Aircraft Instruments
Aircraft Instruments
Aircraft Instruments
► True
The actual speed of your airplane is moving through undisturbed air.
On a standard day, Calibrated airspeed will be equal to TAS.
As density altitude increases, true airspeed increases for a given CAS or
amount of power.
TAS can be calculated by using CAS with temperature and pressure on your E6B
► Equivalent
Calibrated airspeed corrected for adiabatic compressible flow at a particular
altitude.
Above 200 kts and 20,000 feet air compresses in front the pitot tube causing
abnormally high airspeeds. Many flight computers are designed to compensate.
Airspeed Indicator
► Uses ram air from the pitot tube as well as static air.
► Ram air pushes against a diaphragm inside the airspeed indicator,
which will then be able to expand or contract accordingly. This
movement of the diaphragm is then translated into needle
movement.
Airspeed Indicator
► If the Pitot tube is blocked and the drain is open, speed will go to zero.
► If the Pitot tube is blocked and the drain is open, it will act as an
altimeter.
► If the the Static vent is blocked, the airspeed will read higher than it
should above altitude where it became blocked and lower than it should
below.
► If all three all blocked, the needle will freeze.
Questions?
► How does the airspeed indicator
compute indicated airspeed?
► How will we know if we have a blocked
pitot tube?
What would you do?
► Will
you need to compute your
equivalent airspeed for flight?
Altimeter
Altimeter
► Static Input Only
► Manufacturer seals
the aneroid wafer(s)
at a specific pressure.
As the static pressure
fills in the area around
these sealed wafers,
they will be able to
contract or expand
accordingly
Altimeter Operation
Air moves out
9 0 1
8 2
7 3
6 5 4
Wafers expand
9 0 1
8 2
7 3
6 5 4
Air moves in
9 0 1
8 2
7 3
6 5 4
Wafers contract
Types of Altitude
► Indicated
What you read on the altimeter when it is correctly adjusted to
show approximate height above mean sea level
► Calibrated
Indicated altitude corrected to compensate for instrument error
► Pressure
Displayed when altimeter is set to standard sea level (29.92).
Vertical distance above the standard datum plane
► Density
Pressure altitude corrected for non – standard temperature
Used to determine aircraft performance, when high (temp above
standard), performance will be worse.
► True
Actual height above mean sea level
Sectional charts
► Absolute
Actual height of aircraft above the earths surface.
Altimeter Errors
► Make sure you update your altimeter setting as often as
possible (or at least every 100 miles)
► If you fly to an area with a lower altimeter setting, without
resetting your altimeter, you may fly at a lower altitude
than you had intended.
► “High to low, look out below”
► On warm days, true altitude is higher than indicated.
Aircraft true altitude is lower than indicated in colder air.
► Static Blockage
Altimeter will freeze at the altitude the blockage occured
High to Low, Look out Below!
Questions?
► How does the altimeter work?
► What altitude is displayed on a sectional chart?
► If I fly from an area of a pressure setting of 29.92 to an
area where it was 30.00, would I be likely to be flying
above or below where I should?
► How would you know if the static port was blocked?
If you then turned on alternate air, what kind of indication
would you generally expect?
Vertical Speed Indicator
► The same pendulous vanes will cause the gyro to try to line up
with the g – forces of a turn.