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#241
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On Jun 19, 7:57 am, wrote:
Mx [...] "Does not play well with others" comes to mind as something that would appear in his record. He writes well enough, though. "If you can talk brilliantly enough about a problem, it can create the consoling illusion that it has been mastered..." Stanley Kubrick |
#242
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On Jun 18, 8:51 pm, Bertie the Bunyip
wrote: On Jun 18, 9:12 pm, it revealed more about itself with: I'm not sure if that's sufficient to join the treehouse club. You'll have to ask the little boys who run it. There's so much for her to work with, in the above two sentences ![]() She can fly. she's approved. You can't even find tthe lader to theh treehouse, you're not. Fjukkwit. Bertie |
#243
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Mxsmanic wrote in
: El Maximo writes: Quite frequently, actually. No, show me a diagram. Draw the orbit to scale. You'll see. You'd need a big sheet of paper for that, mmoron Bertie |
#244
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An aileron roll is actualy not dissimilar to a Barrel roll in flight
path. You obviously didn't learn to do barrel rolls in the U.S.Navy. vince norris |
#245
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On 2007-06-21 22:58:36 -0400, vincent norris said:
An aileron roll is actualy not dissimilar to a Barrel roll in flight path. You obviously didn't learn to do barrel rolls in the U.S.Navy. vince norris A lot of people mistakenly classify an aileron roll as a narrow offset barrel roll thinking the natural arc the nose describes as it raises before roll initiation and then lowers due to drag during the back side of the roll resembles a barrel roll. Seen from the ground, especially to a novice, an aileron roll, especially an aileron roll performed in a low performance airplane with a slow roll rate can indeed APPEAR to be a narrow offset barrel roll. For the aileron roll, the nose is raised and set, then aileron applied with just a touch of inside rudder to nullify the adverse yaw then released. As the aircraft rolls with aileron, drag begins to pull the nose down. The result of this, especially if no forward stick is introduced to "trim out" the roll through inverted, is for the nose to dish out the bottom of the roll which viewed from the ground can easily be mistaken for a deliberate maneuver resembling a barrel roll. Although it's true the nose does raise and lower during a normal aileron roll,an aileron roll is still basically performed on the longitudinal axis of the airplane using aileron or spoiler (can even be aided by differential tails in some fighters) as the prime roll control and doesn't meet the 3 dimensional rule through space that defines the helical arc of a barrel roll. Even this should not be mistaken for the 90 degree offset at inverted barrel roll as taught by the Navy. The Navy version, and indeed anyoneperforming a helical 90 degree heading offset through inverted is doing the classical version of a barrel roll; the version most often taught as a precision training maneuver. So you are as I'm sure you already know, perfectly correct. This explanation I hope might help others to understand this a bit better. Dudley Henriques |
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