787
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787
Some of you may not care about this, but this is my day job, and I always like to share about it.
I am a flight test engineer at the Boeing Company, and today we received certification of the 787 from the FAA. This is a HUGE deal. I have been working on this airplane heavily for the last 5 years, doing testing for everything from developing control systems for the airplane on a 777, to simulation, to ground testing, and finally flight testing. In the ~1.5 years since we started flying, I've been on 120 flights, all of which have been exciting, challenging, and fun.
I'm feeling pretty proud today!
This is my office in the sky...
I am a flight test engineer at the Boeing Company, and today we received certification of the 787 from the FAA. This is a HUGE deal. I have been working on this airplane heavily for the last 5 years, doing testing for everything from developing control systems for the airplane on a 777, to simulation, to ground testing, and finally flight testing. In the ~1.5 years since we started flying, I've been on 120 flights, all of which have been exciting, challenging, and fun.
I'm feeling pretty proud today!
This is my office in the sky...
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That's incredibly exciting! I know my brother who is also a pilot would love a job like that. Glad you're living your dream! I'll forward your pics to him.
My work place looks like OACs. .... keyboards and terminals. Don't get me wrong it can be very challenging as well, but the excitement level can't compare to yours. Kudos!
My work place looks like OACs. .... keyboards and terminals. Don't get me wrong it can be very challenging as well, but the excitement level can't compare to yours. Kudos!
nice twizz. we got all the upholstery back for our cessna this week. new engine is going on in the next few weeks. then hopefully not too much longer til it's back in the air. no doubt could use some of the equipment in your "office" although I'm pretty sure your office wouldn't fit in the cabin of a 182!
Don't wait up, I'm off to kill Summer....
Wow, that is impressive...thanks for the photos. What are you monitoring there? The machinist 3 doors down from me (not the one that builds the radio units for the predators) machines a lot of parts for the Rolls Royce jet engines...he's always cussing at their choices of metals...and often says it's stupid. I'm just sayin'.
"86% of the time it works 100% of the time".
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Ha!Brazen wrote:Wow, that is impressive...thanks for the photos. What are you monitoring there? The machinist 3 doors down from me (not the one that builds the radio units for the predators) machines a lot of parts for the Rolls Royce jet engines...he's always cussing at their choices of metals...and often says it's stupid. I'm just sayin'.
I'm in the aerodynamics/stability and control group, so I monitor things like airspeeds, angle of attack, sideslip, g's, etc while doing maneuvers like stalls, wind up turns (pulling g's), pushovers (zero g's), etc. Part of what I do is to watch for data quality, how well the pilot flew the maneuver or how good the air quality was, and part of what I do is for safety, to make sure the pilot doesn't put us in a situation where we would lose control. Its usually pretty exciting (think crazy roller coaster)
That's awesome falls! I'm doing my flight training in a 152, so a 182 seems like a cadillac to me!
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twizzstyle: this is super cool and thanks for sharing!
After reading your post where the word "control" came up, I got excited.
I'm a controls and dynamic systems guy by training, and this semester I'm teaching a course on controls to seniors in mechanical engineering, and also teach a senior capstone design course -- a few of the design projects, believe it or not, are ski designs.
Anyway, in my controls class (I've taught this class about 5 times now) I try to bring in examples where control systems are used. So, I'm intrigued by the control system(s) on the 787. Can you elaborate a little? How complicated are they? What's the structure? Are they as simple as PID loops, or something more sophisticated? I'm assuming the simulations use models -- what kind of models are they? I'd really like to share this information in class, if you don't mind....
After reading your post where the word "control" came up, I got excited.
I'm a controls and dynamic systems guy by training, and this semester I'm teaching a course on controls to seniors in mechanical engineering, and also teach a senior capstone design course -- a few of the design projects, believe it or not, are ski designs.
Anyway, in my controls class (I've taught this class about 5 times now) I try to bring in examples where control systems are used. So, I'm intrigued by the control system(s) on the 787. Can you elaborate a little? How complicated are they? What's the structure? Are they as simple as PID loops, or something more sophisticated? I'm assuming the simulations use models -- what kind of models are they? I'd really like to share this information in class, if you don't mind....