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Comment by mulmen

1 year ago

Why would the Ran Air Turbine be time restricted? As long as the plane is moving there’s power.

> Why would the Ran Air Turbine be time restricted?

Gravity?

  • But the turbine generates power to keep the plane flying. Why would it only work for 10 minutes? Certainly the flight time is a product of fuel level and altitude. Even if both engines fail the flight time would be a function of altitude. I don’t see how deployment of the RAT informs flight time.

    • It does not generate power to provide thrust; it generates power - using the airstream as the aircraft moves through the air - for the avionics and/or hydraulics.

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By definition, when you are using the RAT, you don't have any electrical power and you probably don't have thrust.

You are constrained by battery, airspeed, and altitude.

  • Well you aren’t constrained by battery if the RAT is deployed, that’s the point of the RAT.

    “Probably” is doing a lot of work here, there could be a power failure without engine failure.

If the RAT could keep the plane flying indefinitely we would just be using RAT instead of fuel I suppose.

  • /s? A generator or alternator powered directly by the engines is more efficient than towing a wind vane (still indirectly powered by the engines and/or the potential energy of the airplane) every single time.

    This discussion has nothing to do with engine out failure modes.

    • > This discussion has nothing to do with engine out failure modes.

      The 787's APU is not intended to run during flight. If it's running, you're in an engines-out scenario.

  • Huh? It’s a generator. It generates minimum power to keep the flight controls and instruments working. It’s not propulsion.

The RAT is a generator, not a device that can provide thrust. If anything it will minutely slow the plane down.