:-? :-? :-?
Never flown on a 747, but I can't see why it would do this. Maybe you heard this from people who flew on a 747 that took off from a runway with raised centerline lights, and felt the bumping as the nosewheel rolled over them, or...?
That's definitely a weird one; there is no logical reason why any airliner would be designed to not accelerate smoothly.
2 flights on Malaysia 747-400s. Both full loaded passengers, fuel, for the trans Pacific flights LAX-TPE-LAX. The takeoff from LAX was very long but smooth as far as acceleration, engines spooled up then right as the brakes released, full throttle using almost the entire runway to get up. Takeoff from Tao Yuan on the other hand did experience a little bit of what you described. Seemed like after the brakes released and we began picking up speed at full power, just starting to get pressed into the seat then suddenly the pressure was gone for a second feeling like the throttle was brought back some, then hard into the seat again till the end of the runway where we finally lifted off. I was sitting right behind the wing both times, neither takeoff do I remember hearing the engines spool down at all.
Felt this on smaller regional jets a lot though, seems like full power, let off a couple seconds, then back to full power and up we go the whole time engines screaming at full thrust.
If I had to take a guess I would say wake turbulence could be the cause. All times in the regional jets has been at a busy airport right after a larger jet took off before us. TPE we were behind another 747 and didn't wait hardly at all before we followed. LAX we only had a MD-80 ahead of us and I watched it get airborne before we even pulled onto the runway.
I need people who have flown on a 747 to answer this.
I have heard that as a 747 takes off the passengers fell jerks as if the plane is revving up by levels. An example is a car going 20MPH and then accelerates to 40MPH and back to 20MPH. I don't know if this is true. I don't think people inside would feel jerks but I have never been on a 747 so how should I know.
If I am right, this could happen as long as you have a large wingspan, weight and accelerating rate.
Your thoughts about Yaw-roll tendencies?
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 527 guests