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#1
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I've got a question for the group. Suppose you find yourself in the
following situation: You are flying a C182, landing on runway 22. The ATIS lists the winds as 240 at 10. The windsock is not visible. You approach at a normal airspeed, full flaps, coming over the numbers at 65 kts. The mains touchdown, followed by the nosegear. Slight right aileron is being maintained into the wind. Everything is aligned properly and on the centerline at touchdown. After touchdown the plane starts to drift to the right side of the runway. You try to correct by pointing the nose back to the centerline with left rudder. The nose seems to be pointed left, but the plane is still drifting right. It feels like any more left rudder could result in bad skidding and/or a ground loop. What are the proper control inputs to correct the situation? Left aileron would be in the _opposite_ direction of the indicated crosswind. Increasing back pressure would make the nosewheel even less effective. --Dan |
#2
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you've got the right idea, you want to get the nose gear onto the
runway as soon as possible, for wind like that you can center the ailerons, you only really need continous input when theres a strong cross wind. centering the ailerons should counter the drift. use left toe brake if you feel the aircraft skidding when using rudder input. the sooner you get the nose gear to the runway the sooner you'll have directional control |
#3
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Dan,
Left aileron would be in the _opposite_ direction of the indicated crosswind. Well, seems your nose indicates something else, doesn't it? -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#4
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Dan wrote:
I've got a question for the group. Suppose you find yourself in the following situation: You are flying a C182, landing on runway 22. The ATIS lists the winds as 240 at 10. The windsock is not visible. You approach at a normal airspeed, full flaps, coming over the numbers at 65 kts. The mains touchdown, followed by the nosegear. Slight right aileron is being maintained into the wind. Everything is aligned properly and on the centerline at touchdown. After touchdown the plane starts to drift to the right side of the runway. You try to correct by pointing the nose back to the centerline with left rudder. The nose seems to be pointed left, but the plane is still drifting right. It feels like any more left rudder could result in bad skidding and/or a ground loop. What are the proper control inputs to correct the situation? Left aileron would be in the _opposite_ direction of the indicated crosswind. Increasing back pressure would make the nosewheel even less effective. It depends on the reason for the drift. If it is because you landed without being aligned, then I would hold the aileron into the wind and correct with rudder. If it is because the wind really is from the other side, then I would immediately correct the aileron position. However, you would know the latter based on the control inputs required to maintain alignment on final. You should have no doubt as to the wind direction prior to touch down. It sounds like the airplane wasn't aligned with the runway at touch down and you just need more rudder to get things back on track. Matt |
#5
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Dan wrote:
What are the proper control inputs to correct the situation? Yoke full aft, full right aileron, left rudder as necessary to maintain directional control, flaps up. |
#6
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On May 19, 11:26 pm, Dan wrote:
I've got a question for the group. Suppose you find yourself in the following situation: You are flying a C182, landing on runway 22. The ATIS lists the winds as 240 at 10. The windsock is not visible. You approach at a normal airspeed, full flaps, coming over the numbers at 65 kts. The mains touchdown, followed by the nosegear. Slight right aileron is being maintained into the wind. Everything is aligned properly and on the centerline at touchdown. After touchdown the plane starts to drift to the right side of the runway. You try to correct by pointing the nose back to the centerline with left rudder. The nose seems to be pointed left, but the plane is still drifting right. It feels like any more left rudder could result in bad skidding and/or a ground loop. What are the proper control inputs to correct the situation? Left aileron would be in the _opposite_ direction of the indicated crosswind. Increasing back pressure would make the nosewheel even less effective. --Dan My immediate thought was to schedule some more cross wind instruction with a good instructor! We are not talking about much wind at all. ATIS wind is not much of a crosswind - 20deg @ 10kts? I'd be inclined to use less aileron and more rudder if its drifting right into the wind. I sure as hell wouldn't drop the nosewheel to the runway and try to force nosewheel steering with the directional control in question! And for sure I wouldn't try to correct it with any brakes. Keep in mind, if its light enough to drift, its still light enough on the wheels they'll lock up and skid real easy with any brakes. I'd be putting in lots of rudder, easing full aft elevator to keep weight off the nose gear, and whatever aileron needed to keep wings level. If that doesn't work, I'd be giving serious consideration to making an immediate go around to take a 2nd look at what is happening. Makes more sense than going off into the weeds while obviously being behind the aircraft? Soaring Buzzard Infamous Worldwide Pilot/Instructor |
