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Playing Flight Simulator.

2006-09-10 04:47:13 · 7 answers · asked by rocky y 1 in Cars & Transportation Aircraft

7 answers

Technically, you can stall an airplane at any speed. For instance increasing the load factor on a wing (by banking) you increase the stall speed.It is the angle of attack you should be concerned with not the speed. In unacclearted flight you have stalling speed in the landing configuration (flaps, spoilers, gear down etc) will vary according to weight. I will be different than the stall speed in the clean configuration,again varying with gross weight.
For Sim purposes, around 110 knts indicated should get you in the ball park.

2006-09-10 11:08:53 · answer #1 · answered by cherokeeflyer 6 · 2 0

This Site Might Help You.

RE:
What is the stall out speed of a boeing 747-400?
Playing Flight Simulator.

2015-08-19 01:08:57 · answer #2 · answered by Berni 1 · 0 0

747 Stall Speed

2016-11-12 08:32:38 · answer #3 · answered by benjamine 4 · 0 0

At T-20 second, the N1 reads less than 25%, which is essentially idle thrust. Yet speed is at 350, ansd altitude just got up 200 ft in less than 5 seconds. And at T-15 second, thrust is back up to 86.7% N1, and speed is, what? A big fat zero? Unless you played a lot with the throttle and the elevator and put the plane in a stall, then I would blame it on MS. After all, they use to crash computers with amazing regularity, so why not expand this trend to aircraft? Just be thankful MS is not used as the OS inside real airplane. Edit: but Walter (below) 9 degree nose up means nothing if the flight path (gamma) is down, this could mean an alpha that is beyond stall. And besides, we have snapshots at 5 seconds interval; what happened between those?

2016-03-18 21:56:11 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

aren't you the one flying it? stall the thing out! pull the power back and put about 15 units up and see what it takes to maintain altitude. then pull the power back and increase back pressure to a fiarly high nose attitude and see what happens. do this with and without flaps. that should answer your question better than anyone here could. and it's a much more fun.

2006-09-10 06:13:58 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Real airplane: From 120 to 170 KCAS. Depends on the weight and flap setting.

2006-09-10 06:22:01 · answer #6 · answered by Steve 7 · 1 0

Is that just before or just after you fly it into a building?

About 150 Knots.

2006-09-10 04:52:35 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

in the films it is 159, but then they go less than that and do not stall, builds up the tension.

2006-09-10 08:12:46 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

should be around 185. Good luck on the simulator

2006-09-10 04:54:51 · answer #9 · answered by scrambledmolecues 3 · 0 0

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