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沙发

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发表于 2013-11-3 16:01:30
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OK, now you know what the various options are... how do you use them?
Well, first of all, you need to turn the autopilot ON!
The autopilot power is disguised as a 'Flight Director Mode' switch, which has modes OFF, FDIR, AUTO.
What this means is:
If the Flight director is OFF, then NOTHING will happen when you try to use the autopilot.
If the Flight director is ON, then the autopilot will not physically move the airplane controls, but it will move little target wings on your artificial horizon that you can try to mimic as you fly. If you do this, then you will be following the guidance that the autopilot is giving you, even though you are the one actually flying. The flight director is, at that point, following whatever autopilot modes you have selected, and you are following the flight director as you fly the plane.
If the flight director is set to AUTO, then the autopilot servos will actually fly the airplane according to the autopilot mode you have selected.
In other words, if you have a flight director switch, then make sure it is in the right mode for the type of autopilot guidance you want! (None, flight-director only, or actual servos driving the controls).
Now that you have set the flight director to the right mode, let's look at the various modes you can use to command that flight director and possibly autopilot servos!
WING-LEVELER AND PITCH SYNC:
Just hit them and they hold wings level and pitch-attitude at the current pitch.
HEADING, ALTITUDE , VERTICAL SPEED, SPEED-HOLD, FLIGHT-LEVEL-CHANGE, AUTO-THROTTLE:
Just hit them and they will hold whatever values are entered into the selectors, with most values auto-set to your current speed or altitude at the moment they are hit for smooth transitions. Now, this makes perfect sense at first: Simply hit the VVI button and the autopilot will grab and hold your current VVI. Same with airspeed. Same with altitude. BUT WHAT IF YOU WANT THE PLANE TO CLIMB TO A NEW ALTITUDE YOU HAVE NOT REACHED YET? Well, at that point, you have to ask yourself: Do you want the airplane to hold a constant VERTICAL speed to that new altitude, or a constant AIRSPEED to that new altitude? Since airplanes are most efficient at some constant indicate AIRSPEED, climbing by holding a constant airspeed is usually most efficient.
Let's start with the vertical speed case though.
Let's say you are flying along at 5,000 feet and you hit ALT. That grabs your CURRENT altitude of 5,000 feet.
Now let's say you want to climb to 9,000 feet.
First, dial 9,000 into the altitude window. Note that the plane does NOT go there yet!
The NEXT step is to decide HOW you want to get to 9,000 feet!
Hit the VVI button and the plane will capture your current VVI (maybe 0) and simply dial the VVI up or down to get to 9,000 feet more or less quickly.
When you get to 9,000 feet, the autopilot will automatically DIS-ENGAGE the vertical speed mode and drop right back into altitude mode at your new altitude.
Now let's do this the way airliners do:
You are at 5,000 feet in altitude-hold, flying at a constant speed.
You dial in 9,000 feet because you want to climb.
You hit FLCH or SPD!
This make the plane pitch the nose up or down to maintain your current indicated SPEED!
Now, simply add a dose of power and the nose of the plane will raise up to keep the speed from increasing, and up you go!
When you get to 9,000 feet, the pane autopilot will LEAVE speed-hold mode and go into altitude-hold mode, holding 9,000 feet until further notice.
So, as you see, the speed and vertical speed modes will be held just fine... UNTIL THEY GET TO THE ALTITUDE YOU HAVE DIALED IN, A WHICH POIT THEY WILL ABANDON THAT MODE AND GRAB ALTITUDE HOLD MODE. The same thing will happen with GLIDESLOPE! If the glideslope is armed (lit up because you pushed the button!) then the autopilot will abandon your vertical mode when the glideslope engages. The same thing will happen with the LOCALIZER! If the Localizer is armed (lit up because you pushed the button!) then the autopilot will abandon your heading mode when the localizer engages!
This is called 'CAPTURING' the localizer or glideslope.
PITCH SYNC WITH PITCH-SYNC JOYSTICK BUTTON: You can assign a joystick button to be 'Pitch Sync', in which case the autopilot will match the autopilot settings to whatever you are doing as you fly the plane... then, when you RELEASE the pitch-sync joystick button, the autopilot will GRAB HOLD of the yoke (engage servos) and maintain the vertical speed, altitude, airspeed, or pitch that you were just flying! How does this work? Here is an example:
Let's say you are at 3,000 feet, and you are in ALTITUDE mode, the autopilot holding 3,000 feet for you. You hit the PITCH SYNC joystick button. When you do this, the autopilot servos turn the yoke loose and let you fly... you fly to 3,500 ft (autopilot still in altitude mode!) and let go of the PITCH SYNC joystick button. At that point, the autopilot will try to hold 3,500 ft, since you were in altitude mode at 3,500 feet at the moment you let go of the pitch-sync button.
Now let's say you are in VVI mode.. then the autopilot will try to maintain the vertical speed that you had at the moment you released the pitch-sync button.
Now let's say you are in SPEED or LEVEL-CHANGE mode.. then the autopilot will try to maintain the airspeed (by pitching nose up or down!) the airspeed that you had at the moment you released the pitch-sync button.
So, when you HIT the pitch-sync joystick button, the autopilot turns OFF the servos and lets you fly, but when you RELEASE the button, the servos take hold and try to maintain the speed, altitude, or vertical speed that you had at the moment you released the pitch-sync joystick button. The same applies to bank angle: If if you are in wing-level or heading mode when you hit pitch-sync, then the plane will try to maintain the bank-angle you had at the moment you released the button one you release it. (Note: if the bank angle is less than 6 degrees, then the plane will just level the wings, assuming that you want nose-level).
LOC and G/S:
These are the ones nobody can figure out, partially because the right frequencies and HSI mode must be selected to use them, and partially because they WILL NOT DO A THING until they CAPTURE the approach path they are looking for... and some OTHER MODE (any of the ones discussed above) must be engaged to do that.
So, here is how these modes work:
These modes capture an ILS or VOR or GPS course, so they must obviously be able to fly either NAV-1, NAV-2, or GPS.
But how do these know which of those 3 signals to use?
The answer is the button labelled "NAV-1 NAV-2 FMC/CDU", (with filename "but_HSI_12GPS" in the HSI folder), which is the HSI source selector.
Here is why: The AUTOPILOT will fly whatever is THE HSI IS SHOWING (if you have one), so you need to decide what you want the HSI to show: Nav-1, Nav-2, or GPS (labeled FMC/CDU, for Flight Management Computer, which gets it's signal from the GPS). Once you decide what you want the HSI to display with this button, that is what the autopilot will fly.
If you put this button to Nav-1, then the the HSI will show deflections from the Nav-1 radio, and the autopilot
will fly VOR or ILS signals from the Nav-1 radio if you hit the LOC or G/S buttons.
If you put this button to Nav-2, then the the HSI will show deflections from the Nav-2 radio, and the autopilot
will fly VOR or ILS signals from the Nav-2 radio if you hit the LOC or G/S buttons.
If you put this button to FMC/CDU, then the the HSI will show deflections from the GPS, which can be set manually or by the FMS, and the autopilot
will fly to the GPS destination if you hit the LOC button. Rememebr that if you enter destinations into the FMS,
they will automatically feed into the GPS, so the autopilot will follow them if you select LOC.
So now that you know how to send the right signal (Nav-1, Nav-2, or GPS) to the autopilot for LOC and G/S
(lateral and vertical navigation), how do you USE those modes?
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