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There is a co-ordination exercise called Dutch Roll. The idea is to rapidly
roll the plane from zero to +nn degress to -nn degrees without stoping at zero then back to zero while keeping the nose fixed at a point on the horizon. When doing this correctly are the rudder and ailerons co-ordinated or opposite? Why? |
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On Thu, 01 Jan 2004 14:58:41 GMT, "Matthew Jurotich"
wrote: There is a co-ordination exercise called Dutch Roll. The idea is to rapidly roll the plane from zero to +nn degress to -nn degrees without stoping at zero then back to zero while keeping the nose fixed at a point on the horizon. When doing this correctly are the rudder and ailerons co-ordinated or opposite? Why? Coordinated. The wing isn't banked enough to actually start a turn, and your rudder is mostly correcting adverse yaw when doing things that quickly. I've tried it. The maneuver (which I'm told is misnamed, there's another aerobatic maneuver which is apparantly properly called a Dutch Roll) is coordinated. I thought it was cross-controlled until I actually tried it. Rob |
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"Matthew Jurotich" wrote
There is a co-ordination exercise called Dutch Roll. The idea is to rapidly roll the plane from zero to +nn degress to -nn degrees without stoping at zero then back to zero while keeping the nose fixed at a point on the horizon. When doing this correctly are the rudder and ailerons co-ordinated or opposite? Why? From William Kershner's "The Flight Instructor's Manual" "Have the student line up with a good reference on the horizon and roll the airplane from bank to bank, keeping the nose pinned on the reference. For instance, have the student start (with the nose lined up with the reference) by using left aileron and left rudder, as in starting a turn. Before the nose has a chance to move he should use right rudder so that the point is held. Then he applies right aileron and more right rudder to roll the airplane to the right, stopping any turn tendency with opposite (left) rudder, and so on. Elevators are part of the exercise and the altitude should stay within 100 ft of the starting value. You can also use the coordination exercise at lower airspeeds (you set the power and trim the airplane) so that the student can see the effects of adverse yaw, particularly in slow flight. Again, don't have long sessions of this exercise and be prepared for some wild swingings of the nose when he first does the maneuver (and maybe later, too). And, for Pete's sake, don't call this maneuver a "Dutch roll." Dutch roll, a stability and control term, is a condition of a coupling of lateral-directional oscillations with the nose yawing as the airplane rolls from bank to bank; the object here is to keep the nose on the point." Bob Moore ATP CFI |
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Read, Stick And Rudder... Wolfgang Langewiesche
Denny Matthew Jurotich" wrote in When doing this correctly are the rudder and ailerons co-ordinated or opposite? Why? |
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The proper use of the term "Dutch Roll" applies to a characteristic of
the lateral stability of an aircraft, inherent in all aircraft but thoroughly investigated during the test flight and certification stage. The manoeuvre can be seen by simply letting go of the stick in trimmed level flight and yawing the aircraft. Ideally one would provide one yaw impulse and then let the aircraft return itself to steady flight while observing the dynamics of the recovery (how many oscillations, damping etc.) but it is possible to keep the manoeuvre going by alternating the impulse on the rudder pedals with each change in yaw direction. Note that I have only mentioned the rudder above. This manoeuvre does not involve aileron input. In fact a pilot could get himself into trouble by trying to correct with aileron input and could produce amplified pilot induced oscillations. The dynamics are as follows: With the first rudder input comes a yaw impulse. This causes the opposite wing (starboard wing if port rudder input) to swing forward - gaining a few knots (and lift) - and the other wing to swing back - losing a few knots. This is why the aircraft seems to roll during the yaw. If the pilot keeps alternating the rudder inputs this will cause an oscillating yaw condition. Looking at the wing tip you would see it describing an ellipse on the horizon. The way to stop this motion is not to fight it. Simply ceasing control input will rapidly stabilise the aircraft, remember that aircraft are designed to be laterally stable (in most cases), loosing part of the tailplane or rudder could make this a problem. Trying to fight the motion with control inputs will only prolong the motion at best, and amplify it at worst. Your natural instinct to correct in a particular direction with aileron is working against you because at the point that you feel you should correct is the point where the factors influencing the motion are changing direction and you are now only adding to them. If a pilot got caught out he could stall one wing tip while overcorrecting and end up in a spiral or even spin. Unlikely but possible. Incidentally this manoeuvre is best experienced in the tail of the aircraft. The pilots are usually near the wing junction and as such are on the centre line of a helix that the the passengers in the rear of the fuselage are following. Dennis O'Connor wrote: Read, Stick And Rudder... Wolfgang Langewiesche Denny Matthew Jurotich" wrote in When doing this correctly are the rudder and ailerons co-ordinated or opposite? Why? |
