Originally Posted by oil_film_movies
Originally Posted by ZeeOSix
Originally Posted by Astro14
Most airline pilots are not used to AOA.
AOA and airspeed are two very important parameter of flight dynamics ... why in the world would airline pilots not use AOA information? If you could only have two parameters to use to fly an airplane it would be airspeed and AOA.
Stall AoA is important, not values of AoA less than that. I don't care if AoA is 5 degrees or 10 degrees, for example, if
stall AoA is up there at 20 degrees for my current wing configuration.
The key is how airspeed and AoA is used when flying an airliner.
Originally Posted by oil_film_movies
http://www.boeing.com/commercial/aeromagazine/aero_12/attack_story.html
Like I said ... and the Boeing article mentions:
"AOA is one of the most important parameters for understanding airplane performance and handling."
And yes, every airplane has it's own flight dynamics envelope defined by the airplane design with respect to airspeed, AoA, gross weight and weight distribution. How did pilots ever fly airplanes before they became automated? [rhetorical]. And obviously the stall speed as a function of all those parameters is what defines the maximum safe flight dynamics envelope of any airplane.
I can certainly see how the flight dynamics envelope has become heavily automated by computer controlled flight systems as airplanes have become larger and more complicated. But I'd assume part of any airline pilot's flight simulator training is how to fly the plane totally manually with basic flight information like airspeed, AoA and altitude if all automated flight systems are lost or need to be shut off for some reason.