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Ok if someone could explain me that, I will be very happy
I have a simulator, if i pitch up OK, but if I pitch down, my plane stalls and i don't understand why. thank's |
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In article , Grandss grandss@nospam wrote:
Ok if someone could explain me that, I will be very happy I have a simulator, if i pitch up OK, but if I pitch down, my plane stalls and i don't understand why. Your simulator is broken (or you have not described the situation accurately). rg |
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"Grandss" grandss@nospam wrote in message ...
Ok if someone could explain me that, I will be very happy I have a simulator, if i pitch up OK, but if I pitch down, my plane stalls and i don't understand why. It should be just the opposite: pitching up too far can cause a stall, but pitching down is supposed to *recover* from a stall. So there are two possibilities. Either the simulator is flawed, or else you're mistaken to think that the plane is stalling when you pitch down. Can you tell us exactly what the plane does that leads you to conclude that it is stalling? --Gary |
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Grandss wrote:
I have a simulator, if i pitch up OK, but if I pitch down, my plane stalls and i don't understand why. You're inverted. - Andrew |
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Gary Drescher a écrit :
"Grandss" grandss@nospam wrote in message ... Ok if someone could explain me that, I will be very happy I have a simulator, if i pitch up OK, but if I pitch down, my plane stalls and i don't understand why. It should be just the opposite: pitching up too far can cause a stall, but pitching down is supposed to *recover* from a stall. So there are two possibilities. Either the simulator is flawed, or else you're mistaken to think that the plane is stalling when you pitch down. Can you tell us exactly what the plane does that leads you to conclude that it is stalling? --Gary Hi, plane stalls really when i pitch down. I'm not sure to know exactly how it have been determined but i try to explain. A plane stalls in my case if liftcoefficent for a cambered airfoil with a plan trailing edge flap is equals to zero. Flaps to calc. liftcoefficient are landing flaps and ailerons. |
#6
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Bottle to Throttle..........8 hours.
In article , grandss@nospam says... Ok if someone could explain me that, I will be very happy I have a simulator, if i pitch up OK, but if I pitch down, my plane stalls and i don't understand why. thank's |
#7
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![]() "TripFarmer" wrote: Bottle to Throttle..........8 hours. hee-hee! |
#8
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![]() Grandss wrote: Gary Drescher a =E9crit : "Grandss" grandss@nospam wrote in message ... Ok if someone could explain me that, I will be very happy I have a simulator, if i pitch up OK, but if I pitch down, my plane sta= lls and i don't understand why. It should be just the opposite: pitching up too far can cause a stall, = but pitching down is supposed to *recover* from a stall. So there are two possibilities. Either the simulator is flawed, or else you're mistaken to think that the plane is stalling when you pitch down= .. Can you tell us exactly what the plane does that leads you to conclude that= it is stalling? --Gary Hi, plane stalls really when i pitch down. I'm not sure to know exactly how it have been determined but i try to explain. A plane stalls in my case if liftcoefficent for a cambered airfoil with a plan trailing edge flap is equals to zero. Flaps to calc. liftcoefficient are landing flaps and ailerons. Go to your local aero club or flying school. Get into a REAL aeroplane with an instructor and find out what happens when you pitch the nose down. And don't use terms that you don't understand.... |
#9
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In article , grandss@nospam says...
Ok if someone could explain me that, I will be very happy I have a simulator, if i pitch up OK, but if I pitch down, my plane stalls and i don't understand why. thank's Please don't call it a plane. Readers here may take it badly, present company included. |
#10
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![]() If you're on a simulator, maybe your joystick or yolk is set up incorrectly? (pitch reversed). As anyone on this group will tell you in an instant, stalling is not about pitch *per se*, but angle of attack. That said, one pulls up to case a stall, and pushes down to get out of one -- unless you're inverted, or your controls are rigged backwards (which, unfortunately, has been known to happen). -- dave j Grandss wrote: Ok if someone could explain me that, I will be very happy I have a simulator, if i pitch up OK, but if I pitch down, my plane stalls and i don't understand why. thank's |
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