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#11
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Suppose you are in the final quarter of a loop maneuver, looking at the
ground. Your speed is high and you are pulling back hard to bring the plane back to level. Can that result in a stall? Think of it this way, the pilot flew into the ground because he/she failed to properly deduce the correct altitude to fly the maneuver based on the then current conditions (density altitude, aircraft condition, pilot condition, terrain, etc.) Many times an underlying cause is pilot ego. Showing off on the spur of the moment to impress others without considering all the above factors. |
#12
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The last words of many a redneck pilot are "Hey, y'all, watch THIS."
Jim Showing off on the spur of the moment to impress others without considering all the above factors. |
#13
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He flew right into the ground. I can only assume that he was applying back
stick pressure. It's been a long time since I saw the video on the news. Bob Gardner "T o d d P a t t i s t" wrote in message ... "Bob Gardner" wrote: Once upon a time there was a geology instructor at Western Washington University who was also an aerobatic pilot. He got hooked up with someone over in the Middle East (king of Jordan?) and went there to teach him aerobatics...the Arab was already jet-qualified. He did exactly what you describe, only on television news. Hard way to watch someone die. Bob, Can you describe the accident for me a bit? Did the aircraft head to the ground, break up or roll? In the last quarter of the loop you'd be at nearly maximum speed. Stalling requires that you bring the aircraft to its maximum lift coefficient and doing that at high speed means the pilot will be experiencing a very high G-load. Depending on the aircraft and the loop exit speed, this might be enough to produce structural failure. Assuming it does not fail structurally, I would next expect behavior somewhat similar to a straight ahead level stall, except that the nose of the aircraft (and path of the aircraft) is pitched down prior to finishing the loop. If the stall progresses smoothly outward from the root to the tips, the wings may stay reasonably level (relative to the flight path), but lift would decrease delaying/stopping the final portion of the loop. You'd find yourself headed towards the ground at high speed unable to pull out. Other aircraft may not stall smoothly and symmetrically and could snap roll in this configuration. High speed stalls are pretty rough on the airframe (and pilot). They are an area that's extremely hard to explore safely. Do not spin this aircraft. If the aircraft does enter a spin it will return to earth without further attention on the part of the aeronaut. (first handbook issued with the Curtis-Wright flyer) |
#14
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Yea, but who cares. Stalls are nothing once you've done aerobatics.
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#15
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Nah, it's more like this, "Here, hold my beer, and watch this!"
tom "RST Engineering" wrote in message ... The last words of many a redneck pilot are "Hey, y'all, watch THIS." Jim |
#16
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"RST Engineering" wrote in message
... The last words of many a redneck pilot are "Hey, y'all, watch THIS." Jim Usually followed by the need to go one up which is preceeded by: "Hell, that ain't nuthin'..." Jay B |
#17
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![]() Tony wrote: pull back hard, kick in some rudder and you'll get a neat snap roll. Right into the ground! John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) |
#18
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![]() "John Galban" wrote in message ups.com... Tony wrote: pull back hard, kick in some rudder and you'll get a neat snap roll. Right into the ground! John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) If your gonna go, go with a bang! |
#19
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![]() Stubby wrote: Suppose you are in the final quarter of a loop maneuver, looking at the ground. Your speed is high and you are pulling back hard to bring the plane back to level. Can that result in a stall? One can most easily burble the wings across the top of a loop by holding a touch too much pressure... it happens all the time. What takes real skill is stalling it over and over and over again all the way around. :-) My Decathlon-calibrated arm automatically pulls the right amount of pressure to loop the airplane. When it encountered a loop in an Extra 300 for the first time, it was still giving Decathlon-scale tugs to an airplane that really didn't want or need all that much help. I must have stalled it about 8 or 10 times going around that first loop. I was working and sweating and grunting and wondering what in the slam-hell was going on while the GIB was laughing at me so hard he almost cried. She stalled going straight up and going straight down, going fast and going slowly, and every possible combination thereof. The only saving grace to such a miserable performance? If I could just repeat it exactly a few more times, I can name it! -Dave Russell N2S-3 |
#20
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"T o d d P a t t i s t" wrote in
In the last quarter of the loop you'd be at nearly maximum speed. Not necessarily. Or even usually. The exit speed depends on the speed at the top and the tighness of the pullout. Other aircraft may not stall smoothly and symmetrically and could snap roll in this configuration. High speed stalls are pretty rough on the airframe (and pilot). They are an area that's extremely hard to explore safely. Who said this? Below Va there perfectly safe. Power-on makes them pretty hairy though. moo |
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