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Maxwell wrote:
I was taught to lift the flaps immediately upon touch down on soft field landings. My instructors stated getting more weight on the brakes as soon as possible, would facilitate a quicker stop than leaving the flaps down for drag, and loosing some braking power to the extra lift. However, during my last BFR, the instructor corrected me very sharply. He insisted you get more drag from the flaps by leaving them down until you slowed to taxi speed, than the benefit of more weight on the brakes. What is the general consensus of the group? Flaps up or down, after touchdown on a soft field landing? First of all, have you checked your POH for clues? Second, I think you have short and soft confused. Soft fields slow the plane without brakes with surface drag. You don't really want to STOP on a soft field, as you might even sink in. I was taught to think ahead, so I didn't have to stop while taxiing on soft conditions. I'd leave the flaps deployed while I concentrated on using the elevator to keep the nose gear off the turf as much as possible, which will also provide plenty of aero braking. Short, paved fields are a different story. My Beech Sundowner has much less braking ability with the flaps deployed, so I raise them as a course of habit on pavement. The Piper PA-28 variations I've flown had much better braking with the flaps out, raising the flaps didn't offer anywhere near the braking improvement as with the Beech. |
#2
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It's the old "my instructor said..." story instead of reading the book. The
Airplane Flying Handbook says, on page 8-20, "If flaps are used, it is generally inadvisable to retract them during the after-landing roll because the need for flap retraction is usually less important than the need for total concentration on maintaining full control of the airplane." Gotta wonder (1) why the flaps-up instructor doesn't go by the book, and (2) why you swallow his story without asking for documentation for his method. Bob Gardner "Maxwell" wrote in message m... I was taught to lift the flaps immediately upon touch down on soft field landings. My instructors stated getting more weight on the brakes as soon as possible, would facilitate a quicker stop than leaving the flaps down for drag, and loosing some braking power to the extra lift. However, during my last BFR, the instructor corrected me very sharply. He insisted you get more drag from the flaps by leaving them down until you slowed to taxi speed, than the benefit of more weight on the brakes. What is the general consensus of the group? Flaps up or down, after touchdown on a soft field landing? |
#3
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![]() "Bob Gardner" wrote in message news ![]() It's the old "my instructor said..." story instead of reading the book. The Airplane Flying Handbook says, on page 8-20, "If flaps are used, it is generally inadvisable to retract them during the after-landing roll because the need for flap retraction is usually less important than the need for total concentration on maintaining full control of the airplane." Gotta wonder (1) why the flaps-up instructor doesn't go by the book, and (2) why you swallow his story without asking for documentation for his method. Gotta wonder what page Bob, my copy doesn't specify under short field landings. And a lot of inquiring minds here seem to disagree. |
#4
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On Apr 25, 2:54 pm, "Maxwell" wrote:
I was taught to lift the flaps immediately upon touch down on soft field landings. My instructors stated getting more weight on the brakes as soon as possible, would facilitate a quicker stop than leaving the flaps down for drag, and loosing some braking power to the extra lift. However, during my last BFR, the instructor corrected me very sharply. He insisted you get more drag from the flaps by leaving them down until you slowed to taxi speed, than the benefit of more weight on the brakes. What is the general consensus of the group? Flaps up or down, after touchdown on a soft field landing? Please ignore my comments about soft-field landings (although I still think you should use your reference material when your instructor says something questionable instead of accepting it as gospel). The Airplane Flying Handbook is silent on retracting flaps after touching down on short field...go by the POH recommendation. Instructors are often wrong...I know because I are one. Bob Gardner |
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On Wed, 25 Apr 2007 16:54:23 -0500, "Maxwell"
