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On Tue, 10 Jun 2008 11:24:39 -0700 (PDT), Tina wrote:
Thanks again. My intelligent but ignorant guess ???? is designing canards so that they stall first should not take a genius, but there may be traps I don't see. The world is safe, though, since I don't design airplane. The landing issue you raised is pretty neat, since most of us -- especially Mooney drivers -- are careful about airspeed on final and in the flare, and like to land with the wings almost stalled. But in the case of a canard if that stalls first I think the airplane would very enthusiastically want to pitch forward hard enough to bend the nosewheel! Basically you want to set up your speeds so the main gear touches before the canard stalls in a fully flying condition about 85/90 kts. This gives a wide margin before the canard stalls and reduces the sensitivity to Xwinds. Easier than a full-stall landing; all control surfaces are fully functional plne is highly maneuverable all the way to the ground. At least with the stabilizer still flying the nose might be able to be put down more gently. You've provided some nice insights, thanks. Thx. lol |
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