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#31
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On Jan 26, 2:11*am, Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
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#32
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On Jan 26, 8:49*am, wrote:
So, no, I don't know absolutely the danger of spinning a 152 and have been "taught" different views...which is the purpose of my post. I guess the knowledge I should have as a commercial pilot is not only rusty, but was cut way short by the cheap school I chose. Ricky- Hide quoted text - I betcha you could go up and so some spins in the 150 over at McGregor. I know at least one of the instructors over there does that on occasion. Is it Keith H. (last name abbreviated on purpose) you know? He's an instructor at Aurora and is a good friend of mine. Good to know Aurora has a 150 that they'll allow spins in. As soon as the pocketbook allows I'll get my BFR over there. I heard they also have a new generation 172 (not a glass cockpit, just new). Ricky |
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Ricky wrote in
: On Jan 26, 2:11*am, Bertie the Bunyip wrote: . Find a Great Lakes or a Citabria. The tailwheel experience will teach you a lot as well. Bertie- Among the three part 141 schools I went to, Le Tourneau University was the best. I went there with my commercial / instrument in hand, preparing to go through CFII, multi & A&P. The high quality, serious level of instruction at Le Tourneau quickly overwhelmed me as did the huge expense of this small, private, Christian school. I had to leave after one semester because I simply couldn't afford it. I was also quite the irresponsible idiot at the time who'd rather play than study, so the caliber of instruction at Le Tourneau was something I could not handle. I did, however, get my checkout in their Citabria which they used for tailwheel training and spins for the CFI candidates. We were not allowed to do aerobatics in the Citabria or fly solo, but it remains some of the best training and most rewarding flying I've done. The Citabria was loads of fun and I caught on really fast. In an hour I was doing it all alone, including wheelies and 3 pointers. Far too many schools don't offer tailwheel checkouts, at Le Tourneau it was required for graduation, as was a landing at DFW in an Archer or Arrow (and the landing fee came out of YOUR pocket). BTW the Warriors, Archers & Arrows were all air conditioned at Le Tourneau which was great in the Texas Summer! The suggestion for aerobatic instruction is well-received and when I can afford it, I'll do it. My short term plan at the moment is to finish my A&P and 2 yr. degree, get a job and then jump back into flight instruction, finishing my flight degree started long ago and getting my CFII & multi. TSTC has an above-average rating among those I've talked with so I'm anticipating good instruction. It will take a while to get up to snuff on my commercial / instrument before progressing into CFI. There are many places in the DFW area (bit over an hour drive north) offering aerobatic instruction and I even know one or two locally. You said the Pitts was "easy," implying the Citabria was not as easy? I got the impression in my 10 or so hours in the Citabria that it was a pretty easy airplane to fly & land. Did you mean it's a bit challenging for aerobatics, moreso than a Pitts? Yes, exactly, The Pitts is a lot more difficult to land than the Citabria. I've only flown two easier taildraggers than a Citabria and that's the Hatz and the Aeronca Sedan. And mabye a Taylorcraft. My dad built a Pitts in the 70s and sold it within a year because he didn't like the way it flew. I was just a wee lad but I seem to remember his not liking the speed and instability, and he had little interest in aerobatics. So he took it to a few airshows and won awards for quality of construction, finish and decor and then sold it after spending over 5 years building the thing. He really loved working on planes as much as flying them & was a perfectionist. Yeah, I've flown two in my early years and found them a handful then, probably wouldn't find them so much of a handful now, but thye do keep your attentin on the ground. The problem with them doing rolls in particualr is all you really have to do to do a passable roll is slap the sick to the side and it will go around. Doing them in a Citabria requires you to do everything right or it's a bi tof a mess. Bipes are better becasue they're stringer and draggier and if you **** up you have a far greater margin than you would in a Citabria or Decathlon. That's why I suggested the Great Lakes. Bertie |
#34
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Good to know Aurora has a 150 that they'll allow spins in. As soon as
the pocketbook allows I'll get my BFR over there. I heard they also have a new generation 172 (not a glass cockpit, just new). Ricky I met Keith briefly once recently. Hmm. Well, I don't know if they allow spins without instructor -- UFC does. I was thinking of Travis, who told me he sometimes goes and does a spin or two in the 150 "to blow off steam". But I didn't ask if they allow spins as a rule. That was my checkride plane, by the way. Switched from AUS to PWG at the last minute. Not a recommended procedure, a last minute type switch-a-roo, by-the-by! Glass 172 is pricey, compared to my club. |
#35
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"Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message
