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What a Landing looks like it was flat and way to fast!
http://www.katu.com/news/local/14446792.html When we were in Wisconsin yesterday a guy landed his Champ in the snow alongside the runway. Luckily he was on skis, and was presumably on his way back from the ski plane fly-in in Oshkosh! We didn't see him land, and it was kinda startling, seeing the plane parked off in the deep snow. At first, we thought he had crash-landed. The guy had to go through quite a production to fuel (carrying cans over from the pump -- no way to get the truck to his plane) and to depart (pick up the rear end, and turn the plane around 180 degrees, which looked like no fun at all in the deep snow) -- but he seemed to be having a good time nonetheless. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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It's hard to say it was flat and fast. The snow drag on the mains
would have pitched the nosewheel down even if he was making a soft field landing. Great technique for short fields. Let's see, if you can walk away from it it's a good landing, and if the airplane can be used again, a great one. One out of two, huh? On Jan 28, 9:01*am, NW_Pilot wrote: What a Landing looks like it was flat and way to fast! http://www.katu.com/news/local/14446792.html |
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"Jay Honeck" wrote in
news:Splnj.5393$yE1.1303@attbi_s21: What a Landing looks like it was flat and way to fast! http://www.katu.com/news/local/14446792.html When we were in Wisconsin yesterday a guy landed his Champ in the snow alongside the runway. Luckily he was on skis, and was presumably on his way back from the ski plane fly-in in Oshkosh! Luckily? Wow, good thing those things appeared all the sudden, eh? We didn't see him land, and it was kinda startling, seeing the plane parked off in the deep snow. At first, we thought he had crash-landed. Boggle. The guy had to go through quite a production to fuel (carrying cans over from the pump -- no way to get the truck to his plane) and to depart (pick up the rear end, and turn the plane around 180 degrees, which looked like no fun at all in the deep snow) Uh yeh. -- but he seemed to be having a good time nonetheless. God what an idiot you are. Bertie |
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Tina wrote:
It's hard to say it was flat and fast. The snow drag on the mains would have pitched the nosewheel down even if he was making a soft field landing. Great technique for short fields. Let's see, if you can walk away from it it's a good landing, and if the airplane can be used again, a great one. One out of two, huh? On Jan 28, 9:01 am, NW_Pilot wrote: What a Landing looks like it was flat and way to fast! http://www.katu.com/news/local/14446792.html What always gets me laughing is when the media refers to the aircraft's "top" instead of it's back. You'd think that since the Wright's flew at Kittyhawk these people reporting constantly on aviation would at least have learned that an airplane to a pilot doesn't actually have a "top" :-) -- Dudley Henriques |
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On Jan 28, 6:01*am, NW_Pilot wrote:
What a Landing looks like it was flat and way to fast! http://www.katu.com/news/local/14446792.html I don't have a lot of snow flying experience but I would think that a couple feet of soft powder would be a bad place to land a 172 regardless of the touch down speed. -Robert |
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On Jan 28, 8:01*am, NW_Pilot wrote:
What a Landing looks like it was flat and way to fast! http://www.katu.com/news/local/14446792.html Two things surprise me about this. One - how short the landing "roll" was. It looks like it stopped in about 50 feet. I would have thought it would take a longer skid than that to stop the airplane. Two - the nose gear didn't collapse! Phil |
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On Jan 28, 10:34*am, Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
"Robert M. Gary" wrote in news:3df80bdb-00ac-49f4-baa5- : Yeah, if you're aware of the depth it's not so bad. I've been in snow tha deep without skis and the landing can be tricky, but the airplane will definitely stay upright if you touch down slowly and keep the nose up. Getting out is a bigger problem unless you are very light and have a lot of room and a bit of horseposer, but I've gotten a 150 out of snow that deep.It's definitely a dicey operation though. When I was flying the PA-18 my greatest fear was getting water on the top of the floats. As long as you kept your touch down speed low and your nose high you were fine, but if you let the floats dig in you could end up inverted quickly (so I'm told). The tricky part was doing so when the water was glassy since we didn't have a VSI. You just held the nose up, hanging on the prop, until you heard a splash. If your butt felt a sink before you hit you added power. I would assume that snow flying must be similar. -Robert |
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"Robert M. Gary" wrote in
: On Jan 28, 10:34*am, Bertie the Bunyip wrote: "Robert M. Gary" wrote in news:3df80bdb-00ac-49f4-baa5- : Yeah, if you're aware of the depth it's not so bad. I've been in snow tha deep without skis and the landing can be tricky, but the airplane will definitely stay upright if you touch down slowly and keep the nose up. Getting out is a bigger problem unless you are very light and have a lot o f room and a bit of horseposer, but I've gotten a 150 out of snow that deep.It's definitely a dicey operation though. When I was flying the PA-18 my greatest fear was getting water on the top of the floats. As long as you kept your touch down speed low and your nose high you were fine, but if you let the floats dig in you could end up inverted quickly (so I'm told). The tricky part was doing so when the water was glassy since we didn't have a VSI. You just held the nose up, hanging on the prop, until you heard a splash. If your butt felt a sink before you hit you added power. I would assume that snow flying must be similar. Don;t know since my float flying is very lmited and I'm not rated, but yeah, I guess so. The takeoff is a sort of short field deal. plenty of flap and full aft stick, the idea being to get it up and out of the snow ASAP. almost planing on it. I've never done it in a taildragger, but I think that would be more of a problem. I've flown taildraggers on skis though and that's a non-event. It's incredibly easy, in fact. Bertie |
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