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Info on the Comet Smiths Flight director system

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Info on the Comet Smiths Flight director system

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Old 24th Jul 2008, 18:41
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Info on the Comet Smiths Flight director system

I completed a Comet ground school and Comet simulator course with Dan Air in the autumn of 1973 but never did the flight training as the course was cancelled on Christmas eve...somethying to do with the Arabs putting up the price of fuel.
I along with another HS748 F/o never received any instruction on the Smiths flight director system as it was all part of an RAF plot to give our seats to ex RAF Comet pilots waiting at the labour exchange...we were being programmed to simply fail the course which the union had insisted we went on.
I understand RAF and BEA and BOAC pilots got several days of dedicated instruction on this thing as it could get people confused.
I wonder if anyone could post me a link or provide the material I need to read to at last get a handle on this piece of equipment and understand how it was all supposed to work before I die!
For my sins I refused the Dan Air recall for the restarted course in Feb1974 having decided to join GF in Bahrain who were less concerned about fuel...but having flown the DC3 I was sad to miss out on flying the Comet but I really enjoyed the GF/ BA training on the L1011 and the LVP training in 1976. Fate is the hunter.
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Old 24th Jul 2008, 19:37
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Was it the same as the infamous system on the guardsvan?I heard a lot of horrendous tales about that in the 1980s!
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Old 24th Jul 2008, 20:06
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....but I really enjoyed the GF/ BA training on the L1011 ....
Well then, you experienced the very finest (at the time) as Lockheed was at the absolute forefront of automatic flight control systems intregration, bar none.
It is unlikely to have never been equaled..for an analogue system.
Very very good...the Gold standard, at the time.

Lets see.
A twenty four year old L1011, all coupled up for an automatic approach/land maneuver, both autopilots engaged (four channels, monitored)...and it rolls on so smoooooothly, typical Lockheed.
The very finest.

Oh yes...made in America...with proper Rollers, of course.
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Old 24th Jul 2008, 22:17
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Not necessarily much help but if you do a google search for "Smiths Flight System" (including the quotes) there are a handful of interesting leads, including a couple of sites of people that used to fly the Comet and even a PPrune thread from 2001 where a fellow by the name of Flanker mentions using the system.

Smiths Flight System has a small amount of into too.
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Old 24th Jul 2008, 22:49
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Nice going, a thread asking for info about the Comet F/D system skillfully hijacked and converted into an ad for the Tristar in under four posts.
It may have been wonderful to fly (because you keep reminiding us...
You're welcome.
Yes, it was wonderful to fly, and oddly enough....still is.
The only first generation of wide-body jet transport to have never crashed due to an aircraft/engine systems malfunction.

Now, lets us not forget, Comet was first, with jet passenger aircraft.
Credit where credit is due...without a doubt.
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Old 24th Jul 2008, 23:26
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From the little bit I saw of the Smiths FD system, when I had a little play with it on the Vanguard sim at BEA: YOU WERE LUCKY! Good grief, if Smiths had been set the task of designing the milking machine, they'd have nailed the udders to the floor and jacked the cow up and down. Still, it seemed to make sense to those perverse people who revel in making things complicated.

You were jolly lucky to miss the 'Ex RAF Club' on the Comet at Dan too, but you've guessed that already.
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Old 25th Jul 2008, 03:39
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It was virtually the same as the Smiths Military Flight System. A horrid contraption which was fitted to the Mk2 V Bombers. It was a capacity sapper and although it was clever when you intercepted an ILS, that was about it. It was particularly useless in the Victor where your pitch could easily exceed the maximum 17 degrees the main display could show.

If you do find out how it was supposed to work, please share the secret as I never had a clue!
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Old 25th Jul 2008, 07:10
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Ask Doris

As some of you guys are in the UK try Doris. Department of Research and Information Services at the RAF Museum Hendon.

[email protected]
tel 020 8358 4873

They are very helpful, if a little slow to answer on obscure queries. But this one ought to be fairly easy from the leads already given.

My daughter operates in and out of London a lot and enjoys digging up the past. She loves Hendon and if no-one is looking pats a nose here and there for me.

Give them a ring or I can ask herself to look up some facts and see how much meat they have on the bone.
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Old 25th Jul 2008, 14:00
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sep 2

As a ground mech on Vanguards once we got the auto/pilot to stop "hunting " in the pitch mode by fitting a "Deadspace unit " in the pitch channel I believe we could use the Auto/pilot to bring the Aircrarft down the Glideslope to within 200ft of touch down using the Smiths Flight System on the I.L.S and at the end of it's career did not give too much trouble to us Avionioc types .But with the passing of time a rosey glow. might have dimmed the memory , it was about 28 years ago
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Old 25th Jul 2008, 14:24
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Angel sep2

