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I am a long term lurker and have a question regarding landing tailwheel
airplanes in a crosswind. I have about 250 hours in a Piper PA-12 Super Cruiser. The other day during a very routine crosswind landing I started heading for the weeds faster than I new what to do. I had a fairly gentle cross wind from the left. I had cancelled out all sideways drift by lowering my left wing and aligned the plane with the runway with right rudder. At touchdown, everything seemed perfect. That is when all hell broke loose. As soon as I touched down, I started a very fast turn to the right. At one point I was headed right between two runway light. As I was deciding that "between" was not a bad place to be, I finally managed to straighten everything out and managed to stay on the runway. In talking to my mechanic as soon as I touched down (I was sure there was a mechanical problem), he figured that with all of the right rudder needed to keep things straight, that my tailwheel just sent me to the right once it touched down. My question is, what was really going on here? Should my tailwheel have released (castored) when I touched down? Your thoughts are greatly appreciated. Thanks. Tom |
#2
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![]() wrote in message ... I am a long term lurker and have a question regarding landing tailwheel airplanes in a crosswind. I have about 250 hours in a Piper PA-12 Super Cruiser. The other day during a very routine crosswind landing I started heading for the weeds faster than I new what to do. [...] In talking to my mechanic as soon as I touched down (I was sure there was a mechanical problem), he figured that with all of the right rudder needed to keep things straight, that my tailwheel just sent me to the right once it touched down. My question is, what was really going on here? Should my tailwheel have released (castored) when I touched down? Your thoughts are greatly appreciated. Thanks. Tom I had that happen to me recently in a Taylorcraft and thankfully I straddled the runway lights and had enough width on the runway to get her tracking straight again. It must have been a gust or windshear, only thing I can figure. Maule tailwheel will break free and swivel when it takes a notion, but it has always behaved when planted on the runway at landing time. It doesn't lock per se but does have something of a detent. I had the wing down into the crosswind just like the seagulls do, but somehow as soon as we touched down the wind turned us. It was the closest thing to a ground-loop I ever had. If I had it to do over again I would have done a wheel landing, or a go-around. |
#3
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If I remember right, (and that would be a minor miracle :-)the Cruiser
came with a free castoring tailwheel I think, but it's been a long time :-)) Do you have a Scott or a Maule on the airplane, or the original tailwheel? If it's the original, with your experience and the wind you are describing, it sounds very much like a hung up tailwheel spring that kinked out on you then released as the full weight of the airplane centered in the "new direction". It's really hard to tell, and the answer would be in your memory on how the pedals felt at the exact instant the airplane swerved to the right. If you think back, did the pedal LEAD your foot, and did the airplane swerve at the exact instant the tail contacted the runway? This would be a clue if you could remember that! Dudley Henriques International Fighter Pilots Fellowship for email; take out the trash wrote in message ... I am a long term lurker and have a question regarding landing tailwheel airplanes in a crosswind. I have about 250 hours in a Piper PA-12 Super Cruiser. The other day during a very routine crosswind landing I started heading for the weeds faster than I new what to do. I had a fairly gentle cross wind from the left. I had cancelled out all sideways drift by lowering my left wing and aligned the plane with the runway with right rudder. At touchdown, everything seemed perfect. That is when all hell broke loose. As soon as I touched down, I started a very fast turn to the right. At one point I was headed right between two runway light. As I was deciding that "between" was not a bad place to be, I finally managed to straighten everything out and managed to stay on the runway. In talking to my mechanic as soon as I touched down (I was sure there was a mechanical problem), he figured that with all of the right rudder needed to keep things straight, that my tailwheel just sent me to the right once it touched down. My question is, what was really going on here? Should my tailwheel have released (castored) when I touched down? Your thoughts are greatly appreciated. Thanks. Tom |
#5
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I hesitate to try and get too specific with this because it's been so
long ago for me :-). I seem to remember we had a Scott 3200 tailwheel on one of our line PA18's and it always functioned perfectly. Did you try putting the tail up on a stand braced at the spring attach points, then have someone check the tailwheel angle against the rudder displacement as you work the pedals?. I'd simply have the nearest A&P check it out. My system for these things was to check them out backwards. I'd check everything to see if it was working as it should, and if something didn't look right at that point, I'd have the guys check it over. :-) One thing flying wise, if you were holding in right rudder at contact, the tailwheel would have been cocked right. If you were holding in that rudder and came down solid on the tail at ground contact, it could have temporarily jammed it right on you. I've seen this happen a few times. Just a thought. Good luck. I'm sure it's no biggie, but have it checked out anyway. Dudley wrote in message ... I was hoping to get