-08, Pittsburg). As a result, the PCU was completely redesigned (initially a modified dual concentric PCU, then a ground-up redesign) and a retrofit "Rudder System Enhancement Programme" was initiated, and then mandated under Airworthiness Directive 2000-22-02 R1. All 737s in service today will have the new design fitted and there should be no in-service airframes with a dual-concentric PCU in operation.
@mikemicksun64693 күн бұрын
What losses are you talking about the one in Pittsburgh was a servo valve that went past its stop and caused a rudder hard over.
@roscozone80923 күн бұрын
@@mikemicksun6469 Yes. Added detail to my post.
@stricklandgarageaviation28642 күн бұрын
@@mikemicksun6469 I thought the PIT loss was due to flying too low of an airspeed for the configuration and went below inflight minimum control speed. I'm probably wrong.