View Full Version : Secondary Stall
w3n-a
December 7th 08, 02:04 AM
http://w3n-a.blogspot.com/2008/12/secondary-stall.html
This stall is called a secondary stall since it may occur after a
recovery from a preceding stall. It is caused by attempting to hasten
the completion of a stall recovery before the airplane has regained
sufficient flying speed. When this stall occurs, the back-elevator
pressure should again be released just as in a normal stall recovery.
When sufficient airspeed has been regained, the airplane can then be
returned to straight-and-level flight.
This stall usually occurs when the pilot uses abrupt control input to
return to straight-and-level flight after a stall or spin recovery. It
also occurs when the pilot fails to reduce the angle of attack
sufficiently during stall recovery by not lowering pitch attitude
sufficiently, or by attempting to break the stall by using power
only.
http://w3n-a.blogspot.com/2008/12/secondary-stall.html
brianDG303
December 7th 08, 03:40 AM
Can we block this idiot?
Tuno
December 7th 08, 05:59 AM
> Can we block this idiot?
I reported it (to Google Groups) as spam.
Steve Hix
December 7th 08, 06:33 AM
In article
>,
w3n-a > wrote:
> [snip]
Into the killfile for you.
Dudley Henriques[_2_]
December 7th 08, 01:58 PM
On Dec 6, 9:04*pm, w3n-a > wrote:
> http://w3n-a.blogspot.com/2008/12/secondary-stall.html
>
> This stall is called a secondary stall since it may occur after a
> recovery from a preceding stall. It is caused by attempting to hasten
> the completion of a stall recovery before the airplane has regained
> sufficient flying speed. *When this stall occurs, the back-elevator
> pressure should again be released just as in a normal stall recovery.
> When sufficient airspeed has been regained, the airplane can then be
> returned to straight-and-level flight.
>
> This stall usually occurs when the pilot uses abrupt control input to
> return to straight-and-level flight after a stall or spin recovery. It
> also occurs when the pilot fails to reduce the angle of attack
> sufficiently during stall recovery by not lowering pitch attitude
> sufficiently, or by attempting to break the stall by using power
> only.
>
> http://w3n-a.blogspot.com/2008/12/secondary-stall.html
Usenet's amazing!!! :-)))
WHAT a marketing strategy!!!! The only good thing I can think of about
this is that it might have been placed here by this guy's
competition :-))))))))))))))))))))))))))))
Dudley Henriques
Peter[_4_]
December 8th 08, 02:52 AM
ok, let's give the benefit....................so, what is the
point???????????
"w3n-a" > wrote in message
...
> http://w3n-a.blogspot.com/2008/12/secondary-stall.html
>
> This stall is called a secondary stall since it may occur after a
> recovery from a preceding stall. It is caused by attempting to hasten
> the completion of a stall recovery before the airplane has regained
> sufficient flying speed. When this stall occurs, the back-elevator
> pressure should again be released just as in a normal stall recovery.
> When sufficient airspeed has been regained, the airplane can then be
> returned to straight-and-level flight.
>
> This stall usually occurs when the pilot uses abrupt control input to
> return to straight-and-level flight after a stall or spin recovery. It
> also occurs when the pilot fails to reduce the angle of attack
> sufficiently during stall recovery by not lowering pitch attitude
> sufficiently, or by attempting to break the stall by using power
> only.
>
> http://w3n-a.blogspot.com/2008/12/secondary-stall.html
Steve R.[_2_]
December 8th 08, 02:56 AM
On a fixed wing forum, the info is makes sense and it good to know. On a
rotory wing forum, it's totally irrelevant.
"Peter" > wrote in message
...
> ok, let's give the benefit....................so, what is the
> point???????????
> "w3n-a" > wrote in message
> ...
>> http://w3n-a.blogspot.com/2008/12/secondary-stall.html
>>
>> This stall is called a secondary stall since it may occur after a
>> recovery from a preceding stall. It is caused by attempting to hasten
>> the completion of a stall recovery before the airplane has regained
>> sufficient flying speed. When this stall occurs, the back-elevator
>> pressure should again be released just as in a normal stall recovery.
>> When sufficient airspeed has been regained, the airplane can then be
>> returned to straight-and-level flight.
>>
>> This stall usually occurs when the pilot uses abrupt control input to
>> return to straight-and-level flight after a stall or spin recovery. It
>> also occurs when the pilot fails to reduce the angle of attack
>> sufficiently during stall recovery by not lowering pitch attitude
>> sufficiently, or by attempting to break the stall by using power
>> only.
>>
>> http://w3n-a.blogspot.com/2008/12/secondary-stall.html
>
>
309
December 8th 08, 04:09 AM
You guys have it all wrong: This is what sleepy tow pilots do!
Pete
#309 (and former tow pilot)
December 8th 08, 02:57 PM
On Dec 7, 10:09*pm, 309 > wrote:
> You guys have it all wrong: *This is what sleepy tow pilots do!
>
> Pete
> #309 (and former tow pilot)
This is an aircraft RESTORATION forum. No one here gives a rats's foot
for what sleepy tow pilots do!
Werner Schmidt
December 8th 08, 04:23 PM
Hallo , Du schriebst am 08.12.2008 15:57
> On Dec 7, 10:09 pm, 309 > wrote:
>> You guys have it all wrong: This is what sleepy tow pilots do!
>>
>> Pete
>> #309 (and former tow pilot)
>
> This is an aircraft RESTORATION forum. No one here gives a rats's foot
> for what sleepy tow pilots do!
this ain't no forum, it's usenet. Have a look look at the list of
crossposting, then you'll see the issue.
regards
Werner
Steve R.[_2_]
December 9th 08, 03:58 AM
"Werner Schmidt" > wrote in message
...
> Hallo , Du schriebst am 08.12.2008 15:57
>
>> On Dec 7, 10:09 pm, 309 > wrote:
>>> You guys have it all wrong: This is what sleepy tow pilots do!
>>>
>>> Pete
>>> #309 (and former tow pilot)
>>
>> This is an aircraft RESTORATION forum. No one here gives a rats's foot
>> for what sleepy tow pilots do!
>
> this ain't no forum, it's usenet. Have a look look at the list of
> crossposting, then you'll see the issue.
>
> regards
> Werner
Yup, this guy is posting to Restoration, Rotorcraft, Simulators, and Student
newsgroups.
Beauciphus
December 10th 08, 12:35 PM
"w3n-a" > wrote in message
...
> http://w3n-a.blogspot.com/2008/12/secondary-stall.html
This spammer should be reported to blogger.com at
http://help.blogger.com/?page=contact&skipLogin=true
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