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TriStar active ailerons: gimmick or..?

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Old 11th Feb 2007, 10:09
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TriStar active ailerons: gimmick or..?

30 years ago the TriStar's active ailerons were touted as a huge advance but...

- Lockheeds never adopted them on the long bodied TriStar where they surely would have been just as useful (late 200s had as long a range as the 500 and then some, judging by reference literature)

- nobody else was in a hurry to adopt them on their hardware, either (may have been a patent issue?)

- today (well, mid-80s onwards) we have winglets/raked tips instead to cut induced drag and nobody seems troubled by load alleviation and hence active ailerons (to the best of my knowledge which admittedly trails off late 1980s).

So was it all a typically Lockheed high-tech gimmick - just like Direct Lift Control which caused as much trouble as it was supposed to solve and has been (I understand) switched off wholesale on surviving L-1011s?

I couldn't help noticing at the time that in the run up to privatisation BA got rid of its 1011-500s pretty sharpish, though they did admittedly lease a couple later on in the decade.

Just venting my suspicions that the TriStar was a bit of a job creation scheme with lots of hot air driving it. Lovely to look at, I'll grant you...

Sorry if the topic has been raised elsewhere. Looked, couldn't find it.
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Old 11th Feb 2007, 10:51
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You should know better than to start such a topic. Wait .... here it comes .... the rumble of a distant 411A to support his beloved Tristar
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Old 11th Feb 2007, 11:32
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Aah, never one to shrink from putting cats among pigeons! Bit of a fan of La Tristar myself, looks wise...
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Old 11th Feb 2007, 14:15
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The -500 where touted for a range which it initially didn't make, the early aircraft went back to Lockheeds and 4.5 feet where added to each wing along with longer, active ailerons and uprated engines (524B4 as an option), which was what the 6 BA aircraft got, they also came back with other modifications such as RSB.
The -100/-200 had a single cell in the centre wing box for fuel, and the -500 had 3 cells for fuel, so your statement about them having the same range is incorrrect.
As to the -250, not having worked on them I do not know there cell set up or range.
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Old 11th Feb 2007, 16:12
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A Lockheed job creation scheme...

Hardly.
Now, lets have a look at the various models of the 'ole tri-motor.
The standard body aeroplane came with several fuel arrangements, two different models of engines, and had a MTOW of 215 tons, on later varients.
Enter the -500.
More fuel (95 tons vs 80...or less), an extended wing, shorter body etc, and the whole idea was for a very long range jet transport.
I personally have done 12 hours non-stop with the machine.
Many times.
The active ailerons were designed to eliminate extensive wing mods, IIRC.
Looking further, I have had, in 27 years of flying the L1011, absolutely no problems whatsoever with the DLC system, nor with the active ailerons (or MDLC) on the -500 model.
None.
Zip.
There were only six examples of the -250 modified, all by Delta Airlines.
These had the weight increased to that of the -500 model (with limitations), the same fuel capacity, bigger engines but of course were not equipped with active ailerons nor MDLC, and were not capable of the longer range that the -500 offered.
Some folks apparently like to throw stones at the TriStar, simply because they don't understand the inner workings of the beast.
One must remember, the L1011 is the only first generation wide-body civil jet transport that has never crashed due to an aircraft system malfunction, the pilots flew it into the ground for a variety of reasons or failed to use the proper checklist.
As for reliability today, I just completed an extensive schedule of Hajj flying, and the specific L10 airplane that I operated had no delays nor cancellations whatsoever.
None.
Zip.
The automatic approach/land also worked as advertised...it must be experienced to be believed, it is that good, even by todays standards.
Not bad for a thirty seven year old design.

Another thought.
Two years ago I has having a conversation with a recently retired DAL senior vice-president.
He mentioned...."our TriStars made the most money for Delta of any airplane in the fleet, bar none."
Delta should know, they had sixty nine of 'em, and were the largest fleet operator.

