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#21
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Short, soft fields are really pretty easy to get into; they're a bitch to
get out of though -- Jim Carter Rogers, Arkansas "TheSmokingGnu" wrote in message ... Flaps down! Unless it's a short, soft field, in which case you should reconsider using it at all. TheSmokingGnu |
#22
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I was taught that way too, even though I assured all instructors that I
could barely afford to fly a fixed gear aircraft and was pretty sure I'd never be flying a retract. I've got Johnson bar flaps, so there's really not much chance of confusing flaps with gear in my TP. I'd keep flaps down for a soft field and flaps up and on the brakes for a short field. mike "Newps" wrote in message . .. Erik wrote: Regardless of the type of landing, even short field or soft, I've always been taught to clean up the aircraft after I'm clear of the runway. I don't touch anything until then. So, keep them down, I've been taught. That is the weekend pilot information you got there. You give up performance but you'll never retract the wheels on the ground. It's a newbie answer. Are you a newbie? |
#23
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Jim Carter wrote:
Short, soft fields are really pretty easy to get into; they're a bitch to get out of though Yes, you generally have to wait until the field is no longer soft ... or truck out the airplane. :-) Matt |
#24
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On Apr 25, 2:54 pm, "Maxwell" wrote:
I was taught to lift the flaps immediately upon touch down on soft field landings. My instructors stated getting more weight on the brakes as soon as possible, would facilitate a quicker stop than leaving the flaps down for drag, and loosing some braking power to the extra lift. However, during my last BFR, the instructor corrected me very sharply. He insisted you get more drag from the flaps by leaving them down until you slowed to taxi speed, than the benefit of more weight on the brakes. What is the general consensus of the group? Flaps up or down, after touchdown on a soft field landing? I think you are mixing up short field and soft field. In an FAA soft field (which oddly, is never short) you leave the flaps down and use no brakes. -robert, CFII |
#25
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On Apr 25, 5:20 pm, "Maxwell" wrote:
"Maxwell" wrote in message m... I was taught to lift the flaps immediately upon touch down on soft field landings. My instructors stated getting more weight on the brakes as soon as possible, would facilitate a quicker stop than leaving the flaps down for drag, and loosing some braking power to the extra lift. However, during my last BFR, the instructor corrected me very sharply. He insisted you get more drag from the flaps by leaving them down until you slowed to taxi speed, than the benefit of more weight on the brakes. What is the general consensus of the group? Flaps up or down, after touchdown on a soft field landing? Yes, my mistake guy. I did mean short field landing. Well that makes more sense. Different POH's recommend flaps up or not touch the flaps. Getting the flaps up will make the landing shorter but has caused many pilots to accidently raise the gear, so many CFIs say don't touch anything on roll out. Personally, I raise the flaps because I take my Mooney to real soft fields in Mexico. However, for those that use it as an academic exercise it may be more important to make sure your student doesn't grab the gear switch (which is hard to stop as a CFII). -Robert, CFII |
#26
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Maxwell wrote:
I was taught to lift the flaps immediately upon touch down on soft field landings. My instructors stated getting more weight on the brakes as soon as possible, would facilitate a quicker stop than leaving the flaps down for drag, and loosing some braking power to the extra lift. However, during my last BFR, the instructor corrected me very sharply. He insisted you get more drag from the flaps by leaving them down until you slowed to taxi speed, than the benefit of more weight on the brakes. What is the general consensus of the group? Flaps up or down, after touchdown on a soft field landing? First of all, have you checked your POH for clues? Second, I think you have short and soft confused. Soft fields slow the plane without brakes with surface drag. You don't really want to STOP on a soft field, as you might even sink in. I was taught to think ahead, so I didn't have to stop while taxiing on soft conditions. I'd leave the flaps deployed while I concentrated on using the elevator to keep the nose gear off the turf as much as possible, which will also provide plenty of aero braking. Short, paved fields are a different story. My Beech Sundowner has much less braking ability with the flaps deployed, so I raise them as a course of habit on pavement. The Piper PA-28 variations I've flown had much better braking with the flaps out, raising the flaps didn't offer anywhere near the braking improvement as with the Beech. |
#27
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Newps wrote:
