dlrk Posted January 10, 2022 Report Posted January 10, 2022 How should the transition to climb be accomplished? I tried using FLC with ATS in N1 CLB, but it immediately pushed up the throttles to the N1 climb rating, overshot the set speed of 250, then pitched up to 15 degrees and climbed at 6000 FPM before stabilizing at 250 knots and a more reasonable pitch. Quote
Graeme_77 Posted January 10, 2022 Report Posted January 10, 2022 (edited) This is indeed a quirk of the Challenger autothrust system as the pitch modes can't anticipate the power increase or respond quickly to a full power application due to the ATS and AP being totally discrete systems. You can disconnect the ATS, engage FLC then increase power a little bit to enter a gentle climb, this is a common procedure on the Challenger. Alternatively you can "ease" the aircraft into the climb with VS mode, or pitch mode. About 10 degrees nose up is good for low altitude climbs, and 5 degrees for 10-20000ft. After that, FLC mode will be gentle enough even with ATS engaged. Edited January 10, 2022 by Graeme_77 2 Quote
flanisher Posted January 10, 2022 Report Posted January 10, 2022 Takeoff with pitch mode (not v/s or flc) and use the VS up/down wheel to set your climb angle down to 10 degrees after you have cleaned up the plane after takeoff, then dial your speed up! This works well for me. Quote
JT8DNoise Posted January 11, 2022 Report Posted January 11, 2022 On a typical departure, where terrain or obstacles are not a factor, at 400 feet the pilot flying (PF) asks for vertical speed mode. This is typically done where you have a low level off right (KBFI) right after departure, if you use FLC, the pitch angle is too high and you will likely overshoot the level off. If you were on a departure in mountainous regions (KASE or CYLW) or terrain is a concern, at 400 feet the PF will ask for FLC 250. A typical after takeoff check: landing gear up, flaps up, thrust reversers off, ignition as required, 10th stage bleed transition (Right 10th stage bleed press in, 10th stage isolation press out, left Left 10th stage bleed press in, APU LCV press out, climb thrust set (this is done through the FMS CDU (press PERF, select CLB) - Thrust Limit page. N1 Climb is displayed on the primary EICAS page, ATS window. Pressurization would be checked (building diff pressure), and CAS messages would be verified as checked (nothing unexpected). Rob 2 Quote
dlrk Posted January 11, 2022 Author Report Posted January 11, 2022 Last couple flights I've been using pitch mode or handflying to keep the pitch not above 10 while letting the ATS keep the speed at the 200-250, then for further climb using FD SYNC to bring the pitch to 10, then hitting FLC once thrust has stabilized 1 Quote
Graeme_77 Posted January 11, 2022 Report Posted January 11, 2022 That's very close to what I've been doing, what our SMEs recommended and avoids FCP inputs when hand flying - that's the reason why that procedure is described in the Takeoff section. 1 Quote
Gábor Posted January 11, 2022 Report Posted January 11, 2022 10 hours ago, dlrk said: Last couple flights I've been using pitch mode or handflying to keep the pitch not above 10 while letting the ATS keep the speed at the 200-250, then for further climb using FD SYNC to bring the pitch to 10, then hitting FLC once thrust has stabilized Where to find FD SYNC button or switch? Quote
Ed Moore Posted January 11, 2022 Report Posted January 11, 2022 18 minutes ago, Gábor said: Where to find FD SYNC button or switch? It's in the binds under the Captain Pedestal section. Search for sync. 1 Quote
wyhhero Posted August 24 Report Posted August 24 Thank you for sharing this information. Just looking for this operation tech for taking off rather than let the aircraft soaring high into the sky like a rocket. Quote
Osito Posted November 27 Report Posted November 27 How do I join this site it's asking me for the name of the simulator this site is made for and i type explane 12 in all formats and it fails Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.