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#1
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Is it better (in a small GA aircraft) to maintain altitude using minor changes
in pitch and trim alone, or using both pitch/trim and throttle adjustments? I'm asking just about maintaining altitude once there, not climbing or descending to an altitude. |
#2
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On May 16, 4:59*pm, Mxsmanic wrote:
Is it better (in a small GA aircraft) to maintain altitude using minor changes in pitch and trim alone, or using both pitch/trim and throttle adjustments? I'm asking just about maintaining altitude once there, not climbing or descending to an altitude. Define "better". Better yet hit pause. Cheers |
#3
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More flaps, don't you realize your e name is giving him the real
insider clue -- that flap extension and retraction is the superior way? On May 16, 6:27 am, More_Flaps wrote: On May 16, 4:59 pm, Mxsmanic wrote: Is it better (in a small GA aircraft) to maintain altitude using minor changes in pitch and trim alone, or using both pitch/trim and throttle adjustments? I'm asking just about maintaining altitude once there, not climbing or descending to an altitude. Define "better". Better yet hit pause. Cheers |
#4
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On May 16, 10:35*pm, Tina wrote:
More flaps, don't you realize your e name is giving him the real insider clue -- that flap extension and retraction is the superior way? Yep, second only to adjusting the landing gear and dumping ballast. But tell me T, what are you in? Cheers |
#5
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Mxsmanic wrote:
Is it better (in a small GA aircraft) to maintain altitude using minor changes in pitch and trim alone, or using both pitch/trim and throttle adjustments? I'm asking just about maintaining altitude once there, not climbing or descending to an altitude. Generally speaking, you will establish level flight with pitch, adjust the power, and trim the airplane. At this point level flight is maintained by extremely subtle and ever constant "caressing" in pitch. -- Dudley Henriques |
#6
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On May 15, 11:59 pm, Mxsmanic wrote:
Is it better (in a small GA aircraft) to maintain altitude using minor changes in pitch and trim alone, or using both pitch/trim and throttle adjustments? I'm asking just about maintaining altitude once there, not climbing or descending to an altitude. It depends how stable the airplane is. In my Arrow, I used occasional trim adjustments once things settled down. However, in turbulence, more active yoke intervention is required rather than constant trim changes. Best solution on long trips is an autopilot with altitude hold ... :-) |
#7
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In rec.aviation.piloting Mxsmanic wrote:
Is it better (in a small GA aircraft) to maintain altitude using minor changes in pitch and trim alone, or using both pitch/trim and throttle adjustments? I'm asking just about maintaining altitude once there, not climbing or descending to an altitude. Well, if you had actually read any of the books by experts you go on about, you would know this. Or had taken actual instruction, but I digress. Once established in cruise and assuming power and trim have been properly adjusted, you will in general have two factors that will cause the altitude to change. One is vertical wind, i.e. turbulance and thermals. This usually requires yoke input. The other is the airplane gets lighter as you burn off fuel. This is what trim is for. Theoretically the combination of temperature and pressure could cause the engine output power to change requiring throttle and mixture adjustments, but I don't see that happening in the typical C-172 class flight. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
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Dudley Henriques writes:
Generally speaking, you will establish level flight with pitch, adjust the power, and trim the airplane. At this point level flight is maintained by extremely subtle and ever constant "caressing" in pitch. How sensitive is the trim? I find myself wondering this as I adjust trim in the sim. The sim seems a bit coarse, although I'm doing much better at holding altitude in the C182 (which has no altitude hold for the autopilot) than I was doing a week or two ago. When I leave the runway, the aircraft (C182 or C172) seems to climb very briskly with take-off trim set. After climbing a few hundred feet I find that I must hold the stick forward and trim nose down significantly in order to get the aircraft to level off a bit. This is with full throttle (and pitch all the way forward, in the C182). I'm not sure if I should just continue trimming to level flight with the throttle set forward, or back off on the throttle substantially to maintain altitude. I also don't know if this brisk climb behavior (with full tanks but just me and equal-weight ballast in the right seat) is typical of the actual aircraft (I have had mixed replies to my various inquiries). |
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#10
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Mxsmanic wrote:
writes: One is vertical wind, i.e. turbulance and thermals. Are thermals strong enough to raise a small GA aircraft in the same way that they raise gliders? That is, could a small GA powered aircraft remain aloft indefinitely by riding thermals, or is it just not a good-enough glider? I've had a thermal lift me up 100 feet in a couple of seconds. The thought of which should have you running to the bathroom. |
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