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Some Cessna's had their flap travel limited to 30 degrees thereby making
them less desirable for short field work. Bob Gardner wrote: Tell me how knowing the precise deflection of full flaps in degrees will affect your operation of the airplane. Bob Gardner "EDR" wrote in message ... I just acquired my copy of the Cessna 182S PIH. I was looking at the flaps/airspeeds page and noticed that the listings are for zero, ten, twenty and full flaps. When did Cessna start using the word FULL flaps to indicate the maximum flap setting and just how many degrees is full flaps? I went back to my 1982 182Q manual. It lists 0, 10, 20, 40 degree flap settings. Then I looked in my 1986 182R manual. It lists 0, 10, 20 and FULL. I think, but am not certain, that full flaps on this model is still 40 degrees. (I will have to look at them tomorrow.) This manual is a new edition, not an original 86 publication. So now I am really courious. Has Cessna limited the flaps to 30 degrees on the post 86 models? |
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