This is a presentation by Major Hua of the ROCAF about his flameout at 70,000ft, and subsequent deadstick landing in Colorado. It's long, but an interesting story.
http://www.hmhfp.info/SG_09E.html
http://www.hmhfp.info/SG_09E.html
flameout at 70,000ft, and subsequent deadstick landing in Colorado.
Is a dead stick that big of a deal when you're already flying what would appear to be a glider?
I would say yes...unless you plan on grabbing a thermal, ridge lift or mountain wave to increase your time aloft. I am pretty sure they don't practice that in a U-2![]()
I'm sorry, but that was too painful to listen to the whole thing. Any transcripts not in Engrish? Anything important other than that it was in an unusual aircraft at high altitude?
Edited to say that my comments are directed towards the largest glider clip I posted.....
Agreed. Nothing important except that it was interesting to see that much wing on a civilian single seat aircraft. I know the amount of adverse yaw created by trying to roll that beast must be tremendous. The 15-17m wingspan gliders I have flown were bad enough. Most sailplane pilots have to get pretty good with the rudder to stay coordinated. I'm guessing the U2 requires a bit of the same.
Does the U2 have a yaw string? I fight that is probably the most important instrument on a sailplane, with maybe a variometer in at a close second.