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#11
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On Sep 28, 6:44*pm, "Morgans" wrote:
"a" wrote A good landing in my view is where there's a stall warning, throttle aft, touchdown, and make the turn off without using throttle or break. Or without using the brakes, in case nothing is broken. ;-) -- Jim in NC Nice catch! But it is good not to break anything and if you brake too hard you may. It IS Monday, I think it's going to be a bad weak. |
#12
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On Sep 28, 10:00*am, Clark wrote:
D Ramapriya wrote in news:e238c979-3550-4a59-87f1- : On Sep 28, 8:36*am, Clark wrote: D Ramapriya wrote in news:2f5fa47a-a9a0-4d76-897e - : Jeez, in most videos I've seen of yours, the stall horn has sounded just before touchdown. I bet you like hairy landings ![]() Just an educational point: a perfect landing includes a full stall about a foot off the ground. Typically the stall horn will sound about 5 to 10 kn ots above the actual stall. Alan's landings appear to be quite good. In other words, there is no harm in stalling within a few inches of the runway. On the other hand, there can be great harm in attempting to land way to fast. Thanks, mate. Won't this lead to dodgy finals in a situation where the headwind tails off for some reason (a gust or some such)? Final is typically flown at 1.3*Vso which translated means 30% above stall speed. The extra velocity is lost in the roundout at the bottom of the approach. If the winds are gusty then 1/2 the gust factor is added to the approach speed. The gust factor is the difference between the base wind velocity and the maximum gust velocity. Folks have been doing this for a long time and the numbers work really well. Correct me if I'm wrong but there may also be the possibility that in aircraft where the computer doesn't correlate data from the AOA sensor, you'll probably get a slightly slower airspeed indication than actual during the flare, in which case even the stall horn would be a kind of false alarm ![]() Ramapriya |
#13
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![]() "D Ramapriya" wrote in message ... On Sep 28, 10:00 am, Clark wrote: D Ramapriya wrote in news:e238c979-3550-4a59-87f1- : On Sep 28, 8:36 am, Clark wrote: D Ramapriya wrote in news:2f5fa47a-a9a0-4d76-897e - : Jeez, in most videos I've seen of yours, the stall horn has sounded just before touchdown. I bet you like hairy landings ![]() Just an educational point: a perfect landing includes a full stall about a foot off the ground. Typically the stall horn will sound about 5 to 10 kn ots above the actual stall. Alan's landings appear to be quite good. In other words, there is no harm in stalling within a few inches of the runway. On the other hand, there can be great harm in attempting to land way to fast. Thanks, mate. Won't this lead to dodgy finals in a situation where the headwind tails off for some reason (a gust or some such)? Final is typically flown at 1.3*Vso which translated means 30% above stall speed. The extra velocity is lost in the roundout at the bottom of the approach. If the winds are gusty then 1/2 the gust factor is added to the approach speed. The gust factor is the difference between the base wind velocity and the maximum gust velocity. Folks have been doing this for a long time and the numbers work really well. Correct me if I'm wrong but there may also be the possibility that in aircraft where the computer doesn't correlate data from the AOA sensor, you'll probably get a slightly slower airspeed indication than actual during the flare, in which case even the stall horn would be a kind of false alarm ![]() Ramapriya Small aircraft do not use any computers to actuate the stall horn. Instead, there are ports on the leading edge of the wing in a precise location so that the air moves from one to the other at stall only, which blows a reed horn, or some have a little flap that blows over at the leading edge that turns on a switch to sound an electric horn. In either case, it is aerodynamic airflow that triggers the stall horn. -- Jim in NC |
#14
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On Sep 30, 3:13*am, Clark wrote:
D Ramapriya wrote in news:2c0fab6a-a8d4-4889-a0ef- : As for the accuracy of the airspeed indicator, well we generally stall the aircraft in training and proficiency flights so we know exactly when the stall occurs even if the indicated airspeed might be in error. As an aside, the aircraft will usually tell you through handling characteristics and vibration that it's going to stall. The aircraft that don't tell you about the impending stall are the ones with which to be very careful. Thanks, especially for the above bit. Don't know if it's because someone once told me or something I'd read somewhere but I was under the impression that when flying and if you didn't have external visual references of the ground, there's NO way that a pilot can know the airspeed of his aircraft. On another matter, everything I've read so far about the AF447 crash suggests that the aircraft was upset because it flew too slow (iced pitot leading to erroneous airspeed readings) and pretty much went down like a bag of cement and possibly hit the water at a nearly level attitude! Ramapriya |
#15
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On Sep 29, 9:29*pm, D Ramapriya wrote:
Thanks, especially for the above bit. Don't know if it's because someone once told me or something I'd read somewhere but I was under the impression that when flying and if you didn't have external visual references of the ground, there's NO way that a pilot can know the airspeed of his aircraft. Visually, you are correct and even "sensually" (feeling), while IMC there is no way to tell speed or what direction the nose of the plane is pointed (up, down, right or left). The instrumentation is the only source of information you have telling you what direction the ground and sky points to. With regards to airspeed, there are other clues to be watched for airspeed besides the airspeed indicator and one is engine RPM. Generally speaking, under normal flight attitudes, the engine RPM will increase as you point down which subsequently means your airspeed is building. You hear this increase just as if you hear the engine noise level go down, that would normally indicate the nose of the plane is pointed up and your airspeed is decreasing. |
#16
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On Sep 30, 9:42*am, BeechSundowner wrote:
On Sep 29, 9:29*pm, D Ramapriya wrote: Thanks, especially for the above bit. Don't know if it's because someone once told me or something I'd read somewhere but I was under the impression that when flying and if you didn't have external visual references of the ground, there's NO way that a pilot can know the airspeed of his aircraft. Visually, you are correct and even "sensually" (feeling), while IMC there is no way to tell speed or what direction the nose of the plane is pointed (up, down, right or left). *The instrumentation is the only source of information you have telling you what direction the ground and sky points to. With regards to airspeed, there are other clues to be watched for airspeed besides the airspeed indicator and one is engine RPM. Generally speaking, under normal flight attitudes, the engine RPM will increase as you point down which subsequently means your airspeed is building. *You hear this increase just as if you hear the engine noise level go down, that would normally indicate the nose of the plane is pointed up and your airspeed is decreasing. Even under the hood as one approaches the stall or slow flight in general aviation airplanes the controls are really soft -- little bits of pressure make for large excursions. One should not depend on those kinds of clues when there is no outside visual reference (that by the way is LOT different than being in IMC) but it from a sensation standpoint is pretty much like waving an oar in air instead of in water. At cruise speeds the yoke has a certain 'stiffness' that is is largely gone at lower airspeeds. Absent a working airspeed gauge because you might have driven the pitot tube into a seagull of something, the link between manifold pressure, RPM, and pitch attitude is a pretty reliable indication of airspeed for a given airplane configuration. |
#17
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On Sep 29, 5:28*am, "Panic" wrote:
That crab "correction" was the hardest thing to get used to when I flew the B-52H back in the early 60s. * We had a little chart near the rudder control knob to enter the angle and velocity of the crosswind, then we pulled up on the knob and cranked it to the chart value to hydraulically move the main gear so that it would be aligned with the runway even though we landed still in a crab. * We could crank up to 20° of alignment correction. All of my previous years, once we finally saw the runway at very low altitude we'd kick out the crab and use wing low cross control for landing. GCA minimums were 100' ceiling. *You had to psyche yourself ahead of time to insure that when you finally spotted the runway you'd leave the crab in and land that way. *(but...make sure you entered the crab correction in the right direction) "BeechSundowner" wrote in message ... On Sep 26, 8:46 pm, a wrote: On Sep 26, 11:10 am, " wrote: I noticed when you broke out at 500 feet agl you aligned the axis of