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I think you got me here, I cannot gin up a reference frame alibi. Let me
try this: The airplane turns due to the horizontal component of lift. If the horizontal component of lift is exactly equal and opposite the apparent centrifugal force (a coordinated turn) can the airplane depart? Regards Todd "Jose" wrote in message . net... Can a certificated airplane depart if the ball is precisely in the middle[?] If the airplane is changing heading, then it is yawing, irrespective of the ball's position. Jose -- You can choose whom to befriend, but you cannot choose whom to love. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
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Todd W. Deckard wrote:
I think you got me here, I cannot gin up a reference frame alibi. Let me try this: The airplane turns due to the horizontal component of lift. If the horizontal component of lift is exactly equal and opposite the apparent centrifugal force (a coordinated turn) can the airplane depart? Regards Todd "Jose" wrote in message . net... Can a certificated airplane depart if the ball is precisely in the middle[?] If the airplane is changing heading, then it is yawing, irrespective of the ball's position. Jose -- You can choose whom to befriend, but you cannot choose whom to love. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. It can if you introduce an accelerated stall and a yaw rate from this turn. -- Dudley Henriques |
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Todd W. Deckard wrote:
"Dudley Henriques" wrote in message ... There is only one thing you have to know about spins. To enter one you need 2 things to be present; stall and a yaw rate. So to corner your answer to my question: you cannot? spin from coordinated flight. The airplane must be yawed during the stall break (thus the inclinometer ball slips or skids to one side). My question is not to seek out practical advice in spins, or recoveries. It is to explore two academic debates: Can a certificated airplane depart if the ball is precisely in the middle and is there something telling in the emphasis from the foreign sources cited that exposes a gap in our US training practices and material. Thank you for your response. I'll be making a new years resolution to try it out in the neighboorhood Decathalon (with an appropriate chaperone) but as it is cold and snowy I thought I would put it to the uunet. Best regards, Todd You are correct; IF coordinated flight is being defined as ball centered. This is indeed what is taught to most new students as they begin flight training.....that is until they start doing slips :-)) When and if you get into aerobatics or begin flying with advanced instructors with deep aerobatic backgrounds you learn quickly that coordinated flight can mean cross controlled flight as well as the usual definition with everything going ball centered in the same direction :-) I once flew a Pitts Special the full length of a major airfield holding it in knife edge flight. In the TRUE sense of coordinated, holding the aircraft in knife edge would be considered as coordinated flight. Depending on the instructor, you either learn that coordinated flight is with the ball always in the center, or you can be taught that you are coordinated when the control pressures are applied in the exact amount necessary to place the airplane in the sky at the exact configuration required at any instant in time. I prefer the latter definition and have taught my students this way for many years. -- Dudley Henriques |
#4
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For the purposes of my question I am referring to coordinated as:
If the horizontal component of lift is exactly equal and opposite the apparent centrifugal force (a coordinated turn). The pilot flying by the "seat of his or her pants" feels no skid or slip with the seat cushion. In your knife edge demonstration you could measure this if you rotated the ball inclinometer 90 degrees. I *believe* it would show you were in coordinated flight. The Websters definition has merit for you when trying to reinforce a fundamental learning objective but I was trying to drive to a very specific question. Apparantly with that I mis used "yaw" Todd "Dudley Henriques" wrote in message news:QMqdnYyufd3QT- Depending on the instructor, you either learn that coordinated flight is with the ball always in the center, or you can be taught that you are coordinated when the control pressures are applied in the exact amount necessary to place the airplane in the sky at the exact configuration required at any instant in time. I prefer the latter definition and have taught my students this way for many years. -- Dudley Henriques |
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Todd W. Deckard wrote:
