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Thread: MD-80 deploying thrust reversers - GIF

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    Supporting Member Altair's Avatar
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    MD-80 deploying thrust reversers - GIF

    McDonnell Douglas MD-80 deploying its thrust reversers while landing.




    More on the MD-80's thrust reversers:

    https://www.hilmerby.com/md80/md_reverse.html



    Previously:

    Boeing 777 wing flexibility test to failure - video
    Shuttle carrier aircraft piggybacking the space shuttle Endeavor - video
    Concorde jet droop nose - GIF, video, and photo

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    Supporting Member Scotsman Hosie's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Altair View Post
    McDonnell Douglas MD-80 deploying its thrust reversers while landing.
    Whoa! I'm surprised he didn't even wait to touch down, before deploying the reversers. (Almost makes an arrested landing out of it.)

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    Quote Originally Posted by Scotsman Hosie View Post
    Whoa! I'm surprised he didn't even wait to touch down, before deploying the reversers. (Almost makes an arrested landing out of it.)
    If you read the link you will see it claims that the reversers can be activated at high altitude/speed/etc.

    That is, and always has been, pure unadulterated ****.

    You will note in the video that the reverser does not actually open until after the aircraft first contacts the runway and bounced back into the air. What is not apparent to the uninitiated is that is a hard landing. Hard enough for the aircraft to be forced back into the air.
    At the stage of that first landing the landing gear has not only compressed enough to create enough force in the oleo strut to throw the aircraft back into the air but it is more than enough to close the contacts on the squat switches (properly called the ground/flight switches) on the main gears.
    That switch system completes the electrical circuit that operates the mechanism that prevents the reverser handles on the top of the throttles from being lifted "over the hump" and therefore prevents the operation of the reversers in flight. In this particular flight the pilot has pulled the levers over the hump and into reverse in that short time that the weight was on the gear. At many airports crews have one pilot flying the aircraft and the other with his/her hand on the levers ready to act the moment the aircraft contacts the ground as it allows them to exit on a closer taxiway and thus save time taxiing back to a terminal that they passed on landing.

    In simple English - on all aircraft, unless both oleos are compressed past a specific point that equates to a significant percentage of the aircraft landing weight, thrust reversers and propellor reverse thrust are locked in the stowed position and the selector mechanism is locked to prevent operation.

    If I still had my DC-9/MD-80 series manuals I would post the system diagrams and circuits

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    Supporting Member Frank S's Avatar
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    The boeing C17 Globemaster can reverse thrust at altitude to assist in rapid loss of altitude Very few aircraft can do this because the induced stresses on th airframe is tremendous. Fighter jets use thrust vectoring to assist and control pitch yaw and roll. Reverse thrusting is used more to cancel out the forward idle thrust that to actually slow or stop an aircraft. Mi Tasol explained the application procedure pretty well. Intentional or unintentional and accidental overrides of the deployment systems can result in an aircraft crashing. Lauda flight 004 crashed in 1991 due to an uncommanded thrust reversal on 1 of its engines
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    Supporting Member Radioman's Avatar
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    What is an oleos?

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    Supporting Member mklotz's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Radioman View Post
    What is an oleos?
    It refers to the shock absorber mechanism on aircraft landing gear...

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oleo_strut

    'Oleo' is a combining form referring to oil so "oleo-pneumatic" describes the mechanism of the design.
    ---
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    Supporting Member hemmjo's Avatar
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    Interesting that the top deflector on the right side reverser is black even before it was activated. Is that engine running rich? I would think air flow would keep the exhaust off of that surface.

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    Supporting Member Frank S's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by mklotz View Post
    It refers to the shock absorber mechanism on aircraft landing gear...

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oleo_strut

    'Oleo' is a combining form referring to oil so "oleo-pneumatic" describes the mechanism of the design.
    LOL butter substitute and air "oleo-pneumatic" sounds like part of a recipe for imitation spread for toast.
    My grandmother used to have to buy oleo to bake with because an uncle who lived with us was allergic to dairy.so every time she baked she made a special dough using OLEO to bake with for him



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