Re: New JF-17/FC-1 Fighter Aircraft thread
That is incorrect. The F-20 is also unstable and yet it has a composite FBW system.
If an aircraft is pitch unstable, the main stability augmentation would be in the pitch axis. It is theoritically possible to be pitch axis unstable and have augmentation only in that area. Of course it won't be as controllable under very high axis of attack, but then again, the system on the JF-17 is composite. As mentioned in the web article, the roll and yaw axis is still stability augmented. This does not mean that roll and yaw axis are basically statically unstable, but what it does mean is that these are still being used to augment stability for any loss of stability in those axii during maneuvers which includes high AoA maneuvers. All this completely covers what you are saying.
And somehow you forgot the F-20 Tigershark example?
Of course, but somehow you conveniently forgot to mention that leading edge flaps are also used for stability augmentation. There is no reason why it is not done so on the JF-17.
That's nonsense. Don't compare your country's development times with the rest of the world as proof of general example. Development times often include too many factors like obtaining funding and bureaucratic hurdles. You know how quickly the F-16 prototypes rolled out and were quickly doing aerobatics in test competitions against the YF-17, which also rolled out quickly. The X-35 was doing aerobatics within a week after the plane first rolled out.
Certification has nothing to do with it. Certification covers a whole lot of other specifications and requirements in the plane that has nothing to do with flight behavior.
The JF-17 managed to roll out quickly and get certified quickly because the aircraft has a conventional tailed design whose aerodynamic behavior is well understood. No tricks like canards or levcons on deltas whose properties are far less understood and studied.
You really didn't read the articles didn't you? The Cessna article does not portray the manual system just simply as a backup, but the fact that manual control authority and FBW control authority are combined. The manual system and FBW are still working together and simultaneously in regular flight.
Read the lines in the KAMRA page and the image I get is that the roll and pitch axis are manual controls with stability augmentation.
The articles point out that the control authority is a sum of between a a percentage manual with hydraulic and the balance by the FBW. Don't you get it? X% Manual + Y% FBW. That means the FBW still has partial control of the roll and yaw axis controls.
The thing why aircraft with full FBW has three to four channels of redundancy is because by nature, FBW itself is not as reliable or as fail safe as any manual system. The use of a composite system on the F-20, the Cessna and the JF-17 share one common thing, they can reduce cost, complexity, space and weight through a composite system that combines the best of two worlds into one.
On the case of the F-2, legal disputes over the code has no bearing on the design decision on the aircraft to have a 3 channel FBW redundancy with a manual backup.
No it is not true that all the 3 axes are made FBW-capable out of convenience. As I said previously, even if aircraft are just pitch unstable, they have FBW in 3 axes precisely because all the 3 axes do not work in isolation (contrary to your view) but they work together by supporting each other. In this very aspect, the tests of another Asian fighter jet under high AoA conditions were done keeping in mind directional stability, rolling moments, spin recovery and checking the quantum of rudder authority at high angles of attack.
Thus if JF-17 is indeed pitch unstable, it should have most probably have had FBW in other axes too, like all other combat aircraft in service presently.
That is incorrect. The F-20 is also unstable and yet it has a composite FBW system.
If an aircraft is pitch unstable, the main stability augmentation would be in the pitch axis. It is theoritically possible to be pitch axis unstable and have augmentation only in that area. Of course it won't be as controllable under very high axis of attack, but then again, the system on the JF-17 is composite. As mentioned in the web article, the roll and yaw axis is still stability augmented. This does not mean that roll and yaw axis are basically statically unstable, but what it does mean is that these are still being used to augment stability for any loss of stability in those axii during maneuvers which includes high AoA maneuvers. All this completely covers what you are saying.
Once again the presence of instability implies FBW, but the converse is not true. Examples of the converse are civilian aircraft like the Cessna examples that you gave now. Being civilian, they do not have the need to perform military maneuvers with passengers on board, and so do not have any need for instability.
And somehow you forgot the F-20 Tigershark example?
It's true that JF-17 does have leading edge flaps like the F-16, which are likely to be controlled intelligently by the flight-control computer, without the pilot's knowledge. This is done to enhance maneuverability.
Of course, but somehow you conveniently forgot to mention that leading edge flaps are also used for stability augmentation. There is no reason why it is not done so on the JF-17.
It's FBW also has the restrictive property in not allowing the pilot to exceed certain limits. But all this still does not imply instability. As I pointed out in PDF forum, the JF-17's testing period is even lesser than an Indian trainer, IJT Sitara, which took a little more than 3 years from debut flight to certification. Instable aircraft that too with FBW usually have been tested for at least a decade.
That's nonsense. Don't compare your country's development times with the rest of the world as proof of general example. Development times often include too many factors like obtaining funding and bureaucratic hurdles. You know how quickly the F-16 prototypes rolled out and were quickly doing aerobatics in test competitions against the YF-17, which also rolled out quickly. The X-35 was doing aerobatics within a week after the plane first rolled out.
Certification has nothing to do with it. Certification covers a whole lot of other specifications and requirements in the plane that has nothing to do with flight behavior.
The JF-17 managed to roll out quickly and get certified quickly because the aircraft has a conventional tailed design whose aerodynamic behavior is well understood. No tricks like canards or levcons on deltas whose properties are far less understood and studied.
By hybrid controls I meant the kind of controls JF-17 has like FBW in one axis and hydraulic in the other two. I'm not talking of manual backups like in the Cessna aircraft, which are present only for passenger safety. In fighters with full-FBW, manual back-ups are replaced by triple or quadruple redundant flight-control (so that if one line fails another can take over). In the other Asian fighter, there are provisions so that the safety control restrictions of the FBW are actually overridden in case of emergency situations.
Besides in case of the F-2, there was some dispute over the US providing the full source-code of the F-16's FBW to Mitsubishi. So maybe it's more due to politics rather than aerodynamics.
You really didn't read the articles didn't you? The Cessna article does not portray the manual system just simply as a backup, but the fact that manual control authority and FBW control authority are combined. The manual system and FBW are still working together and simultaneously in regular flight.
Read the lines in the KAMRA page and the image I get is that the roll and pitch axis are manual controls with stability augmentation.
The articles point out that the control authority is a sum of between a a percentage manual with hydraulic and the balance by the FBW. Don't you get it? X% Manual + Y% FBW. That means the FBW still has partial control of the roll and yaw axis controls.
The thing why aircraft with full FBW has three to four channels of redundancy is because by nature, FBW itself is not as reliable or as fail safe as any manual system. The use of a composite system on the F-20, the Cessna and the JF-17 share one common thing, they can reduce cost, complexity, space and weight through a composite system that combines the best of two worlds into one.
On the case of the F-2, legal disputes over the code has no bearing on the design decision on the aircraft to have a 3 channel FBW redundancy with a manual backup.