787 Crosswind testing in Iceland
Discussion
787 x wind testing in Keflavik.
http://www.wired.com/autopia/2010/09/video-boeing-...
There are some clips from the A380 testing on there also.
http://www.wired.com/autopia/2010/09/video-boeing-...
There are some clips from the A380 testing on there also.
shouldbworking said:
Beautiful crosswind landings - look absolutely textbook to me as a layman 
Not as daft as you may think. The BAe146 has a hydraulic motor in the fuselage, that drives the flaps, via a set of drive shafts in the trailing edge.
Mojocvh said:
Wonder how they get the wires/pipes/driveshafts to stretch when the wings bend?
Driveshafts from the fuselage to the wings? interesting idea :Pdoodles19 said:
evolution666 said:
whats hanging off the tail of the plane, is this some sort of indicator for wind speed Vs plane speed
Just the question I was going to ask.Mojocvh said:
Wonder how they get the wires/pipes/driveshafts to stretch when the wings bend?
If everything's segmented enough it wouldn't be any different from any other large aircraft. Likewise the control surfaces are segmented, hard mounted at one end of the hinge line, and floating at the other. The surfaces themselves will either bend with the wing, or are designed to have their mounts move, without having any interference with the surrounding structure.El Guapo said:
Is it normal procedure to use a customer's aircraft for flight testing? I would have expected this plane to be sporting Boeing livery.
ZA002 (the one painted in ANA colours) is not going to be a customer aircraft, nor are the other 5 test aircraft. ANA is the launch customer for the 787 though, so it is free advertising for them, and a sign of trust in Boeing that nothing untoward will happen in testing (not good if a plane in your colour scheme goes down!).Gassing Station | Boats, Planes & Trains | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff






