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#12
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Robert Moore wrote in
2.60: Stealth Pilot wrote Sideslips are a very useful tool because they allow you to substantially increase the drag, which makes you descent like a plumbers toolbag, but doesnt change the forward speed. so you have no increased risk of stalling as you wash off the height. What you have described is the "forward slip". Although control usage is the same in both, a "side slip" is used to correct for a crosswind, and a "forward slip" is used to descend more rapidly on final without having the airspeed increase. If one is not landing, I suppose that it would just be a "slip". Airliners normally do not use either because of the increased discomfort caused the passengers....both being uncoordinated flight. Actually, they do. The 72 and 70 were kind of excepetions because of the risk of dragging a flap or pod, but most jet airliners land better in crosswinds when slipped. Even the autopilot will slip it if you're doing an autoland Bertie |
#13
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Stefan wrote in news:1fb3$48d7ad48$54487392$9846
@news.hispeed.ch: Robert Moore schrieb: What you have described is the "forward slip". Although control usage is the same in both, a "side slip" is used to correct for a crosswind, and a "forward slip" is used to descend more rapidly A slip is a slip is a slip. No it isn't. Bertie |
#14
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Stefan wrote in news:9cc9b$48d7b746$54487392
: Robert Moore schrieb: A slip is a slip is a slip. From The FAA H-8083-3a, Airplane Flying Handbook Ok, so in the USA there exist several different brands of slips. In the rest of the world however, a slip is a slip is a slip. Which is how airplanes see it, too, I suppose. You're full of ****, stefan. Slips are slips no matter where you are and slips, while aerodynamically identical have different references. Bertie |
#15
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Hi Amine,
I'll sometimes use a sideslip on final when I want to practice an approach without using any flaps. When I was flying gliders I used to use a slip often to augment the spoilers, especially while flying gliders that had no flaps. Using a sideslip is a great way to control your rate of descent. But be sure to read the aircraft POH to make sure that you understand the conditions where a sideslip may not be recommended. The POH for a Cessna 172 does not recommend forward slips with the flaps down. Randy L. -- Remember: Any landing that you can walk away from, is a landing that you can be fined, sued, or prosecuted for. "Amine" wrote in message ... Hey, Anyone out there used sideslips for anything other than crosswind approaches? |
#16
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"RandyL" rlink(AT)cableone(DOT)net wrote in
: Hi Amine, I'll sometimes use a sideslip on final when I want to practice an approach without using any flaps. That's actually a forwad slip. Bertie |
#17
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Bertie the Bunyip schrieb:
You're full of ****, stefan. Still better than completely hollow like you. Slips are slips no matter where you are and slips, while aerodynamically identical have different references. Of course they have different references... visual references, that is: In one, you look straight ahead, in the other, you look slightly to one side. I'm fully aware that this difference is enough for simple minded like you to think they are two different maneuvres. |
#18
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Stefan wrote in
: Bertie the Bunyip schrieb: You're full of ****, stefan. Still better than completely hollow like you. Slips are slips no matter where you are and slips, while aerodynamically identical have different references. Of course they have different references... visual references, that is: In one, you look straight ahead, in the other, you look slightly to one side. I'm fully aware that this difference is enough for simple minded like you to think they are two different maneuvres. Yeah, right backpedaling boi. Bertie |
#19
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"RandyL" rlink(AT)cableone(DOT)net wrote
The POH for a Cessna 172 does not recommend forward slips with the flaps down. About once-a-year I post the following excerpt from "Cessna, Wings for the World", a book by William D. Thompson. Bill Thompson is an Aeronautical engineer from Purdue University and worked for Cessna Aircraft Company for 28 years as an engineering test pilot and later as the Manager of Flight Test & Aerodynamics. ------------------------------------------------------------------- "With the advent of the large slotted flaps in the C-170, C-180, and C- 172 we encountered a nose down pitch in forward slips with the wing flaps deflected. In some cases it was severe enough to lift the pilot against his seat belt if he was slow in checking the motion. For this reason a caution note was placed in most of the owner's manuals under "Landings" reading "Slips should be avoided with flap settings greater than 30° due to a downward pitch encountered under certain combinations of airspeed, side-slip angle, and center of gravity loadings". Since wing-low drift correction in cross-wind landings is normally performed with a minimum flap setting (for better rudder control) this limitation did not apply to that maneuver. The cause of the pitching motion is the transition of a strong wing downwash over the tail in straight flight to a lessened downwash angle over part of the horizontal tail caused by the influence of a relative "upwash increment" from the upturned aileron in slipping flight. Although not stated in the owner's manuals, we privately encouraged flight instructors to explore these effects at high altitude, and to pass on the information to their students. This phenomenon was elusive and sometimes hard to duplicate, but it was thought that a pilot should be aware of its existence and know how to counter-act it if it occurs close to the ground. When the larger dorsal fin was adopted in the 1972 C-172L, this side- slip pitch phenomenon was eliminated, but the cautionary placard was retained. In the higher-powered C-172P and C-R172 the placard was applicable to a mild pitch "pumping" motion resulting from flap outboard-end vortex impingement on the horizontal tail at some combinations of side-slip angle, power, and airspeed." -------------------------------------------------------------------- Bob Moore ATP/CFI 12 years slipping with flaps in Skyhawks |
#20
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Gig 601Xl Builder wrote in
m: Once we were back on the ground and with his boss close by I left him reading about them in the FAA Airplane Flying Handbook they had in the office. That's incredible. When I took my CFI Ride, I had to demonstrate a maximum effort forward slip on final. Kicked out when I was over the fence and hit the numbers. Seems as if your instructor didn't know the difference between a slip and a skid. -- |
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