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#102
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![]() "C J Campbell" wrote For those who have not seen it, Karl's plane is a beautiful thing. Glowing praise like that should have Karl posting a link, were we can all ogle it! Wait for it; here comes the link now.... Karl?? Karl? ... g -- Jim in NC |
#103
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Here's some pix:
http://temp.corvetteforum.net/c5/kgr...185kgfront.jpg http://temp.corvetteforum.net/c5/kgr...niercessna.jpg http://temp.corvetteforum.net/c5/kgr...__640x480_.jpg http://temp.corvetteforum.net/c5/kgr...__640x480_.jpg http://temp.corvetteforum.net/c5/kgr...nformation.jpg Best, Karl "Curator" N185KG "Morgans" wrote in message ... "C J Campbell" wrote For those who have not seen it, Karl's plane is a beautiful thing. Glowing praise like that should have Karl posting a link, were we can all ogle it! Wait for it; here comes the link now.... Karl?? Karl? ... g -- Jim in NC |
#104
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On 3 Jan, 09:16, "Ken S. Tucker" wrote:
On Jan 2, 9:15 pm, wrote: On Jan 2, 4:35 pm, Michael wrote: Which brings us to the one (and only) difference between landing flaps up and gear up. *Gear up is expensive, every time. *Flaps up is actually more likely to be fatal (as in, you get too slow in a turn) but most of the time it costs nothing at all except some extra runway, which is free. *That's it. * * * * *Unless you are landing on a minimal runway, as we often do out here in the Canadian west. An inadvertent flaps-up landing can get really messy at the far end, depending on the obstacles that might be there. Not really, you just need to learn how to land better, making use of flare and ground effect. Landing with zero flaps, needs a tricky extended flare and once the tires are on the runway, keep the nose up, with pitch control to the elevator, that way the entire main wing operates as an air brake. Be very gentle on wheel braking control because that will lower the nose, and you want the nose as high as possible, while rolling. Once the nose falls, it's hard to get it up because of the relation of the CM to the wheel contact point on the ground. At a high AOA, the CM is pretty close to the vertical location of the wheel contact point, and the elevator is effective. The key is to understand the wheel contact point in relation to the CM. Most A/C with tricycle gear are designed to keep the weight on the mains and keep the forward lightly loaded. Ken Good grief. Bertie |
#105
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On Thu, 3 Jan 2008 07:18:27 -0800, C J Campbell
wrote: On 2008-01-01 18:26:04 -0800, "Mortimer Schnerd, RN" mschnerdatcarolina.rr.com said: Barry wrote: My examiner called the no flap landing an emergency procedure. From the Pilot/Controller Glossary: EMERGENCY- A distress or an urgency condition. DISTRESS- A condition of being threatened by serious and/or imminent danger and of requiring immediate assistance. URGENCY- A condition of being concerned about safety and of requiring timely but not immediate assistance; a potential distress condition. So I would say that the inability to extend flaps would be considered an emergency only if it puts you in serious or imminent danger, or causes you to be concerned about safety. I would call it no more than an annoyance unless I have to stuff the airplane into a really short strip. Emergency? That examiner has to be kidding. He calls it an emergency because that is where a flap failure is in the PTS. It is in the "Emergency Procedures" section. I doubt very much that the examiner thinks it is really an emergency. As was said earlier, no flaps can be a bit of an inconvenience, or normal, but a split flap condition can really add excitement to your day. :-)) They had an AD out for Bonanzas, Debonairs, and Barons for this. Then someone managed to convince the FAA that even a split flap condition in these is not an emergency although it might push the adrenalin up there a bit. All of these planes have enough aileron authority to overcome the split flap condition so they dropped the AD. Roger (K8RI) OTOH, people do manage to turn non-emergencies into emergencies. Every now and then you hear of someone who smashes up a perfectly flyable airplane simply because they managed to spear a June bug with the pitot tube, or a door popped open in flight, or something minor like that. |
#106
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![]() "karl mcgruber" skywagon wrote in message ... Here's some pix: http://temp.corvetteforum.net/c5/kgr...185kgfront.jpg http://temp.corvetteforum.net/c5/kgr...niercessna.jpg http://temp.corvetteforum.net/c5/kgr...__640x480_.jpg http://temp.corvetteforum.net/c5/kgr...__640x480_.jpg http://temp.corvetteforum.net/c5/kgr...nformation.jpg Ahh, Karl, that last one is not a Cessna 185, I believe. Or is that what you hope it will grow up to be? g Nice 185, though. Thanks. -- Jim in NC |
#107
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On 2008-01-05 05:53:09 -0800, "Morgans" said:
"karl mcgruber" skywagon wrote in message ... Here's some pix: http://temp.corvetteforum.net/c5/kgr...185kgfront.jpg http://temp.corvetteforum.net/c5/kgr...niercessna.jpg http://temp.corvetteforum.net/c5/kgr...__640x480_.jpg http://temp.corvetteforum.net/c5/kgr...__640x480_.jpg http://temp.corvetteforum.net/c5/kgr...nformation.jpg Ahh, Karl, that last one is not a Cessna 185, I believe. Or is that what you hope it will grow up to be? g Nice 185, though. Thanks. No. The last one is Karl at work. -- Waddling Eagle World Famous Flight Instructor |
#108
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![]() "C J Campbell" wrote No. The last one is Karl at work. I suspected that. -- Jim in NC |
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