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I've read the term ground loop in a lot of articles and accident reports but
what exactly is a ground loop? --Mike |
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"Mike" wrote in message
... I've read the term ground loop in a lot of articles and accident reports but what exactly is a ground loop? I'm sure somebody can provide a textbook definition, but my general understanding is that it is an abrupt turn of an aircraft moving at a fairly excessive rate of speed. I imagine something like this happening, for instance, if one were landing in a Piper Warrior with a pretty full deflection of the rudder and one didn't straighten it out before the nosewheel touched the ground... the nosewheel moves as the rudder does, unlike a C-172, which has a spring actuated bungee mechanism to turn the nosewheel. -- Guy Elden Jr. PP-ASEL |
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![]() "Mike" wrote in message ... I've read the term ground loop in a lot of articles and accident reports but what exactly is a ground loop? --Mike Take a shopping cart. Push it backwards across a parking lot or down the grocery store aisle and release it. At some point, it is likely to do a rapid piroutte. If it was an airplane instead of a shopping cart, that would have been a groundloop. Groundloops can apply very high forces to landing gear, tearing up the gear and/or overturning the aircraft. Generally, they happen in tailwheel aircraft. KB |
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Mike wrote:
I've read the term ground loop in a lot of articles and accident reports but what exactly is a ground loop? A ground loop is what happens when a taildragger pilot isn't fast enough on the rudder pedals to keep the tail from passing him/her while going down the runway. Because the center of gravity is behind the main landing gear on a taildragger, the tail of the airplane wants to swing around to the front. The center of gravity is forward of the main gear on a tricycle gear airplane, so the nose wants to stay out in front. |
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A ground loop is an inadvertant maneuver that allows you to visits parts of
the airport that you never knew existed before... |
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![]() "BTIZ" wrote in message news:g03Ta.12456$Je.2196@fed1read04... | and that's why tail dragger pilots have "happy feet".. | | never heard of a nose wheel aircraft "ground looping", the CG location | relative to the main gear kinda help keep it straight.. | One of the most common accidents in the Cessna 172 RG Cutlass is the ground loop. I have seen a Cessna 152 after it ground looped -- tore the nose gear off and bent one of the mains. We called it the Cessna 152 RG. I also saw a Cessna 172 SP that was struck by a Cessna 172 N that ground looped. I have heard of Mooneys ground looping, but never seen one. |
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![]() I imagine something like this happening, for instance, if one were landing in a Piper Warrior with a pretty full deflection of the rudder and one didn't straighten it out before the nosewheel touched the ground.. In a Piper Cub or another taildragger, the ground loop is most often begun when sloppy rudder inputs, a gust of wind, or even P factor causes the aircraft to veer. As with a VW Beetle with the engine in the rear (or a Corvair, for that matter), once the vehicle begins to swap ends, it happens very fast, and it's very difficult to recover from. It can happen on takeoff as well as on landing. A ground loop is most dangerous in a low-wing aircraft, where centrifugal force causes the outside wing to dip, possibly dragging on the ground. all the best -- Dan Ford email: www.danford.net/letters.htm#9 see the Warbird's Forum at http://www.danford.net/index.htm Vietnam | Flying Tigers | Pacific War | Brewster Buffalo | Piper Cub |
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On Mon, 21 Jul 2003 23:19:57 -0400, Mike wrote:
I've read the term ground loop in a lot of articles and accident reports but what exactly is a ground loop? As others have pointed out, it's when a plane on the ground uncontrollably does a 180. It usually starts with a swerve, typically due to a gust of wind. In a taildragger, picture your favorite shopping cart pushed backward, the center of gravity is behind the main wheels. If you draw a diagram of the forces, you'll see that the momentum vector will tend to cause the tail to tend to continue swinging out after a swerve. After a certain point, the CG will be outside the wheel and there's nothing you can do to stop it from continuing to swing around. This tends to be hard on the landing gear and wingtips. You want to keep the momentum vector between the wheels if you want to stay in control. There's an old-timer/instructor at The Place I Used To Rent From (whom I never had the chance to fly with, unfortunately) who intentionally groundloops the tailwheel on a grass runway (easier on the landing gear) and at slow speeds (less likely to tip over). Good training exercise if you're with someone who knows what he's doing (Rev definitely knows what he's doing). In the Olden Days, when aircraft didn't have brakes and you just landed in any convenient field, groundlooping was how they stopped. In an emergency, it may be a better choice than hitting something hard and/or expensive. Ground maneuvering in a tricycle-gear airplane is more stable The mains are behind the CG and inertia will tend to straighten it out. As mentioned, it is still possible to ground loop a nosedragger. One of the easiest ways is to touch down nosewheel first on landing. Morris |
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I've ground looped my Kitfox 5 twice and nothing happened to the plane
at all, no damage and no wing strike. Just a real quick 180 and now looking at the plane behind me. I don't know if I got lucky or if the plane just skids really well... |
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Mike
You have received lots of convoluted explanations of a 'ground loop'. The simple explanation is it is when the pointy end not longer points down the R/W on/after landing. It's sometimes known as Oooops! Big John On Mon, 21 Jul 2003 23:19:57 -0400, "Mike" wrote: I've read the term ground loop in a lot of articles and accident reports but what exactly is a ground loop? --Mike |
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