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#1
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To date I have a whopping 8 hours in the Arrow. The last 2.9 were by
far the most fun since the two flights involved maneuvers and landings (lots of landings). The more I get to fly N2104T, the more I like it. Things are becoming more and more comfortable and familiar. Still have lots to learn but I'm having fun. Hopefully, I'll be able to get some solo time soon, maybe in a week or so. Solo will be rather interesting since I haven't done so since last August, right before my FBO melted down. Overall impressions to date: - Float down the runway? Nope, it ain't a C-172. Much harder to float down the runway in an Arrow. Easier to contact said runway with carrier landing force though. - Pull the power back and you can drop like a streamlined manhole cover if you need to. I'll bet forward slips are fun (have yet to try them). - Things are busier in the pattern with the addition of gear, more speeds to remember, CS prop, extra mantras you chant (My personal favorite is "Pump(s), Red(s), Blue(s), Greens" on short final for the last check of boost pump on, mixture full rich, prop full forward, and 3 in the green). - The ground moves by faster now. Not that I'm doing a whole lot of looking down but it takes less time flying to/from the practice area. - 200 HP at sea level on a cool evening and lightly loaded is fun. - I'd almost forgotten how much better I like fuel injection. Have experienced lots of carb ice situations in the Archer during evening instrument lessons. One less thing to worry about. - When working on a Complex endorsement, your CFI has a whole new set of options for messing with you. "What, no 3-green...what ya gonna do there Mr. Pilot?". - Engine out scenarios work way better when you pull the prop back. Very good object lesson in drag reduction. - Would rather have airspeed in knots...though, I learned that you can setup the GNS-430 for MPH...but...why? :-) - Stalls are rather unimpressive, similar to the Archer. Buffet...yawn...that's it. A good thing. - Wing on the bottom vs. wing on the top: Really doesn't matter. I'm just happy to own something with a wing. :-) - It's really cool to (honestly) say "Yes it is" when asked "Is that your Arrow?". The closest I was able to do so in the past was answer "Yes, it's ours by the hour" when asked about newer model rentals I happed to be flying in. -- Jack Allison PP-ASEL-IA Student Student Arrow Owner, N2104T "When once you have tasted flight, you will forever walk the Earth with your eyes turned skyward, for there you have been, and there you will always long to return" - Leonardo Da Vinci (Remove the obvious from address to reply via e-mail) |
#2
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Second only to a new student who comes back from his first flight full of
enthusiasum with an ear to ear grin is the new owner who has just came back from one of his first "comfortable" flights in his new airplane. Are you having fun or what Jack??!! ![]() - When working on a Complex endorsement, your CFI has a whole new set of options for messing with you. "What, no 3-green...what ya gonna do there Mr. Pilot?". You're going to relax and get the checklist out. Don't try to memorize what to do for this one. If you memorize it for one plane, you'll screw something up in another plane. This one isn't an emergency... it's a situation... it just becomes an emergency if you are actually forced to put it down with the wheels in the wells. Keep having fun! Jim |
#3
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- Pull the power back and you can drop like a streamlined manhole cover
if you need to. I'll bet forward slips are fun (have yet to try them). A forward slip in our Pathfinder is like riding a peregrine falcon in a vertical dive. The world gets big, really, really fast. - 200 HP at sea level on a cool evening and lightly loaded is fun. Ain't it? I remember my first flight in our Pathfinder, with a 145 pound CFI, light on fuel, in the winter. Yee ha! All I could see was sky. There is simply no substitute for horsepower. - I'd almost forgotten how much better I like fuel injection. Have experienced lots of carb ice situations in the Archer during evening instrument lessons. One less thing to worry about. First time I've ever heard of a Cherokee icing. It's never happened to me, even in the damp, cold Midwest. (Cessnas are another story...) - It's really cool to (honestly) say "Yes it is" when asked "Is that your Arrow?". Pride of ownership is worth all the headaches and hassles. (Just keep repeating that at annual time, over and over...) ;-) -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#4
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Jay Honeck wrote:
