teakettle31

A Site To Catalog My Aircraft Adventures

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Dassault DA-50 Falcon

January 23, 2025 by Bob Stoney Leave a Comment

Aircraft Information
> Aircraft Make: Dassault. Model: 50. Nickname: Falcon
> Aircraft Mil Civ Description: Business Jet
> FAA Category and Class: Airplane multi-engine land
> Engine Description: Tri jet

Aircraft Experience
> As of: 9/2/2021
> Number of Hours Flown: 3
> Number of Times Flown: 3
> Other Aircraft Models Associated: several Dassault models

First Flown Information
> Sequence First Flown: 151
> Date First Flown: 10/20/2004
> Location First Flown: Lincoln, Nebraska Airport (KLNK)
> Who and/or What Organization First Flown With: Duncan Aviation

Recollections: My first flight in the Falcon (this is a big, three-engined airplane) was a project to evaluate a Universal cockpit display installed in and airplane owned by none other than Michael Bloomberg, at the time the mayor of New York City.

The French cockpit, and displays were very foreign and unusual but, with the help of Bloomberg’s pilot, we got the test done.

I’ve flown the 50 a couple of times since then, as Honeywell uses one as a flying tech demonstrator.  

Dassault Falcon 50 (stock photo)
(c) airliners.net

Filed Under: 151-175, Business Jet, Complete

Airbus A320

January 23, 2025 by Bob Stoney Leave a Comment

Aircraft Information
> Aircraft Make: Airbus. Model: 320. Nickname: None
> Aircraft Mil Civ Description: Large Jet
> FAA Category and Class: Airplane multi-engine land
> Engine Description: twin jet

Aircraft Experience
> As of: 9/2/2021
> Number of Hours Flown: 2
> Number of Times Flown: 1
> Other Aircraft Models Associated: None

First Flown Information
> Sequence First Flown: 162
> Date First Flown: 12/3/2008
> Location First Flown: Toulouse, France
> Who and/or What Organization First Flown With: Airbus Flight Test

Recollections: My first flight ever in an Airbus (flown in an A320-232).  I was still a bit jet-lagged from traveling to France and I didn’t know much about the Airbus design, so it’s all a bit of a blur.  I do remember that it was a chance to fly with a famous Airbus Test Pilot, Ed Strongman and that alone made the flight memorable.  The airplane we flew was F-WWDB, performing some kind of fuels research if I recall.

The cockpit was a bit confusing…somewhat like a Boeing, but not really (ECAM for EICAS?) and, at the time, I don’t think I appreciated the simplicity of the design.  That said, I didn’t understand or enjoy the fact that the throttles didn’t move when autothrottle was engaged…something that–now more than a decade later and two Airbus type ratings under my belt–I’m still not used to.

Two days later, a bit more rested, I got to fly the A380 and this was where my understanding of and appreciation for the Airbus design began it’s journey.  Read about my comparison between the A320 and 380 in the 380 entry.

Airbus A320 registration F-WWDB, serial 659 (stock photo)
(c) flickr.com

Filed Under: 151-175, Complete, Large Jet

Airbus A380

January 23, 2025 by Bob Stoney Leave a Comment

Aircraft Information
> Aircraft Make: Airbus. Model: 380. Nickname: None
> Aircraft Mil Civ Description: Large Jet (boy, is it!)
> FAA Category and Class: Airplane Multi-engine Land
> Engine Description: Quad jet

Aircraft Experience
> As of: 9/2/2021
> Number of Hours Flown: 2
> Number of Times Flown: 1
> Other Aircraft Models Associated: Airbus Flight Test

First Flown Information
> Sequence First Flown: 163
> Date First Flown: 12/5/2008
> Location First Flown: Toulouse, France
> Who and/or What Organization First Flown With: Airbus Flight Test

Recollections: This was my second flight ever in an Airbus airplane and it was conducted on a blustery afternoon in Toulouse.  My first flight had been just two days earlier, on an Airbus A320 (read my recollections of that flight here).  