Seems entirely reasonable to me.

Last edited by 411A; 11th Feb 2007 at 16:46.
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Old 11th Feb 2007, 16:27
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I will give 411A his due. He has a very good memory for one so old
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Old 11th Feb 2007, 16:46
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Well, on range I've got some potted refs that state the 200 had 4850 miles and the 500 had 4580. Looks like a typo, but I recall Flight quoting similar figures (about 300 miles extra for the 200) in its proper old commercial aircraft surveys before it became an accountant's mag. All very odd if true since the 500 was supposed to be the long-ranger. Yes, the 250 was an aftrmarket mod by Delta.

Interesting to hear DLC is still operational. Had heard it had been stripped off years ago by some ops and had been disabled by others, leaving precious few if any operational by now. Must cause extra drag and noise on approach, surely..?

And yes, the active ailerons were put in so the wing could be stretched by 9ft without any structural beef up. Which still leaves me wondering why no active ailerons on other types. (I may be wrong here, since 320s, 330s, 340s, 777s and all that leave me pretty cold.) If the reason was a patent issue, Lockheeds surely could have sold their rights as they were desperate for TriStar funding. So the insiduous thought inside me mind is - they were not as good as winglets, etc.

On reliability, I'm sure it's improved, but can't help recalling what I heard from Court Line people donkeys years ago. Suffice it to say, thank Goodness for the Laker Tens that regularly had to come along and lend a hand...
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Old 11th Feb 2007, 17:37
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I said he wouldn't be long .......
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Old 11th Feb 2007, 21:03
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Some 320s (seemingly the older ones) do have load aleviation function (LAF) which works through ailerons and some outboard spoilers. I´ll be back with more info when I dig out my FCOM.

EDIT: LAF on A320 uses ailerons and two outboard spoilers and deflects them simmetrically upwards when there´s more than 0.3G difference between commanded and actual load factor. If it gets degraded or inop, there are no speed or weight penalties and no flightcrew procedures dealing with it.

In my employer´s fleet, only one older & dry-leased A320 has LAF. The ones we bought new don´t have it.

Last edited by Clandestino; 13th Feb 2007 at 20:33. Reason: Update
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Old 11th Feb 2007, 23:13
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Question for 411A

411A:

Since your memory is SOOOOOOOOOO good-how many hull losses did the Tri-Star suffer? As an EAL grad, we lost the one in the Everglades. Several near-misses, esp. the one with the three-engine oil leak. Saudia lost one on the ground (cabin fire), DL lost the one in a TRW at DFW, but are they any others??

GF

Lockheed builds excellent, lucky planes! Compare to the MD-11! Mega-insurance headache
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Old 12th Feb 2007, 00:17
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Galaxy,

7 hull losses 1011 Everglades, 1014 Fire after an aborted TO, 1026 Ground fire, 1061 Sabotage, 1114 Ground fire, 1163 Crashed on approach, 1169 destroyed by fire.

Thats all I think but I agree with 411A they were a fine jet and in all the time I flew them no problems with the DLC. Agree with the auto land as well untill I had the tail strike with the Auto pilot runaway!!!!!!

Thats all
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Old 12th Feb 2007, 00:40
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http://aviation-safety.net/database/...datekey&page=1
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Old 12th Feb 2007, 01:55
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Pretty good record overall-especially when take out the ground events, not on operational flights.

GF
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Old 12th Feb 2007, 08:35
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The TriStar has long been known for safety, so we're in danger of rediscovering the wheel here. It's not its safety record but its tech whizzery that I am probing into by suggestring some of it wasn't all that. Or rather, wondering aloud whether it was a cul-de-sac, or genuinely useful.

Put simply, it seems the structurally heavier long bodied version achieved much the same range as the active aileron/extended tip short body, which makes sense not, unless we assume the active ailerons/wingtip mods were a gimmick.