.. . "Peter Dohm" wrote in : "Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message .. . "JGalban via AviationKB.com" u32749@uwe wrote in news:7ec1fcb50fea9@uwe: Ricky wrote: I also remember being warned "no spin is exactly the same or predictable, so DON'T do them solo! Was this just a warning from my school so we wouldn't screw up their gyros or are spins indeed possibly very dangerous inherently for some reason? Sounds like the school didn't have a whole lot of confidence in the spin training they provided. Assuming you're within the proper weight and CG envelope, spins should be quite predictable. Particularly in something like a 152. A local FBO will only allow spins in their Great Lakes aerobatic trainers (they also have Supercubs and Huskies) because the have cageable gyros. I've often wondered if this isn't an Old Wives Tale. I've been spinning my Cherokee on a fairly regular basis since 1994. The gyros often tumble during spins, but that's never caused a maintenance problem. I've still got the same gyros in the panel that were there when I bought the plane 14 yrs. ago. They've never been removed for OH and they're still working fine. Holy Crap! That's amazing! It definitely wrecks gyros. The one place I worked that had no non gyro airplanes had one airplane ( cherokee) for spins and it's gyros barely showed any interest at all. I suppose it depends on the quality, but it is defnitely not an old wives tale. Bertie My recollection is that a "normal" spin entry would tumble the gyros in a 150M, but not in a 152. Apparently, if my recollection of the gimbal limits is correct, the 150 dipped through 80 degrees nose down on the entry and the 152 did not. Well, that seems kinda strange! The airframes are essentially the same.The CG would probably be a bit different and maybe they've riggd the airplane differently ( decalage) I haven't got a lot of time in a 152 and in fact I don't think I've ever taught in one. I can't even remember what a Cherokee spins like.. There seems to be a wide variation in the spin entry for various aircraft, even when the entry is not from an accelerated stall, and there are also a variety of non-tumbling gyros (in addition to gageable viarieties) in the GA fleet. All of the cageable gyros that I have personally seen were the old fashioned varieties (gull-wing horizons and those old DGs that looked like the whiskey compass in the windshield) which would tumble on any excursion through 60 degrees of pitch or roll if not gaged. True enough. sounds plausible, allright. I don't know though. Most of the airplanes I used to spin had wrecked gyros in no time, though. I have never personally seen any of the newer type gyros which were cageable, although I presume that they exist. In any case, the newer types (which can now be close to 40 years old) are certainly more rugged than their predecessors. I've seen them for sale OK. New ones. They're megabucks. A friend was showing around a couple of copies of Aviation Consumer at a meeting earlier today. One of them did indeed have pictures of two brands of cageable artificial horizons, but circumstances did not permit me to find the price, and both of the gyros shown were electric. A quick web search was not informative as to the cost of TSO'd vacuum powered gyros with the cageable feature,as would be used as a replacement part for a typical trainer, but it does appear that you are correct--they are expensive and the DGs would be similar. Please treat this as a request for information and comment. I'm not that scary! That didn't apply to any one person, and someone might know something that the rest of us have missed. Peter |
#36
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"Peter Dohm" wrote in
: "Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message .. . "Peter Dohm" wrote in : "Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message .. . "JGalban via AviationKB.com" u32749@uwe wrote in news:7ec1fcb50fea9@uwe: Ricky wrote: I also remember being warned "no spin is exactly the same or predictable, so DON'T do them solo! Was this just a warning from my school so we wouldn't screw up their gyros or are spins indeed possibly very dangerous inherently for some reason? Sounds like the school didn't have a whole lot of confidence in the spin training they provided. Assuming you're within the proper weight and CG envelope, spins should be quite predictable. Particularly in something like a 152. A local FBO will only allow spins in their Great Lakes aerobatic trainers (they also have Supercubs and Huskies) because the have cageable gyros. I've often wondered if this isn't an Old Wives Tale. I've been spinning my Cherokee on a fairly regular basis since 1994. The gyros often tumble during spins, but that's never caused a maintenance problem. I've still got the same gyros in the panel that were there when I bought the plane 14 yrs. ago. They've never been removed for OH and they're still working fine. Holy Crap! That's amazing! It definitely wrecks gyros. The one place I worked that had no non gyro airplanes had one airplane ( cherokee) for spins and it's gyros barely showed any interest at all. I suppose it depends on the quality, but it is defnitely not an old wives tale. Bertie My recollection is that a "normal" spin entry would tumble the gyros in a 150M, but not in a 152. Apparently, if my recollection of the gimbal limits is correct, the 150 dipped through 80 degrees nose down on the entry and the 152 did not. Well, that seems kinda strange! The airframes are essentially the same.The CG would probably be a bit different and maybe they've riggd the airplane