Various of the King Schools knowledge exam prep multimedia materials have some 
footage like that. Probably copyrighted, though. 
 
Dave 
Remove SHIRT to reply directly. 
 
ShawnD2112 wrote: 
 Chuck, 
 You didn't happen to video it, did you?  I've been looking for exactly that 
 kind of footage for my ground school class to show exactly what you've 
 talked about. 
 
 Shawn 
 "PaulaJay1"  wrote in message 
 ... 
 
I did an interesting experiment in my Archer yesterday.  I've read about 
 
 the 
 
wing washout and know the soft stall of my Archer but yeaterday I saw it. 
Using small pieces of duct tape, I put eight, six inch ribbons on the left 
 
 wing 
 
- four along the leading edge, back about 10 inches, and four, 10 inches 
forward of the trailing edge. 
 
At 3,000 AGL, I slowly decreased speed while holding altitude.  For the 
 
 longest 
 
time they all streamed.  Then the most inboard aft "came loose".  Just 
 
 before 
 
the break for the stall, all four close in ribbons were stalling and the 
 
 four 
 
out ribbons were still streaming.  The Archer stall is mild and is a 
 
 series of 
 
scollops.  The outside ribbons, in the area of the ailerons kept 
 
 streaming. 
 
I saw what makes this a forgiving plane and a good choice for the 
 
 occasional 
 
pilot. 
 
Chuck 
 
 
 
 
 
-- 
Dave Butler, software engineer  919-392-4367 
A fool and his money are soon flying more airplane than he can handle. 
 
 
		
	
		
		
		
		
		
	
		 
			
 
			
			
			
				 
            
			
			
            
            
                
			
			
		 
		
	
	
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