A forward slip in our Pathfinder is like riding a peregrine falcon in a vertical dive. The world gets big, really, really fast. Hmmm, sounds like I need to try a few the next time out with my instructor. First time I've ever heard of a Cherokee icing. It's never happened to me, even in the damp, cold Midwest. (Cessnas are another story...) Yep, I was surprised as well but on several instrument lessons at night, I'd be flying a DME arc or a hold and all of a sudden realize that I'm holding some back pressure to maintain altitude...look at the tach and notice that we've lost maybe 150 RPM. Apply carb heat, power drops then vrooommm, we're back at the initial power setting. Pride of ownership is worth all the headaches and hassles. (Just keep repeating that at annual time, over and over...) I'll try to remember this one. -- Jack Allison PP-ASEL-IA Student Student Arrow Owner, N2104T "When once you have tasted flight, you will forever walk the Earth with your eyes turned skyward, for there you have been, and there you will always long to return" - Leonardo Da Vinci (Remove the obvious from address to reply via e-mail) |
#5
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Jay Honeck wrote:
- I'd almost forgotten how much better I like fuel injection. Have experienced lots of carb ice situations in the Archer during evening instrument lessons. One less thing to worry about. First time I've ever heard of a Cherokee icing. It's never happened to me, even in the damp, cold Midwest. (Cessnas are another story...) You'll probably never need to know about it unless you fly in IMC. Try flying at holding or approach airspeed inside a cloud for a while in a carbureted Cherokee without the c-heat on. |
#6
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Jack Allison writes:
- Would rather have airspeed in knots...though, I learned that you can setup the GNS-430 for MPH...but...why? :-) So the speeds look bigger. -jav |
#7
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Jack Allison wrote:
Overall impressions to date: - Float down the runway? Nope, it ain't a C-172. Much harder to float down the runway in an Arrow. Easier to contact said runway with carrier landing force though. What speeds are you using? Downwind: Base: Final: Short Final: Over the Threshhold: - Pull the power back and you can drop like a streamlined manhole cover if you need to. I'll bet forward slips are fun (have yet to try them). Theory question: What is the minimum Indicated Airspeed for a slip? Is there a difference between right and left slips? - Things are busier in the pattern with the addition of gear, more speeds to remember, CS prop, extra mantras you chant (My personal favorite is "Pump(s), Red(s), Blue(s), Greens" on short final for the last check of boost pump on, mixture full rich, prop full forward, and 3 in the green). Remember that one of the greatest causes of gear up accidents is a go around. The pilot brings the gear up reenters the pattern and forgets to put it back down. Jack, have you downloaded the PA28 review from the AOPA Aviation Safety Institute website? Which engine priming system does your aircraft have? |
#8
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What speeds are you using?
Downwind: Base: Final: Short Final: Over the Threshhold: Something that's always worked for me ... Take Vso (bottom of white arc) - reduce it by 5% for every 10% under MAUW then multiply it by ... 1.3 for over the fence speed 1.4 for Base 1.5 for downwind Works for all aircraft I've flown (although I add a bit in C172 - Vso (adjusted) can be as low as 28 knots - so at 28 * 1.3 (approx 37) it still hasn't stalled, but controls are getting pretty mushy (any people who bring them over the fence at 65 to 70 wonder why they float!) |
#9
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One of aviation's Rules of Thumb...
an approximate best approach speed is found halfway between the top and bottom of the white arc. Cockpit Colin wrote: Something that's always worked for me ... Take Vso (bottom of white arc) - reduce it by 5% for every 10% under MAUW then multiply it by ... 1.3 for over the fence speed 1.4 for Base 1.5 for downwind Works for all aircraft I've flown (although I add a bit in C172 - Vso (adjusted) can be as low as 28 knots - so at 28 * 1.3 (approx 37) it still hasn't stalled, but controls are getting pretty mushy (any people who bring them over the fence at 65 to 70 wonder why they float!) |
#10
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![]() "john smith" wrote in message ... One of aviation's Rules of Thumb... an approximate best approach speed is found halfway between the top and bottom of the white arc. It's certainly never going to kill you, but it doesn't make any adjustments for being light (say 1 pilot, and minimal fuel) - which can make approx 13 knots difference to the ideal approach speed in the Arrow (and 10 knots difference to your dirty stall speed). Since I started calculating approach speeds I've been amazed at how the consistancy of my landings has improved - even 5 knots makes a difference. |
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