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- English Electric canberra B(I)8 (YASim) readme.
- This is not an authentic representation of an English Electric
- Canberra B(I)8A-10 but it's based on the right numbers, where I could
- find them and there is a lot of guesswork in the fdm. It should also
- be noted that this a/c is still very much under development, in
- nearly every respect and there are several aspects which need
- fixing/improving.
- History
- -------
- The B(I)8 (Interdictor) version of the English Electric Canberra was
- normally fitted with either a low-drag cannon pack occupying the rear
- portion of the bomb-bay or a range of free-fall weapons. The a/c
- modelled here is carrying a single free-fall nuclear fission device
- (as far as I can ascertain, this device may have been a 'Red Beard'
- tactical nuclear bomb, of up to 60kt yield) and would have been
- delivered using the LABS (Low Altitude Bombing System) technique: The
- bomb sight is depressed to a particular angle (not known) and the a/c
- approaches the target at 1000ft agl at a speed of 425 kt. When the
- target aligns with the bomb sight a 3.5G pull-up is initiated and
- held. The bomb should be released as the attitude gyro starts to
- tumble and the manuevour is completed with an Immelmann.
- Model
- -----
- The model was originally constructed in Realsoft3D (linux beta V4.5),
- exported as a .OBJ format file and imported into AC3D where it was
- converted into .ac format and textured.
- The accuracy of the model is heavily dependent on the data and
- drawings available for it, and in most cases, the side, front and top
- views in a typical 3-view drawing rarely align correctly or measure
- consistently. For example, when the model is scaled to the correct
- length, the wing-span is likely to be a little out.
- Thanks to Vivian Meazza for letting me use the helmet and visor model
- from his Hawker Hunter aircraft.
- Flight Data Model
- -----------------
- The Flight Data Model uses the FlightGear YASim fdm solver, which
- uses a combination of aircraft geometry and performance data to
- generate the flight model.
- Apart from the basic length, span and height of the aircraft, most of
- the measurements needed for YASim are not generally available so
- after uniformly scaling the 3d model to one of the basic measurements
- i.e. length, the geometry data was taken from the model.
- While this may not give the most accurate numbers, with respect
- to the original aircraft, it does mean that what you fly matches
- pretty closely to what you see, at least as far as the geometry
- is concerned.
- The approach parameters have required even more guesswork. They
- are based upon a few photographs I was able to find showing the
- aircraft in what appeared to be the final approach stages, and
- whatever info I was able to find.
- Keyboard Mapping
- ----------------
- Several new keyboard mappings are (temporarily) set-up when this a/c
- is used. These are:
- 'C' (Shift-c) toggle (open/close) the canopy
- 'D' (Shift-d) toggle (open/close) the bomb bay doors.
- 'J' (shift-j) release the Red Beard bomb.
- 'K' (shift-k) toggle trajectory markers
-
- Both the canopy and bomb bay doors open when FG is started. The a/c
- also starts with the parking brake on and this should be released
- before trying to fly.
- Panels
- ------
- Currently, there are two simple 2D panels for the model, neither
- of which are in any way accurate - they are simply holders for
- the instruments. The 'vfr' panel includes the basic instruments
- needed for 'vfr' and calls the 'standard' FlightGear instruments
- from the FlightGear installation. The 'mini' panel includes a
- subset of the instruments on the 'vfr' panel, with a transparent
- background.
- In addition to the standard FG instruments, both panels also
- incorporate a number of custom instruments. These are mostly
- informational but two of them can be used to control some of the
- Autopilot functions - see below.
- Custom Controller Instruments
- -----------------------------
- There are two custom instruments on both the 'vfr' and 'mini'
- panels that can be used to control some of the autopilot
- functions. These are the speed controller and the altitude mode
- controller.
- AP Speed Controller
- -------------------
- The speed controller can be used to hold the aircraft speed by
- throttle, either to a set KIAS, or to a set mach value.
- Clicking with the mouse on the yellow 'K' will set the AP speed
- controller into KIAS hold, while clicking on the blue 'M' will
- set Mach hold. The numeric value displayed in either yellow or
- blue indicates the set speed, in either kias or mach,
- relatively. There is a small array of '+' and '-' characters to
- the left of the instrument and these can be used to increment or
- decrement the speed setting, in either 10kt or 1kt steps for
- kias or 0.1 and 0.01 steps for mach.