#7
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This simply illustrates why you can't trust ATIS to give you anything more
than a general sense of the conditions you might encounter. Winds change. ATIS stations sometimes see different wind conditions than the touchdown point, due to obstacles and wind direction. With an ATIS reading of a 20 degree off-centerline, and 10 knots of wind, I would fly a normal approach and make the corrections necessary to keep the airplane pointed straight down the runway with no drift during the flare and landing. I would not pre-suppose anything. On the other hand, if ATIS was indicating a 90 degree crosswind at 10 knots, and the smoke from chimneys, or waves on a nearby lake, or the windsock confirmed that information, I would *assume* that I had a noticeable crosswind to deal with, and would be mentally prepared for it... BUT, I'd still wait until final approach to crank in gross corrections to correct drift, and would apply whatever corrections were necessary in the flare to keep the airplane aligned and kill any drift. Bottom line.. ATIS gives you an indication of what the winds were at one point on the airfield at a given time. The conditions at your touchdown spot may be different. KB "Dan" wrote in message ps.com... I've got a question for the group. Suppose you find yourself in the following situation: You are flying a C182, landing on runway 22. The ATIS lists the winds as 240 at 10. The windsock is not visible. You approach at a normal airspeed, full flaps, coming over the numbers at 65 kts. The mains touchdown, followed by the nosegear. Slight right aileron is being maintained into the wind. Everything is aligned properly and on the centerline at touchdown. After touchdown the plane starts to drift to the right side of the runway. You try to correct by pointing the nose back to the centerline with left rudder. The nose seems to be pointed left, but the plane is still drifting right. It feels like any more left rudder could result in bad skidding and/or a ground loop. What are the proper control inputs to correct the situation? Left aileron would be in the _opposite_ direction of the indicated crosswind. Increasing back pressure would make the nosewheel even less effective. --Dan |
#8
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On May 20, 6:34 am, john smith wrote:
Dan wrote: What are the proper control inputs to correct the situation? Yoke full aft, full right aileron, left rudder as necessary to maintain directional control, flaps up. OK, so you're saying that based on the situation, I should trust the ATIS, not the fact that the plane is drifting right? Should the ailerons _always_ be into the wind regardless of actual aircraft drift? How much rudder in one direction or the other can a tricycle gear light plane take without groundlooping? I am working on a checkout in this C182 after about 400 hours in Pipers. Compared to what I am used to, the Cessna ground handling (especially after touchdown) seems very squirrley. I've had the same experience with the couple hours I have in 152s and 172s as well. --Dan |
#9
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Could it be the ground effect differences between low wing and high wing
aircraft that are contributing to this issue? "Dan" wrote in message oups.com... On May 20, 6:34 am, john smith wrote: Dan wrote: What are the proper control inputs to correct the situation? Yoke full aft, full right aileron, left rudder as necessary to maintain directional control, flaps up. OK, so you're saying that based on the situation, I should trust the ATIS, not the fact that the plane is drifting right? Should the ailerons _always_ be into the wind regardless of actual aircraft drift? How much rudder in one direction or the other can a tricycle gear light plane take without groundlooping? I am working on a checkout in this C182 after about 400 hours in Pipers. Compared to what I am used to, the Cessna ground handling (especially after touchdown) seems very squirrley. I've had the same experience with the couple hours I have in 152s and 172s as well. --Dan |
#10
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Dan wrote:
On May 20, 6:34 am, john smith wrote: Dan wrote: What are the proper control inputs to correct the situation? Yoke full aft, full right aileron, left rudder as necessary to maintain directional control, flaps up. OK, so you're saying that based on the situation, I should trust the ATIS, not the fact that the plane is drifting right? Should the ailerons _always_ be into the wind regardless of actual aircraft drift? As a previous poster wrote, ATIS is only a guide. Keep in mind that the wind is only measured at one place on the airport. Ailerons should always be properly deflected when taxiing, taking off or landing. What direction to apply them and how much will depend on the direction the aircraft is moving and the direction the wind is striking the aircraft from. Taxiing with a tailwind is different than taxiing with a headwind or crosswind. Your instructor should have covered that with you in your primary training. If they didn't find a new instructor. The best recommendation is to get some taildragger training with an experienced taildragger instructor. THAT will really teach you about proper control position and use in an aircraft. How much rudder in one direction or the other can a tricycle gear light plane take without groundlooping? You only apply as much rudder as necessary to maintain control in the direction you want to go. |
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