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#11
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On May 19, 11:26 pm, Dan wrote:
You approach at a normal airspeed, full flaps, coming over the numbers at 65 kts. The mains touchdown, followed by the nosegear. Slight right aileron is being maintained into the wind. Everything is aligned properly and on the centerline at touchdown. Dan, a couple other things to consider... Is there just you and an instructor in the plane? How big are you and the instructor? Full fuel, two up front, at 65 kts, your over the numbers speed is too fast. Try slowing to 55 - 60 kts over the numbers. Full stall stall speed is going to be below 45 kts at the lighter weight. Your are drifting because you are still too light on the wheels. Does the stall horn go off as the wheels touch the ground? Do you float down the runway between roundout and touchdown? You should be maintaining pitch attitude as the aircraft settles by steadily increasing backpressure on the yoke. Even as the wheels touch, you continue to steadily pull backpressure and hold it full aft until your in your parking spot and the engine is shut down. |
#12
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"Bill Denton" wrote in message
Could it be the ground effect differences between low wing and high wing aircraft that are contributing to this issue? "Dan" wrote in message oups.com... I am working on a checkout in this C182 after about 400 hours in Pipers. Compared to what I am used to, the Cessna ground handling (especially after touchdown) seems very squirrley. I've had the same experience with the couple hours I have in 152s and 172s as well. My guess is the difference in nose gear steering. Skylanes use a bungee to "persuade" the nose gear to turn in a given direction while the typical Piper nosegear is much more authoritative. -- John T http://sage1solutions.com/blogs/TknoFlyer Reduce spam. Use Sender Policy Framework: http://openspf.org ____________________ |
#13
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![]() "Dan" wrote in message ps.com... I've got a question for the group. Suppose you find yourself in the following situation: You are flying a C182, landing on runway 22. The ATIS lists the winds as 240 at 10. The windsock is not visible. You approach at a normal airspeed, full flaps, coming over the numbers at 65 kts. The mains touchdown, followed by the nosegear. Slight right aileron is being maintained into the wind. Everything is aligned properly and on the centerline at touchdown. After touchdown the plane starts to drift to the right side of the runway. You try to correct by pointing the nose back to the centerline with left rudder. The nose seems to be pointed left, but the plane is still drifting right. It feels like any more left rudder could result in bad skidding and/or a ground loop. What are the proper control inputs to correct the situation? Left aileron would be in the _opposite_ direction of the indicated crosswind. Increasing back pressure would make the nosewheel even less effective. --Dan "Kyle Boatright" wrote in message . .. This simply illustrates why you can't trust ATIS to give you anything more than a general sense of the conditions you might encounter. Winds change. ATIS stations sometimes see different wind conditions than the touchdown point, due to obstacles and wind direction. With an ATIS reading of a 20 degree off-centerline, and 10 knots of wind, I would fly a normal approach and make the corrections necessary to keep the airplane pointed straight down the runway with no drift during the flare and landing. I would not pre-suppose anything. On the other hand, if ATIS was indicating a 90 degree crosswind at 10 knots, and the smoke from chimneys, or waves on a nearby lake, or the windsock confirmed that information, I would *assume* that I had a noticeable crosswind to deal with, and would be mentally prepared for it... BUT, I'd still wait until final approach to crank in gross corrections to correct drift, and would apply whatever corrections were necessary in the flare to keep the airplane aligned and kill any drift. Bottom line.. ATIS gives you an indication of what the winds were at one point on the airfield at a given time. The conditions at your touchdown spot may be different. KB I agree with the other good responses in this thread and would only add that the ATIS is a periodic and not real time report that could IMHE be 1 or more hours old. I always want to confirm the ATIS by seeing the windsock and monitoring crab and drift on downwind, base and especially on final. Happy landings, |
#14
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On Sun, 20 May 2007 20:20:10 GMT, "Private"
wrote: I agree with the other good responses in this thread and would only add that the ATIS is a periodic and not real time report that could IMHE be 1 or more hours old. I always want to confirm the ATIS by seeing the windsock and monitoring crab and drift on downwind, base and especially on final. Along with all the good stuff that's been mentioned... If it's a towered field, simply say "Wind Check?" into the mic while turning final and the tower person will usually give you an instant reading like "330 @ 9, gusting 14". A double click of the mic button will confirm reception, no readback or callsign necessary. You don't need a callsign or any other info when asking, simply "Wind Check?", they'll know what it means. Both the ask and response are very quick and don't waste much radio time. Most of the non-towered fields I use have either an AWOS or ASOS (maybe Belfort? G), that updates every minute, but the same caveats apply about the location of the instrument taking the reading vs. the runway. |
#15
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This brings out the most important point to be made in this entire thread.
