you kinda have to read this from the bottom up:
<BLOCKQUOTE id=quote><font size=1 face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id=quote>quote:<hr height=1 noshade id=quote> Bill,
Very true but there were a few extreme instances that concerned the flight
team.
It was very much an over reaction of detractors on the Hill who used the
press to amplify the situation.
Even with the meddling by politics, it worked out for the better, IMHO, as
it helped identify a problem that has been seen on many aircraft and
actually came up with a usable modification and fix
Jake
PS It's funny what the Hill wants to read into Test Pilots reports and how
it effects the $ in their districts! (And the political atmosphere at the
time.) A prime example that comes to mind was the JPATs program. Lockheed's
T-Bird II (MB339) pretty much had the #1 slot with all of the test program
directors and pilots. Low and behold, DoD changed the specs of the program
several months (It may have even been as short as 1 month) before the
contract was to be awarded.
"Bill Watkins" <salted1@msn.com> wrote in message
news:Vsxt9.17125$ku2.703660@twister.southeast.rr.com...
> Friends of mine that participated in DT at Pax told me that this was, in
> reality, nothing different or more noticable than the heavy buffett felt in
> the Tomcat at high AOA. This was an issue that the test pilots identified,
> but did not become a high profile problem until some members of Congress,
> seeking to cut the program, got wind of it and started talking to the press.
>
> "Jake Donovan" <jakedonovan_nospam@cox.net> wrote in message
> news:xQTs9.162684$IL6.8020228@news2.east.cox.net...
> > Peaches,
> >
> > In March 1996, during flight tests at Patuxent River, an F/A-18E/F
> > experienced wing drop-an unacceptable, uncommanded abrupt lateral roll-off
> > that randomly occurred and involved rapid bank angle changes of up to 60
> > deg. Not a safety of flight issue, the roll-offs occur during high-speed,
> > high-g maneuvers and prevent the pilot from performing close-in tracking
> > maneuvers on potential adversaries. The problem was viewed as extremely
> > serious and posed a threat to operational tests and the overall development
> > schedule. During the first year of flight tests, the wing-drop was only seen
> > at high altitudes because load restrictions prevented the aircraft from
> > reaching the relevant range of angle of attack at low altitudes. As the
> > loads test program opened the flight envelope to 7.5g at all altitudes, the
> > full extent of the wing-drop problem became evident. Objectionable wing-drop
> > events occurred through-out the flight envelope at Mach numbers between 0.5
> > and 0.9.
> > The wing drop problem was discovered in early 1996, the Boeing/Navy team
> > performed wind tunnel tests (at NASA Langley) and computational fluid
> > dynamic (CFD) studies in an effort to identify the cause. (Some airflow
> > disruptions were found to be partly caused by the much larger rounded
> > intakes.) The joint Navy team concluded that the wing drop was caused by a
> > sudden, abrupt loss of lift on one of the outer wing panels during
> > maneuvering.
> >
> > A change in the configuration of the leading-edge flaps was evaluated in
> > flight tests in early 1997, with very good results. The leading-edge flap
> > modification significantly reduced the problem. The aircraft still exhibited
> > smaller wing drops at some test conditions.
> >
> > More intensive wind test studies were done at Langley and Langley provided
> > design guidelines for the porosity and thickness of the mesh at the wing
> > fold area. This solution, refined by the NASA, Navy, and Boeing team,
> > resolved the wing-drop problem and permitted continued production of the
> > aircraft. (Along with stall fences, vortex generators and the intakes were
> > modified along with the leading edge of the wing) Both Boeing and the Navy
> > Test Team were satisfied.
> >
> > Although the Super Bugs Flight Test and Evaul programs were one of the
> > smoothest of modern jet aircraft (in terms of issues), that Wing Drop
> > problem, which has not been documented since 1998, keeps coming up in the
> > press and by detractors of the program.
> >
> > JD
> >
> > PS I personally am looking forward to seeing 7 X-35's show up at PAX in
> > 2005. (3 CVs and 4 STOVL) for acceptance testing. Maybe we wont have an all
> > BUG Navy after all.
> >
> > "Pechs1" <pechs1@aol.com> wrote in message
> > news:20021021092107.22604.00002804@mb-fk.aol.com...
> >
> > > jake->Wing Drop on FA 18 E/F's were documented at Strike (PAX RIVER) during
> > > >several evaluation flights. The problem was a high priority during testing
> > > >and final acceptance but the problem was fixed long ago
> > >
> > > What wa the fix??
> > > P C Chisholm
> > > CDR, USN(ret)
> > > Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye Phlyer
<hr height=1 noshade id=quote></BLOCKQUOTE id=quote></font id=quote><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" size=2 id=quote>
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