First–to compare and contrast the A320 with the A380–the two airplanes handled very similarly.  The avionics are very different but the handling qualities were amazingly similar.  One difference that I noted between the two airplanes was the reaction to the gusty crosswind that was present on both flights.  The A320 tended to react to the gusts, and I in turn reacted to the airplane’s motion…the result was, during the approach to my first landing, a tendency towards Pilot Induced Oscillations (PIOs), mostly in the lateral (roll) axis.  Years later (while taking type rating training in the A330) I learned a tip to “not to stir the stew” (don’t try to too tightly control roll) but, on my first flight in the A320 I didn’t know that.  The A380, on the other hand, plowed through the gusts and I did not experience this same PIO tendency (either that or I had already naturally learned “not to stir the stew”).

Airbus A380 (stock photo)
(c) Airbus

The thing I remember most about my A380 flight concerned nothing on the flight…but rather on the ground.  The airplane is GINORMOUS.  Of course.  And, I had enough experience with big airplanes (I’d first flown the Boeing 747 a year prior, along with the very long Boeing 777-300 beginning two years before) to anticipate that taxiing the A380 from the Airbus flight test ramp to the runway would likely be my most challenging task for the day.  Only, it wasn’t.  Taxiing was one of the easiest tasks.  Why?  Because of several A380 design aspects.  First of all, the cockpit is positioned at a mid-level…it’s not at the same height as the airplane’s upper deck (like the 747), it’s only half way up.  The result is that it doesn’t “look that big” from the cockpit perspective.  Secondly, the nosewheel is located relatively close behind the pilot seats….not WAY BACK like on the 777-300 which requires a precise and well-timed “oversteer” technique wherein you taxi your body well past the point of turning before you turn.  Lastly, the Primary Flight Display (PFD) on the A380, when you’re doing ground operations, doesn’t have the normal airspeed/altitude/attitude display…it has video from a camera looking out the front.  This video has a small reference mark on it, left and right, which you simply place on the centerline during turns.  The combined effect of all these features was that driving this giant airplane around the field was a piece of cake.  Well done, Airbus!

A380 Taxi aid indications
(c) quora.com

The other interesting aspect I learned on this flight had little to do with the A380 itself but more about Airbus’s approach to testing.  All major-manufacturer test airplanes are highly instrumented, to gather and record thousands of parameters in order to analyze data and show compliance to engineering requirements.  How this data is handled and processed varies from manufacturer to manufacturer.  Some, like Cessna for example, usually store the data onboard for later download and processing.  Some, like Boeing, bring the engineers onboard with them to monitor and analyze the data stream (this often means up to a dozen engineers onboard…think of it as a “flying control room”).  Airbus does it very differently than Boeing, which I learned on my A380 flight.  There were only 3 Airbus personnel on the flight: the Test Pilot, a Test Flight Engineer (TFE) who sat in the cockpit jumpseat and basically operated all the systems, and a Flight Test Engineer (FTE) who was about half way back in the airplane (see figure), running the instrumentation, keeping weight and balance controlled and ensuring a strong telemetry link to a ground-based control room.  You see, Airbus has a system of telemetry receivers that cover the whole of France, and pipe that info back to Airbus controls rooms at the flight test facility in Toulouse.  Many ways to get the job done and very interesting to be exposed to the “Airbus way”.

Stefan Vaux, FTE extraordinaire
(c) Bob Stoney

Filed Under: 151-175, Complete, Large Jet

Airbus A350

January 1, 2025 by Bob Stoney Leave a Comment

Aircraft Information
> Aircraft Make: Airbus Model: A350 Nickname: None that I know of.
> Aircraft Mil Civ Description: Large Jet
> FAA Category and Class: Airplane Multi-engine Land
> Engine Description: Twin jet

Aircraft Experience
> As of: 9/2/2021
> Number of Hours Flown: 10
> Number of Times Flown: 3
> Other Aircraft Models Associated: none

First Flown Information
> Sequence First Flown: 172
> Date First Flown: 9/16/2015
> Location First Flown: Toulouse, France
> Who and/or What Organization First Flown With: Airbus Flight Test

Recollections: The A350 is Airbus’s newest and most advanced aircraft.  Designed to compete with Boeing’s 777, I was involved in what is called a “validation” of the A350 for use by American operators.  As a result, my involvement in testing consisted of few flights than in a domestic “Certification” program.  However, I did travel to Toulouse many times to learn more about the airplane and evaluate its handling qualities, performance, systems and human factors.

