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#11
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john smith wrote
The Arrow has a healthy sink rate the requires some extra speed initially to keep the sink rate below 500 fpm. Sink rate (and rate of climb) is a function of power not airspeed. Excess power...you go up, more excess power and you go up faster. Same for a deficiency of power, the greater the deficiency, the faster you go down. A 500 fpm rate of descent can be flown at "almost" any airspeed by using an appropriate power setting. Bob Moore |
#12
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On Sat, 16 Aug 2003 23:49:11 GMT, Dave Stadt wrote:
If you have effective brakes differential braking works if the tailwheel is free to caster or locked. The trouble is the wind was so strong, I'd have needed so much brake it would have taken almost takeoff power to taxi :-) Much easier to have two eager linemen grab a strut each g -- Dylan Smith, Castletown, Isle of Man Flying: http://www.dylansmith.net Frontier Elite Universe: http://www.alioth.net "Maintain thine airspeed, lest the ground come up and smite thee" |
#13
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On Sun, 17 Aug 2003 19:29:14 GMT, john smith
wrote: Snowbird wrote: AFAIK, I fly a plane whose stall speed is *higher* than an Arrow's. 90 mph sounds quite high for normal final approach esp. w/ just you in the plane, assuming your stall speed is similar to or lower than mine. I target final approach at 80 mph, 75 if it's just me and partial fuel. I add 1/2 the gust factor as a rule of thumb ie 17 g 27 would add ~5 kts. JMO, but I don't think it adds to safety to put on too much extra speed. If it's really nasty and swirly near the ground, it just extends the time you have to spend in ground effect bleeding off extra speed. Why do you feel it's necessary, or safer, to add 10 to 15 kts to an approach speed which already sounds rather fast? Note thaty the original poster stated airspeed in MILES PER HOUR not knots. 90 MPH is about 75 kts, which is okay. That's still faster than I land a Bonanza or Debonair. and I think its considerably faster than I used to Land the Cherokee 180. And I did make the distinction between knots and MPH. The Arrow has a healthy sink rate the requires some extra speed initially to keep the sink rate below 500 fpm. OK...why do you want to keep the sink rate below 500 fpm? I'm used to seeing 800 in the Deb and can easily manage a descent up to 1100 fpm. Actually I can come down a lot faster than that, but I can do a more or less normal descent at 1100. "As I recall" power off in the old Cherokee 180 was also around 800 with full flaps. As a comparison, a power off "best glide" in a Glasair III is about 1500 fpm. Roger Halstead (K8RI EN73 & ARRL Life Member) www.rogerhalstead.com N833R World's oldest Debonair? (S# CD-2) |
#14
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john smith wrote in message ...
Snowbird wrote: AFAIK, I fly a plane whose stall speed is *higher* than an Arrow's. 90 mph .... I target final approach at 80 mph, 75 if it's just me and partial fuel. Note thaty the original poster stated airspeed in MILES PER HOUR not knots. Yes. Note that so did I. 90 MPH is about 75 kts, which is okay. Well, I've never flown an Arrow -- as I said up-front. I calculate 90 MPH as 78 kts. What is Vso in a Hershey-bar Arrow? www.risingup.com gives one 180 hp model as 53 kts. Using the 1.3xVso rule of thumb, that suggests an approach speed of 69 kts or about 80 mph, which is my target. Note that the original poster also said he was adding 10-15 *kts* of extra speed to compensate for 10 kt gust. The Arrow has a healthy sink rate the requires some extra speed initially to keep the sink rate below 500 fpm. Well, like I said, I've never flown one, but it looked to me like it had the same wing as the comparable PA28-180 or Archer of its year. Why would it have such a high sink rate vs. these planes? Cheers, Sydney |
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On Sun, 17 Aug 2003 20:38:02 GMT, Robert Moore
wrote: john smith wrote The Arrow has a healthy sink rate the requires some extra speed initially to keep the sink rate below 500 fpm. Sink rate (and rate of climb) is a function of power not airspeed. Excess power...you go up, more excess power and you go up faster. Same for a deficiency of power, the greater the deficiency, the faster you go down. A 500 fpm rate of descent can be flown at "almost" any airspeed by using an appropriate power setting. Bob Moore Ahh, words of wisdom from a fellow Naval Aviator. (They don't seem to teach that anywhere else, Bob.) vince norris |
#17
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As such, Bob's comments were right on the money.
I was just quibbling about his comment about airspeed being unrelated to excess power. That was indeed wrong, and if it went unchallenged, some readers might think it was right. However you slice it, the original comment ("The Arrow has a healthy sink rate the requires some extra speed initially to keep the sink rate below 500 fpm") is just plain wrong. True. |
#18
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rethinking previous postings...
with power... - fly the numbers or faster with shallower approach without power... - fly the numbers with normal rate of descent - fly faster with steeper rate of descent |
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