You need an instructor that plays in the dirt alot. I'm not an instructor but I will outperform any of your typical college flyboy instructors for short field landings. That's what I'm good at, but don't ask me to help you fly a turn around a point. The POH is general info, you want to do it at a higher level of performance you find the people who do it all the time. Some of them may even be instructors, like the people in McCall, ID. Couldn't agree more. When doing pretend short field ops on a nice long paved runway, the procedures in most POHs works just fine. When flying into and out of an actual short strip, you're going to want to do everything you can to maximize performance. One example of this is the short field takeoff procedure I've seen in many POHs that recommends standing on the brakes, going to full power, then releasing the brakes. I never see anyone do this at short, high backcountry strips (except for noobs). The rolling start is well known to be superior. As to the original question, there's a good reason for raising the flaps just after touchdown (works best with manual flaps). Assuming that it's really a short field, you can expect to be applying the brakes rather vigorously, ASAP. If the wings are still carrying a lot of the aircraft weight, it will be very easy to lock up the brakes inadvertently. If you killed the lift by raising the flaps, you'll have much more effective braking. You'll also be less likely to inadvertently flat-spot, or put a hole in your tire. Something I've seen happen more than a few times on planes practicing short field landings. John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) -- Message posted via AviationKB.com http://www.aviationkb.com/Uwe/Forums...ation/200704/1 |
#28
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It's the old "my instructor said..." story instead of reading the book. The
Airplane Flying Handbook says, on page 8-20, "If flaps are used, it is generally inadvisable to retract them during the after-landing roll because the need for flap retraction is usually less important than the need for total concentration on maintaining full control of the airplane." Gotta wonder (1) why the flaps-up instructor doesn't go by the book, and (2) why you swallow his story without asking for documentation for his method. Bob Gardner "Maxwell" wrote in message m... I was taught to lift the flaps immediately upon touch down on soft field landings. My instructors stated getting more weight on the brakes as soon as possible, would facilitate a quicker stop than leaving the flaps down for drag, and loosing some braking power to the extra lift. However, during my last BFR, the instructor corrected me very sharply. He insisted you get more drag from the flaps by leaving them down until you slowed to taxi speed, than the benefit of more weight on the brakes. What is the general consensus of the group? Flaps up or down, after touchdown on a soft field landing? |
#29
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On Apr 25, 2:54 pm, "Maxwell" wrote:
I was taught to lift the flaps immediately upon touch down on soft field landings. My instructors stated getting more weight on the brakes as soon as possible, would facilitate a quicker stop than leaving the flaps down for drag, and loosing some braking power to the extra lift. However, during my last BFR, the instructor corrected me very sharply. He insisted you get more drag from the flaps by leaving them down until you slowed to taxi speed, than the benefit of more weight on the brakes. What is the general consensus of the group? Flaps up or down, after touchdown on a soft field landing? Please ignore my comments about soft-field landings (although I still think you should use your reference material when your instructor says something questionable instead of accepting it as gospel). The Airplane Flying Handbook is silent on retracting flaps after touching down on short field...go by the POH recommendation. Instructors are often wrong...I know because I are one. Bob Gardner |
#30
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![]() JGalban via AviationKB.com wrote: One example of this is the short field takeoff procedure I've seen in many POHs that recommends standing on the brakes, going to full power, then releasing the brakes. I never see anyone do this at short, high backcountry strips (except for noobs). The rolling start is well known to be superior. Yep, even a 20 foot perpindicular start to the actual runway helps. Ain't no way I'm going to sit at the approach end of any runway and runup to full power with the brakes on in my plane. If you want that we'll do it in your plane. As to the original question, there's a good reason for raising the flaps just after touchdown (works best with manual flaps). Assuming that it's really a short field, you can expect to be applying the brakes rather vigorously, ASAP. I've found best performance to be a carrier type landing. Fly it into the ground at minimum speed, as soon as you hit lock the brakes, stick full back and hit the flap switch. Let up slightly on the brakes every now and again, I've found just a little slippage is better than totally locked. Non pavement only, of course. |
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