"Let the AIRPLANE tell you what the ACTUAL winds are and fly the approach and landing doing whatever the AIRPLANE tells you needs to be done for the wind. This is cardinal rule 1 for ALL landings and supercedes any and all forecast and radio transmitted expectation for wind condition and direction. Dudley Henriques "Kyle Boatright" wrote in message . .. This simply illustrates why you can't trust ATIS to give you anything more than a general sense of the conditions you might encounter. Winds change. ATIS stations sometimes see different wind conditions than the touchdown point, due to obstacles and wind direction. With an ATIS reading of a 20 degree off-centerline, and 10 knots of wind, I would fly a normal approach and make the corrections necessary to keep the airplane pointed straight down the runway with no drift during the flare and landing. I would not pre-suppose anything. On the other hand, if ATIS was indicating a 90 degree crosswind at 10 knots, and the smoke from chimneys, or waves on a nearby lake, or the windsock confirmed that information, I would *assume* that I had a noticeable crosswind to deal with, and would be mentally prepared for it... BUT, I'd still wait until final approach to crank in gross corrections to correct drift, and would apply whatever corrections were necessary in the flare to keep the airplane aligned and kill any drift. Bottom line.. ATIS gives you an indication of what the winds were at one point on the airfield at a given time. The conditions at your touchdown spot may be different. KB "Dan" wrote in message ps.com... I've got a question for the group. Suppose you find yourself in the following situation: You are flying a C182, landing on runway 22. The ATIS lists the winds as 240 at 10. The windsock is not visible. You approach at a normal airspeed, full flaps, coming over the numbers at 65 kts. The mains touchdown, followed by the nosegear. Slight right aileron is being maintained into the wind. Everything is aligned properly and on the centerline at touchdown. After touchdown the plane starts to drift to the right side of the runway. You try to correct by pointing the nose back to the centerline with left rudder. The nose seems to be pointed left, but the plane is still drifting right. It feels like any more left rudder could result in bad skidding and/or a ground loop. What are the proper control inputs to correct the situation? Left aileron would be in the _opposite_ direction of the indicated crosswind. Increasing back pressure would make the nosewheel even less effective. --Dan |
#16
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Dan wrote:
On May 20, 6:34 am, john smith wrote: Dan wrote: What are the proper control inputs to correct the situation? Yoke full aft, full right aileron, left rudder as necessary to maintain directional control, flaps up. OK, so you're saying that based on the situation, I should trust the ATIS, not the fact that the plane is drifting right? Should the ailerons _always_ be into the wind regardless of actual aircraft drift? No, you should know from which side the wind is coming before you ever touch down. This is very easily detected while on final. And if you slip to accommodate the crosswind (which is the correct way in this airplane and almost all others), then you know exactly what is up before you ever touch down and you also know if the crosswind component is within the control authority of the airplane. How much rudder in one direction or the other can a tricycle gear light plane take without groundlooping? Quite a bit, but if you start to ground loop, then back off! One thing my primary instructor stress was that you ALWAYS apply whatever control input is required to get the performance you desire. You don't fly to some preplanned target. He was not a fly by the numbers pilot and, while I appreciate the need for that in many high performance airplanes, his basic philosophy is sound. The conditions are what they are, not what you planned for or what you wish they were. Fly the conditions, not some preconceived notion of what they should be. I am working on a checkout in this C182 after about 400 hours in Pipers. Compared to what I am used to, the Cessna ground handling (especially after touchdown) seems very squirrley. I've had the same experience with the couple hours I have in 152s and 172s as well. My Skylane wasn't squirrelly at all. Typically, it is the pilot that is squirrelly. :-) Matt |
#17
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Private wrote:
"Dan" wrote in message ps.com... I've got a question for the group. Suppose you find yourself in the following situation: You are flying a C182, landing on runway 22. The ATIS lists the winds as 240 at 10. The windsock is not visible. You approach at a normal airspeed, full flaps, coming over the numbers at 65 kts. The mains touchdown, followed by the nosegear. Slight right aileron is being maintained into the wind. Everything is aligned properly and on the centerline at touchdown. After touchdown the plane starts to drift to the right side of the runway. You try to correct by pointing the nose back to the centerline with left rudder. The nose seems to be pointed left, but the plane is still drifting right. It feels like any more left rudder could result in bad skidding and/or a ground loop. What are the proper control inputs to correct the situation? Left aileron would be in the _opposite_ direction of the indicated crosswind. Increasing back pressure would make the nosewheel even less effective. --Dan "Kyle Boatright" wrote in message . .. This simply illustrates why you can't trust ATIS to give you anything more than a general sense of the conditions you might encounter. Winds change. ATIS stations sometimes see different wind conditions than the touchdown point, due to obstacles and wind direction. With an ATIS reading of a 20 degree off-centerline, and 10 knots of wind, I would fly a normal approach and make the corrections necessary to keep the airplane pointed straight down the runway with no drift during the flare and landing. I would not pre-suppose anything. On the other hand, if ATIS was indicating a 90 degree crosswind at 10 knots, and the smoke from chimneys, or waves on a nearby lake, or the windsock confirmed that information, I would *assume* that I had a noticeable crosswind to deal with, and would be mentally prepared for it... BUT, I'd still wait until final approach to crank in gross corrections to correct drift, and would apply whatever corrections were necessary in the flare to keep the airplane aligned and kill any drift. Bottom line.. ATIS gives you an indication of what the winds were at one point on the airfield at a given time. The conditions at your touchdown spot may be different. KB I agree with the other good responses in this thread and would only add that the ATIS is a periodic and not real time report that could IMHE be 1 or more hours old. I always want to confirm the ATIS by seeing the windsock and monitoring crab and drift on downwind, base and especially on final. A wind sock is nice, but entirely optional. If you can't peg the wind pretty well while flying final, then you need more instruction and more practice. Matt |
#18
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Dudley Henriques wrote:
This brings out the most important point to be made in this entire thread. "Let the AIRPLANE tell you what the ACTUAL winds are and fly the approach and landing doing whatever the AIRPLANE tells you needs to be done for the wind. This is cardinal rule 1 for ALL landings and supercedes any and all forecast and radio transmitted expectation for wind condition and direction. Dudley Henriques Say it again, Dudley! You fly the conditions as they exist, not what you think they are or wish they were. Matt |
#19
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![]() "Matt Whiting" wrote in message ... Dudley Henriques wrote: This brings out the most important point to be made in this entire thread. "Let the AIRPLANE tell you what the ACTUAL winds are and fly the approach and landing doing whatever the AIRPLANE tells you needs to be done for the wind. This is cardinal rule 1 for ALL landings and supercedes any and all forecast and radio transmitted expectation for wind condition and direction. Dudley Henriques Say it again, Dudley! You fly the conditions as they exist, not what you think they are or wish they were. Matt "You fly the conditions as they exist, not what you think they are or wish they were". How's that!! :-)) DH |
#20
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![]() Bill Denton wrote: Could it be the ground effect differences between low wing and high wing aircraft that are contributing to this issue? No, I noticed that right away after I bought my Bonanza. With my 182 it was second nature to manipulate the aileron for the wind while taxiing. In the Bo I don't bother as there's no reason to. I simply hold the yoke so the controls don't get slammed around in the wind. With a high wing the wing is out there on a longer lever plus the wheel track is a little narrower. |
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