One of the problems with the S.E.P.2 was because it was all Magnetic Amplifiers and they tended to "drift "we were always trying to reset the potentiometers to rectify this problem this made the a/c wander in which Mode it was in . I think have my course notes but they were all "techie"[if the mice havent eaten them it was such a long time ago and i could find them] I know an old Vanguard Captain I'll ask him what problems he had.
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Old 25th Jul 2008, 16:02
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This is the civil version as fitted to the Viscount





As Dan Winterland says, the presentation made it easy to fly an ILS but, because the compass scale was set and fixed to the QDM, track, or course as desired, it was not much good for lateral orientation. I used the RMI for that.
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Old 25th Jul 2008, 16:29
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Hum it is a bit ugly isent it?
I suppose I would have tried hard and eventually learned to love it.
I read it incorporated a small screw that could come loose unseen by the pilot and freeze the pitch up indications and this caused one Comet to crash.
Seeing that picture and reading up on the history of the Comet just makes me realize how rapid has been the progress in aircraft design and development and how brave and skilled the jet pioneer pilots were.
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Old 25th Jul 2008, 20:46
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because the compass scale was set and fixed to the QDM, track, or course as desired, it was not much good for lateral orientation.
This was the common complaint from pilots who had previously used other systems such as Collins. They found it hard to come to terms with the heading not necessarily being at the top. I think those who had not used a flight director system before found it a bit easier to get to grips with.
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Old 25th Jul 2008, 21:35
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Hmmm, reminds me of some of the older Bendix flight director systems fitted to a very few older B707's...obtuse at best.
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Old 25th Jul 2008, 21:48
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That seems a highly confusing and difficult bird to learn.

Modern day pilots I think you get of easy.
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Old 25th Jul 2008, 21:50
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I came from years on Collins FD 108 onto the Smiths. Had heard years of moans, but quite liked it. Dunno why.

My pal was looking at the 108 in me shiny jet, when he was on Brits. I kept a dead pan face as I told him that if we did a back CRS we had to take the istruments out of their mounts, and swap them over. A crew walked on at that moment, and the joke was forgotten. Years later, said mate was trainig on 707s, and yep, he started to quote me in the classroom. It was about the time everyone in the room was staring at him that he realized he'd been had. I'd tought him electrickery since he was 6 years old, so I guess it's not so surprising he fell for it.

I completed a Comet ground school and Comet simulator course with Dan Air in the autumn of 1973 but never did the flight training as the course was cancelled on Christmas eve...somethying to do with the Arabs putting up the price of fuel.
I think I can remember Ken Balsden SP? standing in front of our class and saying how worried he was about that price increase. From 10 to 12 old pennies / gal wasn't it?
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Old 26th Jul 2008, 06:43
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I flew the Vanguard at Air Bridge.(Not for very long and never liked calling it anything else btw)

Some things I remember about the Smiths
1/ A lot of people struggled to get through the course because of it.
2/ You had to be really pedantic setting it up for an approach and there were little chants associated with it....'Pitch Up Sense across..?'
3/ Situational awareness was a bit tricky using it.(on my line check I took off from EMA for Cologne and initially after take off lost my direction for a...short....while (just couldn't find south)until after hunting desperately round the cockpit for something familiar I managed to ease the tension and remove the trainers bemused stare!
4/ On an ILS it could show fully centred while the aeroplane was actually curving on to the ILS.

Is that about right or is my memory as cr*p as is usually is?

Last edited by Stan Woolley; 26th Jul 2008 at 06:54.
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Old 26th Jul 2008, 08:15
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A few years ago (maybe 6 or 7), I was trying to source an autopilot systems handbook for the Trident (dont ask - oh OK, I was taking a group of air cadets to fly a simulator we could actually afford for them). I wanted the handbook as I had previously flown the sim and remained continually 20nm behind it when the AP was on.

Unfortunately I dont have the contact I spoke to, but I did manage to get in touch with someone at Smiths (now a GE company) after a hell of a lot of phone calls. The result (after a bit of amusement that I was trying to trace this doc) was a full copy of the AP manual turning up in the post.

If the same people are still at Smiths then it is sure worth giving Smiths a call.
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Old 26th Jul 2008, 21:56
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Originally Posted by Stan Wooley
there were little chants associated with it....'Pitch Up Sense across..?'
Yes, that brings back distant memories. The set up for take off was "Off and across, Up and across" and for an ILS it was "Across across, Down and....up??" I think. Not sure about the "Up". Was that to do with the sense knob? Anyone remember?
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Old 28th Jul 2008, 18:48
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trident s.f.c.s

What a wonderful system!!!! From about 1976 onwards we were doing fully automatic landings down to Cat 3C but went back to 3B because it was all very well landing nearly Zero Zero but the crews complained they couldn't find their blasted stand, it cost B.E.A. a fortune to get it to that point but it paid for itself by getting into L.H.R.when all others failed in foggy weather. and it led the way for all other planes to get to the same standard [ if the operator would afford it.] its only drawback was the pitch computers were electro /mechanical and would sometimes stick so that channel was automaticlly switched out so it went from triplex to duplex and it became an manuel landing after 200 ft It kept me in work for very many years.
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