Topic
After engines stop working, the plane can glide. It still needs to be controlled. What is the power source for the controls.
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After engines stop working, the plane can glide. It still needs to be controlled. What is the power source for the controls.
A little wind turbine will pop out and suply power. Its only enough to display speed and altitude.
In small aircraft, the pilot moves the control surfaces directly without any need for a power source. In large aircraft, if all engines fail, emergency power for actuating control surfaces can come from a RAT (ram air turbine), a small propeller that is extended outside the aircraft & is turned by the wind as the airplane glides. In four-engine aircraft, the windmilling of the engines alone may be sufficient to provide emergency hydraulic or electrical power, eliminating the need for a RAT.
Some aircraft can obtain emergency power from an auxiliary power unit (APU).
Emergency electrical power for avionics can come from any of the above sources and/or from batteries.
I work primarily on Boeing products, so my answer is from that perspective.
Short answer: GTCP331
Commercial aircraft use an Auxiliary Power Unit (APU) that provides electrical power & pneumatic pressure. The electrical power can then be used to run the electrical pumps (ACMPs)to pressurize the hydraulic system.
There r also Ram Air Turbines (RATs) that deploy directly into the air stream. This ''RAT'' looks like a trolling motor u would see on a boat, the wind spins the propellers & generates hydraulic pressure. If u have pneumatics, u can use the Air Driven Pump (ADP) to get hydraulic pressure. If u have hydraulics, but no electric, u can use the Hydraulic Motor Generator (HMG) to get electrical power.
There r backup systems all over aircraft these days. Most of which r activated automatically in the event of a failure of another system. The crew may only get an annunciator light to inform them that a backup system has been activated. No further action necessary.
There is a thing called the ram air turbine (RAT), that is automatically deployed if the plane has lost all its engine power. It is a mini turbine that rotates and generates power as the wind goes across it (suppose the plane is still moving at the time), and this power gives the pilots basic surface controls like pitch up and down and turns and things like that :)
Planes have a turbine which provides electrical power separate from the engine generators. They operate on jet fuel.
In large transport a/c, - a APU to generate hydralic pressure and electrical power. If this is in op, can also be provided by a ramair turbine.
Small jets/prop - either a backup battery/apu- or the control surfaces are controlled by cables.
Nowhere the plane turns into a glider unless the Pilots are very skilled then they might be able to restart the engines and make an save emergency landing
The controls are either hydraulic, wire, or linkage based. They do have battery back up for the hydraulic systems, and everything else would be as normal
electrical power source i would guess
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