I'm flying over the South Pacific and am running into some problems with FS2002. I'm wondering if anyone else has encountered the following and if they know of any fixes:
Background:
I'm flying from Auckland, NZ (NZAA) to Buenos Aires, Argentina (SAEZ) in a B747 (standard FS2002 Global Freightways model). I have used the Flight Planner to create a route close to a great-circle route, with most of the flight taking place over the South Pacific Ocean (> 50 deg South latitude). I have loaded real-world weather, and have a tailwind of almost 65kts at an altitude of 37,000'. The flight is under air-traffic control. I have been able to take off, ascend, and attain cruising altitude under nominal conditions. I then go to autopilot and auto-throttle and am on autopilot for several hours.
Problems:
1. About 3-4 hours into the flight, I am cruising at 37,000' at Mach 0.85, with a ground-speed of about 550kts (strong tailwind). All of a sudden, my IAS (Indicated Airspeed) shoots up to about 400KTS, and the "Overspeed" indicator flashes. My speed shows at about Mach 1.l5 and the auto-throttle scales back the throttle to almost idle, until my speed is reduced to Mach 0.85 again. Now, because I've "slowed down" considerably, my groundspeed (shown in the GPS window) indicated 250KTS. I've checked the tailwind, and it's still a 65KT tailwind.
2. Another 1-2 hours later, (cruising at 37,000', Mach 0.85, 250KT groundspeed), my IAS goes down to 120KTS, and my altitude drops to 25,000' almost immediately. The auto-throttle tries to compensate by giving full power, but because autopilot is set to Mach 0.85, I quickly get into an unstable condition where I stall. I am able to manually bring the aircraft back to Mach 0.85 and 37,000'. At this point, GPS shows a groundspeed of 491KTS.
3. Another 1-2 hours into the flight, the problem I encountered in #1 shows up again, except this time, instead of only going to 400KTS indicated, I shoot up to 50,000' almost immediately. I then have to take the aircraft off autopilot and manually maneuver it back to nominal flight conditions. The groundspeed shows about 250KTS again.
I haven't gotten further than this in the flight, but I'm sure step #2 will show itself again while the aircraft tries to get back to a more "Normal" groundspeed of about 500KTS.
Sorry for the amount of detail, but does anyone have a clue as to what's going on here? I've taken many flights over other parts of the world, but this is the only time I've seen this behavior. I've never flown over the South Pacific before, so I thought that might be part of the problem. Any help is appreciated.
Thanks,
PropStrike
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