wrote: I was taught to lift the flaps immediately upon touch down on soft field landings. My instructors stated getting more weight on the brakes as soon as possible, would facilitate a quicker stop than leaving the flaps down for drag, and loosing some braking power to the extra lift. However, during my last BFR, the instructor corrected me very sharply. He insisted you get more drag from the flaps by leaving them down until you slowed to taxi speed, than the benefit of more weight on the brakes. What is the general consensus of the group? Flaps up or down, after touchdown on a soft field landing? Hopefully here won't be a consensus. It depends on the airplane, pilot, and technique. The short field landing which you are describing, rather than soft field usually has a recommendation in the POH which may, or not give the shortest landing possible including roll out. However that landing was done using the best possible application of normal techniques with a very good pilot who knew the specific make and model far better than the average pilot. One thing short field landings have in common is a STEEP final where energy/speed is bled off in the round out. In some planes this means carrying considerable power on the final just prior to the round out. Dragging it in with the ability to set it down and stop on a postage stamp is not a normal short field unless you are a bush pilot landing on sand bars, or dragging it in over your neighbor's bean field. Even then a good portion of the final (in ground effect) should be considered as part of the landing. There is one thing in normal short field landing I've heard with which I disagree and that is holding the yoke back all the time. I plant the mains on, immediately let the nose gear down, get on the brakes, and THEN bring the yoke back again. Something to remember in planes with electric flaps is the time it takes to retract them and how much added lift you get during the retraction. With most planes most of us are flying the last portion of flap extension adds drag without adding lift. So when removing flaps we remove drag, then add lift for a time before the flaps have retraced enough to reduce the lift. I've found some planes where the POH recommends raising the flaps can be almost brought to a stop before the flaps are all the way up. That means in the latter portion of the ground roll it didn't matter if the flaps were up or down. In some of those cases raising the flaps adds lift right when you want to get rid of it and removes drag right when it will do the most good. One plane or rather group of planes where the retraction of the flaps can be quite effective in shortening the rollout is the Cherokee family that has the Johnson bar flaps (Mechanical). Actually it's the only plane I've flown where the difference is quite noticeable. "I believe" which is a personal opinion based only on my experience in the specific 150s, 172s, Cherokees, Debonairs, and Bonanzas I've flown, that it is possible to make the shortest landing possible by leaving the flaps at full and a lot of practice. OTOH With the 150s and 172s I doubt if most pilots are going to be able to see much if any difference whether the flaps are raised or left down. |
#6
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![]() Roger (K8RI) wrote: There is one thing in normal short field landing I've heard with which I disagree and that is holding the yoke back all the time. I plant the mains on, immediately let the nose gear down, get on the brakes, and THEN bring the yoke back again. Then you're too fast to start with. A short field landing is a bang-bang play. Bang, the mains hit, then bang the nose wheel hits. Stick position is irrelevant and won't really affect what happens with the nosewheel because if you have your speed right any additional drag, such as the mains hitting, means she's all done flying. The nose is coming down and nothing short of a lot of power is going to change that. Something to remember in planes with electric flaps is the time it takes to retract them and how much added lift you get during the retraction. With most planes most of us are flying the last portion of flap extension adds drag without adding lift. So when removing flaps we remove drag, then add lift for a time before the flaps have retraced enough to reduce the lift. Not correct. From full flaps, retracting any amount of flaps will always reduce the total amount of lift the flaps are providing. On your typical Cessna the majority of the lift comes in the first 20 degrees with not a lot of added drag. But going from 20 to 40 degrees does add lift, that's why the stall speed is lower at 40 flaps than at 20. So reducing any flaps reduces lift, it raises the stall speed thereby putting more weight on the wheels. |
#7
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"Maxwell" wrote in
m: I was taught to lift the flaps immediately upon touch down on soft field landings. My instructors stated getting more weight on the brakes as soon as possible, would facilitate a quicker stop than leaving the flaps down for drag, and loosing some braking power to the extra lift. However, during my last BFR, the instructor corrected me very sharply. He insisted you get more drag from the flaps by leaving them down until you slowed to taxi speed, than the benefit of more weight on the brakes. What is the general consensus of the group? Flaps up or down, after touchdown on a soft field landing? I think it depends more on how fast you land... If you land right at stall speed, retracting the flaps might help you break. If you are faster, retracting the flaps will probably extend your rollout. There are also a lot of people who say you shouldn't be under there during that part of the landing phase in case some day you are flying a retract and grab the wrong lever. Of course then those people go on to do go arounds and touch and goes and do it anyway. ![]() |
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