Mirage probe puts spotlight on Dassault's flight computer's behaviour
On
February 1, two experienced Indian Air Force (IAF) pilots died when
their newly upgraded Mirage
2000-I fighter
crashed while taking-off in Bengaluru. A Court of Inquiry (CoI)
investigating the accident is now confronting the worrying
possibility of a glitch in the Mirage 2000’s flight computer that
kicks in without warning, causing the aircraft to behave
unpredictably.
IAF
flight records examined by the CoI have revealed at least four such
incidents in the past. In each of these, a flying Mirage 2000 has,
suddenly and without command from the pilot, jerked its nose towards
the ground. Then, as spontaneously, the nose was jerked upwards. Each
time, the aircraft has continued this up-and-down jerking — termed
“pitch oscillations” — for several seconds before resuming
normal flight.Members of the CoI from the IAF, Hindustan Aeronautics (HAL), the National Aeronautics Laboratory (NAL) and the Aeronautical Development Agency (ADA) are veering round to the belief that such an incident caused the February 1 crash.
In three recorded incidents, the “pitch oscillations” took place at high altitudes, giving the aircraft time to correct itself. However, on February 1, the ill-fated Mirage 2000-I’s flight computer jerked the fighter’s nose down just after it lifted off the runway. With the aircraft barely five metres off the runway, it had no time, or altitude to correct itself. In a fraction of a second, the nose slammed onto the runway, the front undercarriage (nose wheel) sheered off, and the aircraft careened across the runway, fatally out of control. Read More
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