- AP Altitude Mode Controller
- ---------------------------
- The altitude mode controller appears as a strip reading
- AP Mode: AH TF TO IL MC
- The meaning of the different modes are:
- AH = Altitude Hold
- TF = Terrain Following
- TO = Automatic Take-Off
- IL = Automatic Instrument Landing
- MC = Mach Climb
- AH Mode
- -------
- The AH (Altitude Hold) function is intended to hold the aircraft
- at the altitude set in /autopilot/settings/target-altitude-ft.
- When engaged, the set altitude can be changed by using the
- standard FG keystrokes.
- TF Mode
- -------
- The TF (Terrain Following) function is intended to hold the
- aircraft at a constant distance above ground level (agl). The
- separation distance is set in /autopilot/settings/target-agl-ft.
- It is not currently possible to change this setting from either
- of the panels - it must be changed via the property browser.
- It should also be noted that FG does not currently provide a
- look-ahead function that could be used for a proper terrain
- following system so the current terrain following function works
- by simply checking the agl directly below the a/c. This means
- that the TF function can only react after the separation has
- increased or decreased and will not stop you from flying into
- steep sided ground elevations i.e. cliffs.
- TO Mode
- -------
- The TO (automatic take-off mode) function is intended to be used
- to automate the take-off process. It should be noted that the
- a/c has the parking-brake engaged when FG starts and this should
- be released before trying to take-off. When TO mode is engaged,
- the following sequence of actions take occur:
- The current heading of the a/c on the runway is set for both
- the ground-roll and in-air heading.
-
- The flaps are extended to 0.64
-
- Hold speed-with-throttle is engaged (KIAS mode)
-
- The wing-leveller is engaged
-
- Rudder/nose wheel steering is engaged.
- As soon as speed-with-throttle is engaged, the a/c will start
- accelerating down the runway and once it has sufficient speed it
- will rotate and lift off from the ground. Note that during the
- ground roll there is no specific means of keeping the a/c on the
- runway centre-line so while the a/c will hold the heading, there
- may be some drift across the runway in cross-winds.
- Once the a/c has climbed above 50ft agl, a climb-out pitch-hold
- controller is engaged, to hold the a/c at a constant pitch, the
- under-carriage is retracted, the rudder control is reset and the
- rudder re-centred.
- As the aircraft continues accelerating, the flaps are progressively
- retracted and once fully retracted the AP heading hold mode is
- switched to true-heading-hold, the speed control is set to
- mach-with-throttle and Mach-Climb mode (see below) is engaged. The
- final action is to disable the AP TO mode so that it cannot be
- engaged in flight.
- It is possible to set a number of way points before engaging the
- TO function but it is then necessary to hit Ctrl-h a couple of
- times to dis-engage true-heading-hold, which is set whenever a
- way point is entered, and re-centre the ailerons before TO is
- engaged. What will happen in this case is that once the
- take-off sequence has finished and true-heading-hold is engaged,
- the a/c will turn to the appropriate heading and follow the way
- points. If no way points have been set the take-off heading
- will be followed.
- IL Mode
- -------
- The IL (automatic instrument landing) function is designed to
- land the aircraft automatically, provided that the runway you
- wish to land on has an instrument landing system. It is assumed
- that the radio nav equipment will have already been correctly
- tuned for the intended landing runway.
- When engaged, the IL function will set nav1-heading-hold, set a
- pre-defined target speed and either climb or descend to get on to the
- glide-slope.
- Once a pre-defined vertical descent rate is exceeded the target speed
- for the AP speed controller is reduced and the 'speed-brakes' are
- deployed (1.0). As the speed drops the flaps are progressively
- deployed, the 'speed brakes' are progressively reduced and the
- undercarriage is extended.
- Once the ias drops below a pre-defined speed an AoA-hold-by-throttle
- controller is engaged and this will gradually reduce speed until
- an approach AoA of 2 degrees is achieved.
- Once the a/c drops below a pre-defined agl the AP controller switches
- to touch-down mode and will try to set the a/c down at around
- 0.1 vfps (currently it's between 2-3 vfps).
- MC Mode
- -------
- The MC (Mach Climb Mode) function is designed to command the
- highest climb rate that can be sustained for a given mach
- setting and is only enabled when mach-hold-by-throttle is
- selected on the AP Speed Controller. This function has some
- limitations, one being that it works best when the aircraft is
- travelling below the set mach number and is accelerating. If
- the aircraft is already travelling at the set mach number the
- climb rate is likely to be very low and it may be necessary to
- temporarily reduce speed, and then increase it again (using the
- AP Speed Controller) or force a climb by pulling back on the
- stick.
- Lee Elliott. 2004/09/16
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