In aerobatics, the cobra maneuver (often shortened to the cobra), also called dynamic deceleration, among other names, is a dramatic and demanding maneuver in which an airplane flying at a moderate speed abruptly raises its nose momentarily to a vertical and slightly past vertical attitude, causing an extremely high angle of attack and momentarily stalling the plane, making a full-body air brake before dropping back to normal position, during which the aircraft does not change effective altitude.

It is sometimes called Pugachev's Cobra named after Viktor Pugachev, the first pilot to bring the maneuver to the public eye.

The maneuver relies on the ability of the plane to be able to quickly change angle of attack (alpha) without overloading the airframe, and sufficient engine thrust to maintain nearly constant altitude through the entire move, but also post-stall stability and aerodynamics that allows for the recovery to level flight. The maneuver demands accurate pitch control, alpha stability and engine-versus-inlet compatibility for the aircraft, as well as a high skill level on the part of the pilot.

The cobra maneuver is an example of supermaneuverability, specifically poststall maneuvering. The Herbst maneuver and the helicopter maneuver are similar post-stall maneuvers that are often executed by 4.5th Generation and 5th Generation fighter aircraft employing thrust vectoring.

The maneuver is typically performed at air shows, but could be used as a last-ditch maneuver to force a chaser to overshoot in close-range air combat. The maneuver has never been verified in real combat, although it has been used during mock dogfights and border protection.

Execution (Sukhoi Su-27)

In the case of the Su-27, to execute the maneuver the pilot initially disengages the angle of attack limiter of the plane, normally set at 26°. This action also disengages the g limiter. After that, the pilot pulls back hard on the stick. The aircraft reaches an angle of attack of 90–120° with a slight gain of altitude and a significant loss of speed. When the elevator is centered, the drag at the rear of the plane causes a torque that makes the aircraft pitch forward. At the same time, the pilot adds power to compensate for the reduced lift.

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  • Ideology [she/her]
    ·
    2 years ago

    Like what @CARCOSA said. Masto has technically split into two to four social networks.

    1. The anarcho-lib/anarchist network is mostly lgbt people and allies. Lots of techy transgirls, artists, activists, "activists" and just general comfy posting. There is one ML server (monads.online) but they are full. Was hoping someone else would start one.
    2. Switter. Switter is actually one of the largest parts of the network. Most instances block or mute them because they post a high volume of risque adverts, but I haven't seen too many places being swerfy about it.
    3. Japanese Mastodon. Pawoo.net is the official pixiv social network platform (so it's very large). They attract a lot of alt-righty weeb servers, but I've heard very little about pawoo itself since they banned loli. Most in category 1 don't really federate with them.
    4. The alt-right/fash/freeze peach network. Everyone hates them, and they hate that everyone hates them. They like to buy domain names or take over poorly moderated servers to harrass category 1 people (mostly transpeople), mostly out of spite for people putting their servers on the #fediblock list (masto people are good at recognizing dogwhistles). But small servers with good admins do a very good job of blocking servers that host people like that. I have seen very little from my pov but I've heard about it from others.

    The founder technically doesn't allow fash on his server but their moderation team is lacking so joining small servers is ideal. Because of the fash servers, it looks on its face like it's going to be problematic, but good instances are way better than twitter mods at supporting their comrades and trying to keep them safe.