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#61
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Tim Taylor wrote:
High on Final, Summary Thanks to all that have given input so far. My original intent was to do some modeling before starting the discussion, but this is RAS and it has a life of it's own. So here is the issue. You are high on final and full spoilers are to enough; what do you do? List of options so far: 1. Slip 2. "S" turns 3. Dive until intercepting normal angle for spoilers 4. Dive until near the ground, then decelerate 5. Slow down until intercepting normal angle for spoilers 6. 360 degree turn Unfortunately I still don't have good data for what happens to the polar as speed increases with the spoilers open. Condor was a good suggestion, and I am working to see if I can get meaningful data from it. John Cochrane brought the discussion back to the real point which is what would you use in the real world? It is interesting but not that useful to discuss how you do this at your home airport with 2500 to 9000 feet of runway and know precisely the field elevation. When your aircraft and your own safety are on the line in a real off-field, what are you going to do? What I do must be taken with a grain of salt, because I'm not an instructor, pretty much learned how to deal with field landings by trial and error, have 20 or 30 of them under my belt (5 to 10 in "small" fields), and have yet to do any more damage than scuff up the underside of the nose. First, I *never* fly a normal pattern. I fly directly overhead high enough to make one or more big lazy circles around the field at approach speed, so I can look carefully for fences, wires, rocks, figure out which way the field is sloped, get an idea of the actual wind direction, potential for sink, get a picture of just how high I am above the field, and pick the spot where I plan to touch down. When it becomes clear that I won't be able to make another 360 (and I've found that pretty easy to determine), I shift the circle as needed to approximate an abbreviated downwind, base, and final, and will use spoilers, landing flaps, slips, adjustments to the circle, etc., to get myself into the field as best I can. I never let myself get out of reach or visibility to the touch down point, and keep plenty of energy in case it becomes clear that I need to make a last second shift to a different touch down point (and that has happened more than once). Using this approach, I've never found myself too high or low to land when I commit to final approach... Marc |
#62
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On Oct 21, 12:13 pm, Tim Taylor wrote:
[...] It is purely an academic exercise from a safety discussion we had about what are the best steps to follow if you are high on final. I am trying to look at the difference between several suggested techniques if full spoilers are not enough. Since I was a participant in the original discussion, I feel obliged to throw in my $0.02 even though the thread has been hijacked. Truth in advertising: while I am a CFI-G, the vast majority of my dual given has been in powered airplanes. First, Tim's method works for him and probably for many other pilots. This does not mean that it works for all pilots, or even most pilots. By analogy, some maneuvers might be a piece-of-cake for a proficient aerobatic pilot (that would not be me) but deadly for others. The low airspeed drag-it-in kind of approach that some have advocated for power planes falls into this category. One of the skills an instructor must bring to the table is the ability to figure out what approach is best for the student and teach that. The aerodynamics of Tim's maneuver - slow down and get on the "back side" of the polar - mean that the plane has lost both potential and kinetic energy. The two methods lose comparable amounts of potential energy, so the loss of kinetic energy is significant. Loss of kinetic energy also means loss of maneuverability in all axes, due to reduced airflow over the control surfaces. So, a glider that has slowed and hits big sink will take longer to recover than one with a higher airspeed, due to reduced elevator effectiveness. Also, the slower glider is just a few knots above stall, so a rather small wind shear (headwind-to-tailwind) will lead to a stall and more loss of altitude. For this reason alone I would be uncomfortable teaching it to new pilots. |
#63
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Brian wrote:
Looking at a polar is exactly why it works. It is called Speed to fly. It really only works well when you have some headwind. It does work somewhat in calm conditions but is really not very effective. It probably doesn't work at all in a tailwind condition. First I thought that you were pulling our legs, but it seems you're actually serious. Every year a couple of pilots die because they are too slow on approach. Where I fly, a student will fail his checkride big time if he's only one knot below the yellow triangle on final. *Especially* with a headwind. If you don't understand this, I *strongly* recommend you talk to a knowledgeble instructor. |
#64
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![]() Author: John Smith Date/Time: 17:40 24 October 2007= First I thought that you were pulling our legs, but it seems you're actuall= y serious.Every year a couple of pilots die because they are too slow on ap= proach. Where I fly, a student will fail his checkride big time if he's onl= y one knot below the yellow triangle on final.=20 =20 - =20 Whilst I understand your sentiment, I think this is over the top. The yello= w triangle is best approach speed at all up weight. For a glider that takes water ballast, this may well be 2-3 knots higher th= an the best approach speed at dry weight. ie one knot slower than yellow tr= iangle may be higher than 1.3x stall speed for particular set-up. =20 I have found out the hard way about too slow approaches. My SLMG best engin= e speed is 49 knots which is lower than the approach speed of 55 knots. Whe= n the engine does not start at low level, with wet wings and an uphill land= ing, you find out that the extra speed is required to enable a flare, and o= nly incidentally to prevent a stall/spin. =20 Rory __________________________________________________ _______________ Celeb spotting =96 Play CelebMashup and win cool prizes https://www.celebmashup.com= |