In your knife edge demonstration you could measure this if you rotated the ball inclinometer 90 degrees. I *believe* it would show you were in coordinated flight. Didn't even have a ball indication in that airplane. You don't use them in aerobatics. Even for primary instruction, it's best to get the student's head outside the cockpit and away from the ball as soon as possible and concentrated on nose attitude where it belongs. Personally, I feel the ball is the least necessary instrument on the entire panel :-) -- Dudley Henriques |
#6
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In my experience, a stall break while straight and level or in a 60 degree
bank if perfectly coordinated will drop the nose straight down. The kicker is that 98% of the pilots have lazy feet and don't really keep the aircraft coordinated. If power is ON, the aircraft will need more rudder to control yaw and that amount of rudder will increase as speed is decreased approaching the stall. Some airplanes may not have enough rudder to stay coordinated to the stall, most pilots will not use the rudder that is available. Some airplanes will not spin, even wit yaw supplied by maximum rudder input at the stall in a pro-spin direction. The Beech Skipper [BE77] requires that the stall be entered, just before the stall, full pro-spin rudder is applied to induce a roll. At a 90 degree bank angle, sudden and full aileron in the opposite direction as the rudder is necessary to stall the wing crisply at the outer half. That will cause the airplane to roll rapidly and enter a spin. If not timed or done correctly, the aircraft will enter a spiral. In the accidental spin, the pilot is likely to do exactly the same thing, just not with thought and skill. The plane is stalled while yawing [uncoordinated] and when the break happens, the poorly trained and non-current pilot's reaction will often be to try to pick-up the wing that is falling and the nose with aileron and up elevator. The natural reaction, which training and experience correct, is to "fight" the falling nose, the falling wing, with normal control input. IF the aircraft is coordinated perfectly, the difference in lift vector is due slightly to the radial airspeed difference between the L&R wings, but more my the dihedral built in the airplane. The problem is that flight is very dynamic, control forces are changing, humans have reaction times, and the control authority created by the aerodynamic surfaces rapidly falls with a small decrease in airspeed [lift equation] and the other forces, such as P-factor and engine torque involve inertia and mass. "Todd W. Deckard" wrote in message ... | | "Dudley Henriques" wrote in message | ... | There is only one thing you have to know about spins. To enter one you | need 2 things to be present; stall and a yaw rate. | | So to corner your answer to my question: you cannot? spin from coordinated | flight. | The airplane must be yawed during the stall break (thus the inclinometer | ball slips or skids | to one side). | | My question is not to seek out practical advice in spins, or recoveries. It | is to explore two | academic debates: Can a certificated airplane depart if the ball is | precisely in the middle | and is there something telling in the emphasis from the foreign sources | cited that exposes a | gap in our US training practices and material. | | Thank you for your response. | | I'll be making a new years resolution to try it out in the neighboorhood | Decathalon (with an appropriate | chaperone) but as it is cold and snowy I thought I would put it to the | uunet. | | Best regards, | Todd | | |
#7
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clarification edit inserted
"Jim Macklin" wrote in message ... | In my experience, a stall break while straight and level or in a 60 degree | bank if perfectly coordinated will drop the nose straight down. [edit--relative to the pilot, not the horizon] | The kicker is that 98% of the pilots have lazy feet and don't really keep | the aircraft coordinated. If power is ON, the aircraft will need more | rudder to control yaw and that amount of rudder will increase as speed is | decreased approaching the stall. Some airplanes may not have enough rudder | to stay coordinated to the stall, most pilots will not use the rudder that | is available. | Some airplanes will not spin, even wit yaw supplied by maximum rudder input | at the stall in a pro-spin direction. The Beech Skipper [BE77] requires | that the stall be entered, just before the stall, full pro-spin rudder is | applied to induce a roll. At a 90 degree bank angle, sudden and full | aileron in the opposite direction as the rudder is necessary to stall the | wing crisply at the outer half. That will cause the airplane to roll | rapidly and enter a spin. If not timed or done correctly, the aircraft will | enter a spiral. | | In the accidental spin, the pilot is likely to do exactly the same thing, | just not with thought and skill. The plane is stalled while yawing | [uncoordinated] and when the break happens, the poorly trained and | non-current pilot's reaction will often be to try to pick-up the wing that | is falling and the nose with aileron and up elevator. The natural reaction, | which training and experience correct, is to "fight" the falling nose, the | falling wing, with normal