the airplane with the runway then tended to drift a little left, and coordinated turned yourself onto the center line again. Absolutely nothing wrong with that, but my habit is a little different. I continue to fly the localizer at whatever crab angle I need to keep the needle centered and when much lower drop the windward wing, kick the airplane into alignment and transition to a cross wind landing. It would be interesting for the thread to address the advantanges and disadvantages of each method. A, While IMC, I do exactly what you say, fly the crab all the way down. Problem and why you see me drift left when I break out was I was 1/2 dot off fthe localizer to the right, so in order to find the centerline, it required a slight turn to the left when I broke out 512 MSL or *200 AGL. You can see my "reintercept" of the centerline from 7:20 to to 7:30 by watching the point of the cowling in relationship to the runway centerline. *During this 10 seconds, I was correcting the right of the localizer problem. Couple of thoughts, as I did not even realize until breaking out that I had that much of a crab as I was so focused on maintaining the localizer. . *It took several adjustments of the header bug on descent to find that sweet spot in tracking. *When I broke out, needless to say I was surprised at my crab angle (like, oh crap, where's the runway!), and thus the sharp "response on the yoke" *My subsequent approaches were not that abrupt on the yoke as I was better prepared. Didn't you know the x-wind factor for the runway you were using? Cheers |
#18
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On Oct 1, 2:42*am, BeechSundowner wrote:
On Sep 29, 9:29*pm, D Ramapriya wrote: Thanks, especially for the above bit. Don't know if it's because someone once told me or something I'd read somewhere but I was under the impression that when flying and if you didn't have external visual references of the ground, there's NO way that a pilot can know the airspeed of his aircraft. Visually, you are correct and even "sensually" (feeling), while IMC there is no way to tell speed or what direction the nose of the plane is pointed (up, down, right or left). *The instrumentation is the only source of information you have telling you what direction the ground and sky points to. With regards to airspeed, there are other clues to be watched for airspeed besides the airspeed indicator and one is engine RPM. Generally speaking, under normal flight attitudes, the engine RPM will increase as you point down which subsequently means your airspeed is building. * Yes, for a fixed pitch prop. With a CSU its not so. Airframe noise does increase but that's subtle for small speed excursions and I have no idea if you can pick that up with noise cancelling headsets.. Cheers |
#19
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On Sep 30, 10:48*pm, "Flaps_50!" wrote:
Didn't you know the x-wind factor for the runway you were using? It changed as I was descending. The only thing I need to know is that the x-wind is not above my capabilities before executing the approach. My job is to keep the localizer centered and deal with the WCA visually when I break out. |
#20
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On Oct 1, 8:37*am, BeechSundowner wrote:
On Sep 30, 10:48*pm, "Flaps_50!" wrote: Didn't you know the x-wind factor for the runway you were using? It changed as I was descending. *The only thing I need to know is that the x-wind is not above my capabilities before executing the approach. My job is to keep the localizer centered and deal with the WCA visually when I break out. To support Sundowner's observation -- I simply don't worry about the crosswind component once I start an approach. The DG and runway heading tell me where to look for the runway environement when close to minima, and the final decision regarding landing or going elsewhere is dependent on, among other things, if I have enough rudder to keep the airplane aligned with the center line at reasonable touch down speeds. I don't remember ever having to go to an alternate because of an excessive cross wind. I have, at oncontrolled airports, had to because all I could see at mimimums was the inside of a cloud. It's worth noting if there is a strong crosswind there is no obligation to land with the airplane axis aligned with the centerline. On a wide runway touch down closer to the downwind edge with the airplane aimed on a diagonal -- you can steal up to 8 or 9 degrees of cross wind that way. But don't try that without adult supervision, you (or at least I) need a lot of hours in a given airplane and have to know its characteristics very well to pull that off. .. |
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