Flight Instruments
Flight Instruments
VSI
ALTIMETER
Simple altimeters are calibrated to read only under ISA conditions at all heights
The capsule itself is not perfectly elastic so will distort differently for large
increases and decreases in altitude HYSTERESIS ERROR
Any change of sea level pressure from the datum set on the altimeter subscale,
will give an incorrect altitude reading BAROMETRIC ERROR
If the static line becomes blocked, the pressure inside the instrument cannot
change so whether climbing whether descending no changes in altitude are
displayed
QFE: when you put in the subscale a value that zeros the altimeter on the
airfield datum or if you put the actual pressure at the airfield elevation
QNH: when the subscale setting permits the altimeter to read aircraft altitude
above MSL and therefore airfield elevation. Is like QFE reduced to a sea level
with ISA temperature values.
Airfield QNH must be set on the altimeter when departing from an aerodrome
in controlled airspace. There is also regional QNH.
QFF: like QNH except it uses the actual station temperature to calculate the sea
level pressure, not ISA
QNE: is not an altimeter setting but is the height shown at touchdown on the
altimenter with 1013mb set on the subscale
Standard setting is 1013,25mb or the equivalent 29.92 inches
The sensitive altimeter uses the same principles as the simple altimeter but
increases the sensitivity by having more pointers
Later instruments have a digitiser box to send flight level information to the ATC
transponder ( is a sensitive altimeter )
When the I bar is disturbed, one of the E bar produces a greater voltage than
the other one. This resulting voltage difference is fed to an amplifier then to a
servomotor which through a feedback system repositions the I bar so that the
air gaps are once again equal. The servomotor displacement is a measure of the
capsule expansion.
Simple altimeters usually are single pointer; sensitive altimeters began with 3-
needle displays but since they are difficult to read by pilots under stress, later
types and servo assisted altimeters have a digital and single needle redout.
TEMPERATURE
Calculate barometric and temperature errors separately and first the barometric
errors
In air temperature that differ from ISA, the altimeter error will be approximately
4ft per 1000ft of height above the pressure datum for every degree of deviation
from ISA
It is only in temperatures below ISA that the altimeter will overread and the
error will be dangerous
Approaching the speed of sound, the airflow around changes dramatically and if
the aircraft is not designed for supersonic flight it can have a loss of control,
instability or stall
The speed of sound MACH 1.0 does not remain constant. It’s speed decreases
with decreasing temperature
Machmeter gives the pilots an indication of his speed relative to the speed of
sound so that the dangerous area can be avoided
That’s why Mach number indications are often incorporated in the ASI
If the pitot source becomes blocked, it shows the same error as an ASI. The
mach number will remain unchanged until static pressure changes in a climb or
descent. In a climb the airspeed capsule will have excess static pressure trapped
so will over read and vice versa
If is the static sources that is blocked, during climb excess static pressure is
trapped in the case and the Macheter will under read