control input. | | IF the aircraft is coordinated perfectly, the difference in lift vector is | due slightly to the radial airspeed difference between the L&R wings, but | more my the dihedral built in the airplane. The problem is that flight is | very dynamic, control forces are changing, humans have reaction times, and | the control authority created by the aerodynamic surfaces rapidly falls with | a small decrease in airspeed [lift equation] and the other forces, such as | P-factor and engine torque involve inertia and mass. | | | | "Todd W. Deckard" wrote in message | ... || || "Dudley Henriques" wrote in message || ... || There is only one thing you have to know about spins. To enter one you || need 2 things to be present; stall and a yaw rate. || || So to corner your answer to my question: you cannot? spin from | coordinated || flight. || The airplane must be yawed during the stall break (thus the inclinometer || ball slips or skids || to one side). || || My question is not to seek out practical advice in spins, or recoveries. | It || is to explore two || academic debates: Can a certificated airplane depart if the ball is || precisely in the middle || and is there something telling in the emphasis from the foreign sources || cited that exposes a || gap in our US training practices and material. || || Thank you for your response. || || I'll be making a new years resolution to try it out in the neighboorhood || Decathalon (with an appropriate || chaperone) but as it is cold and snowy I thought I would put it to the || uunet. || || Best regards, || Todd || || | | |
#8
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On Dec 27, 1:42 pm, "Todd W. Deckard" wrote:
Can you depart and spin from coordinated flight? Specifically a coordinated climbing turn? Well, yeah, prolly, but it'd have to be pretty tight. We used to spin some glider types "over the top" as you suggest, but it's kind of splitting hairs to suggest what you are suggesting. And courting disaster doing a chandelle? If you're going to do a commercial ticket you should be familair with spins intimately. An incipient spin shouldn't even make you break a sweat. BTW, stalls in a climbing turn are pretty much standard standard stuff even for Private pilots. Bertie |
#9
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I have a limited exposure to spins (I've demonstrated spins or received spin
instruction in 5 different airplanes on six different occasions). I have a commercial certificate (although you wouldn't think so from my demonstration of a chandelle). Maybe I did have to demonstrate a power on stall while in a climbing 20 degree bank, once. As I recall, we survived it. I return to the original question: if the ball is in the middle will it spin? Becuase I believe snowmobile suits are for snowmobiling and not for flying I won't have a chance to explore it with an aerobatic instructor and an appropriate (but drafty) airplane for a few months -- so I thought I would put the question in a bottle and throw it in the ocean. Regards Todd "Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message ... On Dec 27, 1:42 pm, "Todd W. Deckard" wrote: Can you depart and spin from coordinated flight? Specifically a coordinated climbing turn? And courting disaster doing a chandelle? If you're going to do a commercial ticket you should be familair with spins intimately. An incipient spin shouldn't even make you break a sweat. |
#10
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Todd W. Deckard wrote:
I have a limited exposure to spins (I've demonstrated spins or received spin instruction in 5 different airplanes on six different occasions). I have a commercial certificate (although you wouldn't think so from my demonstration of a chandelle). Maybe I did have to demonstrate a power on stall while in a climbing 20 degree bank, once. As I recall, we survived it. I return to the original question: if the ball is in the middle will it spin? Becuase I believe snowmobile suits are for snowmobiling and not for flying I won't have a chance to explore it with an aerobatic instructor and an appropriate (but drafty) airplane for a few months -- so I thought I would put the question in a bottle and throw it in the ocean. Regards Todd "Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message ... On Dec 27, 1:42 pm, "Todd W. Deckard" wrote: Can you depart and spin from coordinated flight? Specifically a coordinated climbing turn? And courting disaster doing a chandelle? If you're going to do a commercial ticket you should be familair with spins intimately. An incipient spin shouldn't even make you break a sweat. The answer to the ball question is no. It won't spin. A ball centered airplane in a climbing turn is compensated by rudder and is considered coordinated (in the classic sense). If you introduce a climbing turn stall with the ball centered, you might get a temporary wing drop at the break but unless you introduce a yaw rate as the stall breaks; no yaw rate...no spin! -- Dudley Henriques |
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