Additionally, I still can't work out the status of DLC. Can't remember my source, but its gist was that DLC was removed by operators as a drag, noise and tech generator.
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Old 12th Feb 2007, 09:49
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What I have read shows the 500 having a range of 6300 miles which is alot further than the 200.
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Old 12th Feb 2007, 11:32
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Are we talking nautical or statute? I've got 3 potted books all showing 4580nm for the 500 and 4850 for the 200, or 5100 st. m. versus 5400 st. m. at 225 t v. 230 t. Max AUW was 250 tons if I recall (for both the 500 and 200). At 250t AUW, 6300 st. m. should be about right. My potted books are admittedly very highly "iffy", but I do recall Flight citing much the same data. Must call on Westminster Reference Library one of these days...
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Old 12th Feb 2007, 11:54
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Was told by Lockheed in the early days that the fundamental reason for DLC was to reduce touchdown 'spread' during autolands. This enabled the ole girl to be certified to CAT 111c in the UK (a BEA requirement). I believe that she was the first widebody so certified. Indeed perhaps someone could enlighten us as to whether the other two (Jumbo, DC-10) got such certification early on?

ACS was indeed fitted to limit wing loads with stretched wing tips but note that later a/c (ie not the early BA -500s) had a stronger wing (with stretch incorporated already)and the ACS (as I recall) had a smaller travel.
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Old 12th Feb 2007, 15:14
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All quite true, idg, the DLC was there for a reason.
The TriStar was the first wide-body to achieve CATIIIC and be stage three noise compliant at all weights, right out of the hangar, not added on later.
Having flown both the -500 model and the earlier -200's and 250's, the -500 will sail right on past a -200/-250, when the latter types have dry tanks.
No operator that I'm aware of has disconnected DLC as a normal mode of operation, nor should they as it is very reliable.
The only downside is for the pilot who tries the 'Boeing push'...they learn straight away that it ain't a good idea.
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Old 12th Feb 2007, 15:52
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"Was told by Lockheed in the early days that the fundamental reason for DLC was to reduce touchdown 'spread' during autolands. This enabled the ole girl to be certified to CAT 111c in the UK (a BEA requirement). I believe that she was the first widebody so certified. Indeed perhaps someone could enlighten us as to whether the other two (Jumbo, DC-10) got such certification early on?"
--------

I heard from more than one source that the touchdown spread was so tight it spurred BA to inquire of LHR whether there would be a downside to the plane hitting the exact same spot nearly every time. LHR was horrified, and asked them to put some dither into the touchdown aim point.

Lockheed has always built a stiff wing, which is great for aerodynamics, at the expense of gust loading. The DC-10 has a moderately stiff wing, and you wonder how they can ever calculate angle of attack on the outboard engines and wing sections of a 747, even in mild turbulence.

Lockheed stiff wings have suffered fractures, including the loss of a few C-130s, and major re-works of their wings and wings of the C-5A.

Problems with Bendix's supposed CAT III autoland in the DC-10 was blamed for the bankruptcy of Douglas Aircraft, and its takeover by McDonnell. I don't believe any airline made it operational, although I've ridden through several autolands in production testing, as they were required to demonstate it before delivery to some customers.

I never heard that the dual-dual Sperry autoland was particularly successful in the 747, but don't know for sure it wasn't.

The Collins dual-dual autoland L-1011 was the first commercially successful CAT IIIc, I believe, and the Collins in the L-1011 was the first digital autoland system, preceding the triplex Collins system in the 767 by a couple of years.

GB
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Old 12th Feb 2007, 17:03
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Thanks, 411 - at last now I know that 200s have less range than 500s! Phew! And that DLC was hot. I admit to having been misinformed.

Greybeard, I thought McDonnells took over Douglas in the mid-60s (1967?) because old Donald D was selling Nines at sweetheart rates and his son was undercutting even the sticker price... Didn't the Ten's AFCS problems come way later, in the 70s..?
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