differently ( decalage) I haven't got a lot of time in a 152 and in fact I don't think I've ever taught in one. I can't even remember what a Cherokee spins like.. There seems to be a wide variation in the spin entry for various aircraft, even when the entry is not from an accelerated stall, and there are also a variety of non-tumbling gyros (in addition to gageable viarieties) in the GA fleet. All of the cageable gyros that I have personally seen were the old fashioned varieties (gull-wing horizons and those old DGs that looked like the whiskey compass in the windshield) which would tumble on any excursion through 60 degrees of pitch or roll if not gaged. True enough. sounds plausible, allright. I don't know though. Most of the airplanes I used to spin had wrecked gyros in no time, though. I have never personally seen any of the newer type gyros which were cageable, although I presume that they exist. In any case, the newer types (which can now be close to 40 years old) are certainly more rugged than their predecessors. I've seen them for sale OK. New ones. They're megabucks. A friend was showing around a couple of copies of Aviation Consumer at a meeting earlier today. One of them did indeed have pictures of two brands of cageable artificial horizons, but circumstances did not permit me to find the price, and both of the gyros shown were electric. A quick web search was not informative as to the cost of TSO'd vacuum powered gyros with the cageable feature,as would be used as a replacement part for a typical trainer, but it does appear that you are correct--they are expensive and the DGs would be similar. Yeah. A friend of mine has a Yak 52 and that has a 360 deg gyro ( that reads backwards, ground above, sky below) It'd probably last forever. it looks pretty hefty, though. Please treat this as a request for information and comment. I'm not that scary! That didn't apply to any one person, and someone might know something that the rest of us have missed. Kay. now I'm disappointed that I'm not that scary. Bertie Bertie |
#37
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![]() Please treat this as a request for information and comment. I'm not that scary! That didn't apply to any one person, and someone might know something that the rest of us have missed. Kay. now I'm disappointed that I'm not that scary. There's just no pleasin' some folks. Peter |
#38
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"Peter Dohm" wrote in news:WVPmj.49325$k27.34902
@bignews2.bellsouth.net: Please treat this as a request for information and comment. I'm not that scary! That didn't apply to any one person, and someone might know something that the rest of us have missed. Kay. now I'm disappointed that I'm not that scary. There's just no pleasin' some folks. Now I'm unhappy that you think I'm a fussbudget. Bertie |
#39
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![]() "Ricky" wrote in message ... I was watching the 50-something spins done in a 152 on youtube and it got me thinking; I seem to remember being taught during commercial training that spins do not greatly increase G forces on the airplane, is this true? I also remember being warned "no spin is exactly the same or predictable, so DON'T do them solo! Was this just a warning from my school so we wouldn't screw up their gyros or are spins indeed possibly very dangerous inherently for some reason? I would like to try some solo next time I'm up just for fun but may take a willing CFI along (or fellow pilot) just in case. Would 50-something spins compromise a Cessna 150 or 152's structure? Another thing I'd be concerned about was getting overly dizzy beyond a handful of spins. Ricky I Spin my 150-M all the time solo it's fun do it in an area where a landing can be made with out harm just incase. |
#40
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![]() "Jim Logajan" wrote No one would reasonably demand (at least I wouldn't!) that civil engineers, or mechanical engineers must be proficient at welding, running a lathe, running a milling machine, laying bricks, woodworking, plumbing, electrical wiring, and so on before they can be considered competent engineers. I've run into civil engineers that didn't know what good wet concrete looked like, or which end of a hammer was used to hit a nail, or how to use a framing square to figure out how to figure out a roof pitch. They drew plans that indicated their lack of grip on the subject. I would not expect a civil engineer to have skills on the level of a journeyman carpenter or mason. They sure as hell should have a working knowledge of the skills they are asking workers to employ, to build their plans. How else can they possibly know how to engineer a job that gets the best bang for the buck? I've even seen plans that could not be built as drawn. (many of them- I've always thought that they should have 1 year of labor experience in their field, to be able to walk for their diploma) If the engineer had ever done a little building, they would have known that. I wouldn't expect a software EE to be able to solder up, or repair a circuit board. I would expect a hardware EE to be able to do some soldering, and for sure, be able to examine a board and see if all of the solder joints and traces look good. Yes, I know that an EE is and EE, and they don't give two separate degrees. They do specialize, and if they are hiring on as a software engineer, that should be indicated by what experiences they have had on their resume and transcripts. -- Jim in NC |
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