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#11
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Dave Rogers, a professor at the USNA, Annapolis, has done a lot of
work on this problem. See http://web.usna.navy.mil/~dfr/flying/possible.html or Google "impossible turn." One good idea is to add "Turnback altitude" as the last item on your takeoff check list, and say that altitide aloud, so you have it in mind as you climb out. Another is to consciously note any crosswind on takeoff; make your turn into the wind when the enngine quits. vince norris |
#12
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#13
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Don't turn back at these low altitudes.
One has a much better chance of surviving an off airport landing straight ahead than the alternative, stalling in the turn and performing the 1/2 or 1/4 turn spin entry which in almost all cases results in the expiration of the pilot as his/her head augers into the instrument panel, then the engine compartment and finally into mother earth. Oh yes, and anything in the back seat, i.e. the mother-in-law, gets slammed into the back of the pilots head. Land straight ahead, at the slowest flight possible, avoiding striking obstacles head on, and using the wings to prove Newton's laws. "T o d d P a t t i s t" wrote in message ... It was seriously hazy this weekend, and with a long cross country coming up in our 1946 Aeronca Champ, I thought it was a good day to do some engine-out landing practice. I was flying with full fuel, but solo. Wind was light, 3 knots or less. Field elevation was below 1000' MSL, temp about 77 deg F/ near 100. For those not familiar with the Champ, it's a 65 hp taildragger with a max gross of 1220 pounds. I was flying it 150 pounds under that. After some ordinary engine-out landings from downwind and base I began to practice engine-out turn-back from the initial climb out on takeoff. I thought others here might be interested in my results. I had no trouble turning back 180 degrees from 200', just as I do in my glider. A rapid push to get the nose down and maintain speed, and a rapid roll to about 40 degrees of bank. Lots of back stick pressure. I never had to let the airspeed drop below 60 mph. By the time it was turned back, I still had 50-75' left to make a shallow alignment turn. There was certainly no time to waste, but with practice it was a comfortable maneuver. Of eight attempts, I would have been in the trees once and the bushes once. The trees are in a line at one end of the runway, with a cut through them in line with the runway. My first attempt I didn't go far enough to the side during the climb out, so when I turned, I couldn't get back through the cut. All the other attempts in that direction I let myself slide off to the side so I could turn back through the cut. One time I came through the cut and had to land diagonally on the grass adjacent the departure runway. If I wanted to land on the same runway, with no crosswind, I needed to get really far to the side during the climb out. The time I would have ended in the bushes at the opposite end occurred because I did a touch and go from the previous attempt. That put me farther down the runway than usual, so on the 180 reverse, although I was turned back, wings level and aligned, I couldn't glide far enough to get back to the runway over the bushes in the overrun. This is not a recommendation to anyone else as to the altitude to turn back at. This was one specific light airplane, flown solo, using a modified departure to put me in the best position to turn back, by a pilot who knew exactly when the engine would "fail" and who was current in engine out and had lots of 200' turn back practice in gliders. I have seen lots of other reports of heavier aircraft practicing turn backs and estimating more than 600 - 800' needed for success. I watched a friend lose an engine in a very similar aircraft at a similar height. He turned back, following a very similar flight path to the ones described above, and hit a dead tree. Do not spin this aircraft. If the aircraft does enter a spin it will return to earth without further attention on the part of the aeronaut. (first handbook issued with the Curtis-Wright flyer) |
#15
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On 2005-06-15, Dave S wrote:
The second, final time, he was a bit lower, and in trying to turn back, ended up making a VERY steep banked turn, and hit the lone stand of trees off the end of the runway. It's not only altitude - it's terrain. For example, departing 08 at Ronaldsway, I'd want a bit more altitude for thinking about turning around - because if you come in too low, you hit a cliff (the departure end goes off a small cliff into the sea). Most times, I'd rather ditch and have to swim back to shore (an eminently survivable option) than risk hitting a cliff head on (which is eminently unsurvivable). Runway 26 is also obstructed on its departure end (lights, a low wall, and a main road) - so I wouldn't make a minimum altitude turn back there either. However, at Andreas, the surrounding terrain is just fields and low hedges. Off 11, the 'hedge' is just a border of weeds between the wheat field off the departure end and the runway itself, so I'd be inclined to turn around at a lower altitude there (and since it's the airfield I most often fly from, I'm a lot more familiar with it anyway). -- 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" |
#16
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On 2005-06-13, Brian wrote:
for variables such as wind, runways and location from the runway. My typical issue with the 200ft turn around is that I am usually lined up with the runway going downwind with a 100 ft to spare and down wind It can sometimes take a little effort to not go off the far end of the runway. In my first 200' turn back in a glider (it was a Schweizer 2-33 as well, not noted for its performance), I managed to actually make a very tight pattern and land into wind. It was a relatively windy day though, so I did zip downwind at high speed (and judged it safer from my sink rate to make a tight pattern instead of landing downwind). -- 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" |
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