I am often asked “which do you prefer….Boeing or Airbus?” and I always give the same (hopefully non-offending) answer: “My perfect airplane would be a blend of the two…I really like the avionics system and Human Factors of the Airbus and like the way the Boeing flies and handles.”  I often add that I’ve never gotten used to a few aspects of the Airbus design (like the throttles, which do not move when autothrottles are engaged) and that both Boeing and Airbus make airplanes whose performance are simply incredible.

Just like my A330 experience, all my A350 flying was done with Airbus Test Pilot Thierry Bourges.  I also had the pleasure of flying often with Stefan Vaux (Flight Test Engineer…or maybe it was Test Flight Engineer–that story I will save for my A380 entry).  I also had the unique opportunity to fly with two Airbus experts who are literally world-famous for their knowledge of specific engineering disciplines: Laurent Capra (an expert in Handling Qualities, Stability and Control) and Robert Lignee (an expert in Performance).


Airbus A350-1000 Test Crew, July 2017
(c) Bob Stoney

Filed Under: 151-175, Large Jet

Airbus A330

January 1, 2025 by Bob Stoney Leave a Comment

Aircraft Information
> Aircraft Make: Airbus Model: A330 Nickname: None that I know of!
> Aircraft Mil Civ Description: Large Jet
> FAA Category and Class: Airplane Multi-engine Land
> Engine Description: Twin jet

Aircraft Experience
> As of: 9/2/2021
> Number of Hours Flown: 16
> Number of Times Flown: 6
> Other Aircraft Models Associated: A330, A330NEO, A330-941

First Flown Information
> Sequence First Flown: 173
> Date First Flown: 10/7/2015
> Location First Flown: Toulouse, France
> Who and/or What Organization First Flown With: First flight of a production A330, with Thierry Bourges

Recollections: My experience in the Airbus A330 has been unusual in several respects.  First of all, I had my A330 type rating more than a year before I ever flew the actual airplane…receiving training from US Airways right before they were merged with American Airlines (US Airways had the contract with the FAA for training in the A330).  The hours from that training (like all simulator hours) are NOT included in my flight time (I don’t count sims as “real flying”!).  

Secondly, my first flight in a real A330 was that AIRPLANE’s first flight.  While that may seem standard, I don’t know of any other OEM that would allow such a flight.  But they should.  They should because that’s what Test Pilots are trained to do (“new things”) and it shows a trust in the Company Test Pilot who flew with me…which leads to the third unique aspect to my A330 flying…who I flew with.

Every one of my A330 flights has been flown (over the course of 3 years) with Airbus Test Pilot–and my great friend–Thierry Bourges.  Thierry must have drawn the short straw one day, being assigned to “babysit the FAA guy”.  I flew with him on the first production flight (on the “older version” of the A330), and later on an actual set of Test Flights for the not-yet-certified A330 “NEO”, for propulsion testing in cooperation with the European aviation authority, EASA.  Thierry, an ex French Navy pilot and test pilot, is a calm, steady and extremely capable pilot who I am thankful for having known and flown with. For the life of me, I can’t find a picture of him, so had to use a stock photo from the internet.

A330 NEO Airbus, EASA and FAA Flight Test Crew, Cardiff, Wales
(c) Bob Stoney
A330 NEO FAA Crew (Steve Bacher, Bob Stoney)
(c) Bob Stoney
Airbus Test Pilot Thierry Bourges (Stock photo)
(c) Flightglobal

Filed Under: 151-175, Large Jet

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