Flight Control Manual Fokker F27 -

In 2020, the Dutch Aviation Museum digitized the complete 1982 edition of the F27 Flight Control Manual. It remains one of the most downloaded technical documents in the museum’s collection – not only by pilots but by aerospace engineers studying human-centered design. The Flight Control Manual Fokker F27 is more than a set of procedures. It is a moral document. It teaches that flight control is not about domination but about partnership – between human muscle and aerodynamic force, between written word and muscle memory, between Fokker’s engineers and the unknown pilot flying a thirty-year-old Friendship into a gravel strip at dusk. Every page whispers the same warning: the aircraft will forgive much, but not ignorance. And every page offers the same promise: if you study, practice, and respect the controls, the F27 will be your most loyal friend in the sky.

Instructors often said: “The manual is your co-pilot. But you must become the manual.” Checkrides included a “blindfold test” – covering control surface position indicators – where the candidate had to state control surface angles from control column position alone. A typical question: “Flaps 25°, speed 120 KIAS, power 25 lbs torque, engine out left. Where is the rudder trim?” The answer was not in a table but in a feel described in Section 4.3. Flight Control Manual Fokker F27

The most famous section of the manual is the “Propeller Asymmetry” chapter. With two Rolls-Royce Dart engines, each turning a large four-blade propeller, an engine failure at low speed produces yaw far beyond rudder authority if not caught immediately. The manual prescribes a sequence memorized by generations of Friendship pilots: “Power – Identify – Feather – Rudder – Trim – Climb.” But uniquely, it adds: “If rudder pedal force exceeds 150 lbs, you have waited too long. Reduce power on the good engine before you lose control.” That counterintuitive advice – reduce power to regain control – saved lives in the 1960s and remains a classic case study in upset recovery training. The F27 flight control manual evolved through hard experience. The 1972 revision followed a series of tailplane icing accidents. Fokker discovered that a thin layer of rough ice on the horizontal stabilizer could cause elevator buffet and increased stick forces. The manual added a new procedure: “In known icing, do not retract flaps beyond 15° until clear of ice. Flap retraction changes tail angle of attack. Ice contamination may lead to loss of pitch authority.” In 2020, the Dutch Aviation Museum digitized the

The 1982 revision incorporated lessons from a runway excursion in South America caused by improper rudder use in crosswind landing. The manual expanded its crosswind technique section: “In strong crosswind, use wing-down method. Do not use rudder alone. Crab until flare, then kick straight with aileron into wind. The F27’s high wing makes it susceptible to crosswind gusts during decrab. Be aggressive but precise.” It is a moral document

The manual also contains “Pilot Notes” – margin comments from decades of Fokker test pilots. One famous margin entry, initialed “H.v.d.B.” (likely Hendrik van der Bijl, chief test pilot), reads: “Never let go of the yoke in turbulence. The F27 wants to fly straight, but it wants your help.” Another: “On landing, do not flare like a jet. Fly it onto the runway. Hold off. Then hold off again. Then it lands.” Today, most F27s have been retired from first-world airlines, but hundreds still fly cargo in remote regions: the Canadian Arctic, the Amazon, the highlands of Papua New Guinea. Pilots there learn from photocopies of the original manual, often tattered and annotated in multiple languages. The manual’s influence extends beyond the F27 itself. The prose style – direct, urgent, yet explanatory – became a model for later Fokker aircraft: the F50, F70, and F100. Even Airbus, with its fly-by-wire philosophy, borrowed the F27 manual’s principle of “control law transparency” – the idea that pilots should understand exactly what the aircraft is doing, even when computers intervene.