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![]() The proper use of the term "Dutch Roll" applies to a characteristic of the lateral stability of an aircraft, i One of the more famous aircraft subject to Dutch Roll was the Northrop YB-49 turbojet Flying Wing bomber. The military test pilot Robert Cardenas (who took over the project after Glen Edwards was killed) recalled that the bombardier used to get seasick from the oscillations. (The YB-49 is cited as the predecessor of the B-2 Spirit stealth bomber, because it was from Northrop and had the identical span. In fact, the B-2 more closely suggests the German "nurflugel" designed by the Horten brothers. www.warbirdforum.com/edwards.htm ) all the best -- Dan Ford email: see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
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Cub Driver wrote:
The proper use of the term "Dutch Roll" applies to a characteristic of the lateral stability of an aircraft, i One of the more famous aircraft subject to Dutch Roll was the Northrop YB-49 turbojet Flying Wing bomber. The military test pilot Robert Cardenas (who took over the project after Glen Edwards was killed) recalled that the bombardier used to get seasick from the oscillations. (The YB-49 is cited as the predecessor of the B-2 Spirit stealth bomber, because it was from Northrop and had the identical span. In fact, the B-2 more closely suggests the German "nurflugel" designed by the Horten brothers. www.warbirdforum.com/edwards.htm ) all the best -- Dan Ford email: see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com Yup I would definately believe that. The lateral stability in those tail-less designs was achieved through wing sweep rather than the usual vertical fin. I would imagine that they had interesting spin characteristics as well, although I don't remember it being mentioned anywhere. The father of flying wing / tail-less designs was Alexander Lippish. |
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![]() I would imagine that they had interesting spin characteristics as well, I think it was Eric Brown who wrote about flying the British all-wing aircraft, and having it almost rotate backward on him. This is probably exactly what happened to the YB-49 that crashed near Muric (now Edwards AFB) killing the pilot Danny Forbes, co-pilot Glen Edwards, and the crew. There are two files on the Warbird's Forum consisting of interviews with Robert Cardenas, the military test pilot after Edwards, and a very different view from Northrop test pilot Charlie Tucker www.warbirdforum.com/edwards.htm all the best -- Dan Ford email: see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
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"Matthew Jurotich" wrote in message .. .
There is a co-ordination exercise called Dutch Roll. The idea is to rapidly roll the plane from zero to +nn degress to -nn degrees without stoping at zero then back to zero while keeping the nose fixed at a point on the horizon. When doing this correctly are the rudder and ailerons co-ordinated or opposite? Why? Matthew I think this one has been debated for as long as I have been flying (1950's) I was taught a "Dutch Roll" in a Piper J-3 by an instructor with 6 digits in his license number. Put nose on a point, add aileron and use rudder to hold the nose on point. When you reach the maximum of rudder vs aileron and still hold the point, ease out one or other until you reach level coordinated flight, then repeat to the opposite side. Altitude hold is of course required. Anyone who thinks this does not require coordination is not paying attention. I have taught this to a myriad of pilots over the course of my aviation career. Nearly any taildragger pilot uses the technique either conciously or otherwise while making a landing. Some have labeled it a forward slip and pooh poo its use for cross wind landings and prefer the crab type approach with a "kick out" at touchdown. Damned if I can see how that can be done with consistency regardless of aircraft. It has never worked for me in spite of thousands of hours trying it. Note: thousands of hours in a log book do not mean jack @#*& if its all flying straight and level on autopilot and at altitude. My experience has been in the lowest reaches of the airspace system for the most part and at about 3'agl. I will contend the "Dutch Roll", use of aileron vs rudder to prevent a turn, is the most valuable coordination exercise ever developed to train and hone a pilot in the use of each. Each time I get into a different airplane, I will try the dutch roll to see how the aircraft is rigged and see what the limits of the aileron/rudder are for that particular aircraft. When it comes time for a cross wind landing in that airplane I'm not faced with any surprises or lack of control on one axis. Ah what the hell do I know after 12,000 hours crop dusting..... Ol Shy & Bashful |
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