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There is the question. I'm in a mood today. Have you flown your
favorite aircraft with zero or near zero indicated airspeed? I'm talking about controlled flight and predictable outcomes. Let the games begin. I'm so freaking tired of beach volleyball and the bull**** olympics that is full of professionals. Whoooooppppss I digress Zero IAS. Why is it important to pilots? And I'm talking about in flight, not sitting on the ramp with the engine off. |
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I have done zero indicated airspeed routinely while flying acro- the top of
a hammerhead, tail slides, and lomcevaks come to mind. |
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"Ol Shy & Bashful" wrote in message
... There is the question. I'm in a mood today. Have you flown your favorite aircraft with zero or near zero indicated airspeed? Yup. This past Tuesday. Water in the pitot line. It wasn't much fun, because I was pretty rusty. The ASI went to 60MPH and just stayed there after I rotated. When I pitched up, it dropped to zero, but I kept climbing. When I was flying straignt and level, it seemed to clear up, but when I was landing, it stayed at 80. I ended up dropping it a few feet when it stalled, but the ASI still said 80. |
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Ol Shy & Bashful wrote:
There is the question. I'm in a mood today. Have you flown your favorite aircraft with zero or near zero indicated airspeed? I have flown an older (I mean, really old) glider that had a venturi instead of a pitot, and the thing would happily drop to zero (not that it was normally flying much faster :-) whenever you set it into a mildly aggressive slip... --Sylvain |
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Ol Shy & Bashful wrote:
There is the question. I'm in a mood today. Have you flown your favorite aircraft with zero or near zero indicated airspeed? I'm talking about controlled flight and predictable outcomes. Let the games begin. I'm so freaking tired of beach volleyball and the bull**** olympics that is full of professionals. Whoooooppppss I digress Zero IAS. Why is it important to pilots? And I'm talking about in flight, not sitting on the ramp with the engine off. 1959 C-150 with 40' flaps and drooped wingtips. about 1/2 throttle, FULL flaps and climbing 100 FPM at ZERO indicated air speed. I would guess is was near 50+ but with the pitot tube at slow air speeds and high AOA it read 0. |
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On Aug 15, 3:00 pm, "Ol Shy & Bashful" wrote:
There is the question. I'm in a mood today. Have you flown your favorite aircraft with zero or near zero indicated airspeed? I'm talking about controlled flight and predictable outcomes. Let the games begin. I'm so freaking tired of beach volleyball and the bull**** olympics that is full of professionals. Whoooooppppss I digress Zero IAS. Why is it important to pilots? And I'm talking about in flight, not sitting on the ramp with the engine off. Ancient history, but the truth, On my IFR flight test, I cut the throttle of the C172 I was flying on the takeoff run -- the airspeed needle wouldn't come off zero. I announced the problem, probably with a curse -- I wanted that rating, was at 199.2 hours total time, and so ready! The examiner said "Go anyway." Even now I am not sure I was flying a legal airplane, but I do think my decision to chop the throttle told him I'd probably make decent decisions as a pilot. I will admit partial panel (needle, ball, and wind noise) was interesting, but it was a tired 172 and spoke pretty loudly about its airspeed. Turns out there was a bug that managed to hit the pitot dead center on the airplane's last flight. I wonder now if testing the pitot heater cooked it in place. Two questions: during a flight test with an examiner, who is PIC? I'm thinking here about taking responsibility for taking off. I assume I was responsible, and probably showed poor judgment in taking off, even with the go ahead from the examiner. Second question, was the airplane legal without an airspeed indicator? Even if the flight was NOT legal, I am not tearing up the card that says "Instruments" |
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"Ol Shy & Bashful" wrote in news:68fc8555-c715-436a-
: There is the question. I'm in a mood today. Have you flown your favorite aircraft with zero or near zero indicated airspeed? Yep Bertie |
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