an answer from Dudley. Our plane has a Scott tailwheel. When you talk about a hung up tailwheel spring, are you talking about the small spring internal to the tailwheel. Should the tailwheel release in such a situation? As to your question regarding if the tailwheel "lead" my foot, I think it may have. I was actually a little confused, when I think back, as to what was going on with my feet! Not that there was any time to think when it happened. Not sure if the swerve happened the exact instance the tailwheel touched, but I think that is a good possibility. Tom In article et, says... If I remember right, (and that would be a minor miracle :-)the Cruiser came with a free castoring tailwheel I think, but it's been a long time :-)) Do you have a Scott or a Maule on the airplane, or the original tailwheel? If it's the original, with your experience and the wind you are describing, it sounds very much like a hung up tailwheel spring that kinked out on you then released as the full weight of the airplane centered in the "new direction". It's really hard to tell, and the answer would be in your memory on how the pedals felt at the exact instant the airplane swerved to the right. If you think back, did the pedal LEAD your foot, and did the airplane swerve at the exact instant the tail contacted the runway? This would be a clue if you could remember that! Dudley Henriques International Fighter Pilots Fellowship for email; take out the trash |
#6
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![]() One thing flying wise, if you were holding in right rudder at contact, the tailwheel would have been cocked right. If you were holding in that rudder and came down solid on the tail at ground contact, it could have temporarily jammed it right on you. I've seen this happen a few times. I think I have experienced that. As another poster suggested, it's an argument for wheelies! Happily the number of instances is slight, but it seems to me that if I am going to swerve on takeoff, it is always to the left, and if I am going to swerve on landing, it is always to the right. all the best -- Dan Ford email: (put Cubdriver in subject line) Warbird's Forum www.warbirdforum.com Piper Cub Forum www.pipercubforum.com the blog www.danford.net |
#7
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"Cub Driver" wrote in message
... but it seems to me that if I am going to swerve on takeoff, it is always to the left, and if I am going to swerve on landing, it is always to the right. That makes since Dan since as you add power for take off, you create 3 factors trying to make your plane go to the left. 1) Torque 2) Corkscrew slipstream 3) Gyroscopic effect when you lift the tail. All of these cause you to add just a little more right pedal (unless you already have too much) to keep it straight down the centerline and not to the left. As you're landing, you're reducing power and speed which in turn reduces each one of the above effects causing you to use less right pedal, or perhaps even a little left pedal to keep it straight or from going to the right. PJ ============================================ Here's to the duck who swam a lake and never lost a feather, May sometime another year, we all be back together. JJW ============================================ |
#8
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It's a "sometimes issue" with some Scott's, but if you have an original
tailwheel on the Cub, I don't think that one malfunctions all that much, at least I don'r ever remember having a problem with them. Dudley "Cub Driver" wrote in message ... One thing flying wise, if you were holding in right rudder at contact, the tailwheel would have been cocked right. If you were holding in that rudder and came down solid on the tail at ground contact, it could have temporarily jammed it right on you. I've seen this happen a few times. I think I have experienced that. As another poster suggested, it's an argument for wheelies! Happily the number of instances is slight, but it seems to me that if I am going to swerve on takeoff, it is always to the left, and if I am going to swerve on landing, it is always to the right. all the best -- Dan Ford email: (put Cubdriver in subject line) Warbird's Forum www.warbirdforum.com Piper Cub Forum www.pipercubforum.com the blog www.danford.net |
#9
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Wheel landing or full-stall?
How wide was the runway? Did you keep the rudder and aileron in or relax and neutralize the controls once the wheels were on? Did you suck the stick full back into your gut? If you don't pull it all the way, you don't get enough pressure on the tailwheel. wrote: I am a long term lurker and have a question regarding landing tailwheel airplanes in a crosswind. I have about 250 hours in a Piper PA-12 Super Cruiser. The other day during a very routine crosswind landing I started heading for the weeds faster than I new what to do. I had a fairly gentle cross wind from the left. I had cancelled out all sideways drift by lowering my left wing and aligned the plane with the runway with right rudder. At touchdown, everything seemed perfect. That is when all hell broke loose. As soon as I touched down, I started a very fast turn to the right. At one point I was headed right between two runway light. As I was deciding that "between" was not a bad place to be, I finally managed to straighten everything out and managed to stay on the runway. In talking to my mechanic as soon as I touched down (I was sure there was a mechanical problem), he figured that with all of the right rudder needed to keep things straight, that my tailwheel just sent me to the right once it touched down. My question is, what was really going on here? Should my tailwheel have released (castored) when I touched down? Your thoughts are greatly appreciated. Thanks. Tom |
#10
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