I subscribe to the theory that after slowing below stall speed, like during
the landing roll, flaps do not add any lift to speak of, mainly drag.
-Frank
"Ramapriya" wrote in message
oups.com...
Hi folks,
I've always seen spoilers and flaps being deployed fully upon landing.
While the reason for spoilers is straightforward, I haven't yet figured
why flaps are deployed too.
Isn't the landing roll the time when you'd be wanting all the load of
the craft to be on the main wheels, which is where the brakes are,
instead of creating lift whereby the load gets transferred onto the
wings and possibly lessening the braking effect? I know the plane would
be decelerating all the time with the engines throttled back fully and
even the forward thrust depolyed, perhaps, yet why create any lift
possibility at all? Wouldn't braking be more effective with no flaps
deployed? Or does the drag produced by the flaps compensate for the
lift?
I suspect I've missed something really fundamental
)
Ramapriya