#65
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![]() "5Z" wrote in message ups.com... perhaps a 270 degree turn from base to final. But only if the weather is considered to be benign. I watched an ASW-22BL do this at a fairly low altitude while going into a fairly short field on a relatively calm day and it made sense. Due to the ship's low sink rate, the pilot was able to drop perhaps 100' and also end up slightly farther away from the touchdown spot. My gosh, an honestly new idea (at least to me). In my book, that qualifies as #7. It would not be my first choice, but if you allow yourself get to the point where your best choices are behind you, the 270 degree turn from base to final could be the better of several bad options. Vaughn |
#66
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Rory O'Conor wrote:
Whilst I understand your sentiment, I think this is over the top. The yello= w triangle is best approach speed at all up weight. For a glider that takes water ballast, this may well be 2-3 knots higher th= an the best approach speed at dry weight. ie one knot slower than yellow tr= iangle may be higher than 1.3x stall speed for particular set-up. The point is not the triangle. The point is that the student has to call out a target speed and then hold that speed. 5 knots more is tolerated, but 1 knot below is not. Simply not. No way. Period. Now if the student calls out a target speed lower than the yellow triangle, the expert will ask him why. If the student can explain, then it may be ok. On the other hand, if there is a headwind, the student must compensate for this. Rule of thumb is add 1/2 wind speed. (And certainly not slower than without wind, as some other hero suggested.) Again, the expert will ask what wind speed the student estimates and why. As for water ballast, well, I've yet to see a student who flyes with ballast on his checkride. |
#67
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![]() On Oct 22, 7:57 am, wrote: On Oct 21, 11:13 am, T= im Taylor wrote:[snip] If you are THAT much too high, wouldn't it also be = prudent to consider a large 360? It may not be pretty, but let's face it, = if you have I would join the crowd voting a 360 turn on final, a score of 0/10. =20 If you are cool about scratching at 400ft AGL then fine, but if you like to= terminate your thermalling by 800ft AGL then dont consider it. The workloa= d when turning low down is enormous and you need to be prepared to push the= nose groundwards against your instincts if the speed shows any sign of ble= eding off. =20 Dont do full turns below the height you would be prepared to do them when s= cratching. =20 Rory __________________________________________________ _______________ Celeb spotting =96 Play CelebMashup and win cool prizes https://www.celebmashup.com= |
#68
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Tims summary is a good one, thanks!
I have to add my thinking, open to scrutiny. 1- whatever needs to be done to get the a/c to an acceptable landing position above and before the field needs to be done early, to minimise ground effects. (theoretically, if this is adhered to, the problems wouldnt eventuate, as the pilot would have noticed his/her extra altitude before arriving at final and modified the curcuit to suit.) So, slips, s turns etc, must be initiated as soon as the over-energy issue is recognised. 2-if the pilot is high-energy when arriving in the flare it is way too late, a long or harsh landing is inevitable. concluding the above, s turns are going to be a logical option, as you are just extending your base turn, then back again toward the field and repeat at a reasonable altitude, into the wind. Unfortunately, the turns will be at a higher speed, sloppily co-ordinated with the brakes out, so if you survive them, you will probably land correctly! The issue is one of observation, the fact is there has been previos mis-observation, so, will the pilot suddenly realise? - possibly not. The more time that is taken to realise it, the more serios the problem results. Quite the conundrum! thanks for a great post bagger |
#69
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![]() My gosh, an honestly new idea (at least to me). In my book, that qualifies as #7. It would not be my first choice, but if you allow yourself get to the point where your best choices are behind you, the 270 degree turn from base to final could be the better of several bad options. My choice, given this situation. would be one or more figure 8's with all turns toward the runway. In a 270, the first third of the turn is heading away from the runway - not good down low if you hit unexpected sink. Tony V. "6N" |
#70
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![]() Every year a couple of pilots die because they are too slow on approach. Where I fly, a student will fail his checkride big time if he's only one knot below the yellow triangle on final. Assuming the U.S., not likely. I admit that being slow on final is bad news, but the Practical Test Standard for the private pilot exam calls for +10/-5 knots as being acceptable for a final approach speed (page 1-16 - see below). If one of my students was "pink slipped" for being one knot slow on final, I would advise him to challenge the failure - and he would win. An examiner simply does not have that kind of latitude. If the applicant flies to the PTS, he gets his license. I agree that if there is a headwind, "recommended approach airspeed" will be higher than the "yellow trangle". Tony V. LANDINGS Q. TASK: NORMAL AND CROSSWIND LANDING NOTE: If a crosswind condition does not exist, the applicant’s knowledge of crosswind elements shall be evaluated through oral testing. REFERENCES: Soaring Flight Manual, Glider Flight Manual. Objective. To determine that the applicant: 1. Exhibits knowledge of the elements related to normal and crosswind approach and landing procedures. 2. Adjusts flaps, spoilers, or dive brakes, as appropriate. 3. Maintains recommended approach airspeed, +10/-5 knots. |
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