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#21
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![]() "Roger" wrote in message ... On Mon, 17 Mar 2008 18:38:38 -0400, Dudley Henriques wrote: Dan wrote: Anyone else have expereince with the C172E (1964)? No matter what I did I could not get that bird to spin to the right. Left spins take some work, and power helps (of course). But right it just wallows and then steep spirals. Dan Mc Try accelerating the stall a bit just before reaching the 1g stall point . Decelerate the airplane carrying just a bit of power into the stall, then just before it would break naturally, apply aggressive pitch, as the stall breaks, apply full pro-spin rudder. It should break a lot cleaner and right into the spin; assuming normal rigging. Of course an extra bit of enthusiasm could lead to a snap roll. :-)) Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com Hi Roger, That is understandable. Of course, a snap roll is just a spin in a different direction! :-) It is the only way to roll in an old Citabria with no spades. Otherwise your arm wears out holding that aileron pressure! :-) Highflyer Highflight Aviation Services Pinckneyville Airport PJY |
#22
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![]() "Tina" wrote in message ... Some SEL airplanes are not certified for spins. I assume the 172 isn't in that group. Hi Tina, Depends on the 172. Most, but not all, C172's were certified in both the Normal and the Utility categories. The Normal category does not require spin recoveries for certification. If you spin an airplane in that certification category you become an instant test pilot! :-) The Utility category requires spins and spin recoveries for certification and aircraft in the Utility category can be spun. Many GA airplanes are certified in both categories, but the Utility category has a more restrictive weight and balance limitation. Lower weight, and more forward CG range. The old straight tail Cessnas would spin nicely. Then they slanted the tail back for cosmetic reasons and shot themselves in the foot aerodynamically. Now the bulk of the rudder is in the shade of the stabilizer in a spin and the airplanes do not enter well or spin as well. They may also not want to pop out of a fully developed spin. Most failed spin attempts will result in a high speed spiral and you can build excessive speed quickly and then must be very careful pulling out of the resulting dive so that you do not overstress the aircraft at a speed well above maneuvering speed. Highflyer Highflight Aviation Services Pinckneyville Airport PJY |
#24
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Dave Doe wrote:
In article , says... Roger wrote: On Mon, 17 Mar 2008 18:38:38 -0400, Dudley Henriques wrote: Dan wrote: Anyone else have expereince with the C172E (1964)? No matter what I did I could not get that bird to spin to the right. Left spins take some work, and power helps (of course). But right it just wallows and then steep spirals. Dan Mc Try accelerating the stall a bit just before reaching the 1g stall point . Decelerate the airplane carrying just a bit of power into the stall, then just before it would break naturally, apply aggressive pitch, as the stall breaks, apply full pro-spin rudder. It should break a lot cleaner and right into the spin; assuming normal rigging. Of course an extra bit of enthusiasm could lead to a snap roll. :-)) Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com Timing Rog....TIMING!!! With women and flying.......it's all in the TIMING!!!! :-))) Question on this - snap rolls can put some big strains on the a/c - so I presume the a/c (most 172's I've flown, actually make that *all* - are in the normal cat, not utility) - is aerobatic? - or at least in the utility category? I snap rolled a Traumahawk years ago when I performed a stall turn (himmelman (sp?) - call it what you like) - when I whacked the rudder in while I was (obviously) still above stall speed. I ended up flick rolling and upside down and recovered just fine - but it scared the chit out of me (the turning force was really quite considerable). Opinions? Only one. Don't snap a normal OR a utility category airplane. It ain't healthy! :-)) Neither category comes near meeting aerobatic category standards. I would strongly suggest from reading what you say you were doing with a Tomahawk that you not continue that practice PLEASE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! -- Dudley Henriques |
#25
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In article ,
says... Dave Doe wrote: In article , says... Roger wrote: On Mon, 17 Mar 2008 18:38:38 -0400, Dudley Henriques wrote: Dan wrote: Anyone else have expereince with the C172E (1964)? No matter what I did I could not get that bird to spin to the right. Left spins take some work, and power helps (of course). But right it just wallows and then steep spirals. Dan Mc Try accelerating the stall a bit just before reaching the 1g stall point . Decelerate the airplane carrying just a bit of power into the stall, then just before it would break naturally, apply aggressive pitch, as the stall breaks, apply full pro-spin rudder. It should break a lot cleaner and right into the spin; assuming normal rigging. Of course an extra bit of enthusiasm could lead to a snap roll. :-)) Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com Timing Rog....TIMING!!! With women and flying.......it's all in the TIMING!!!! :-))) Question on this - snap rolls can put some big strains on the a/c - so I presume the a/c (most 172's I've flown, actually make that *all* - are in the normal cat, not utility) - is aerobatic? - or at least in the utility category? I snap rolled a Traumahawk years ago when I performed a stall turn (himmelman (sp?) - call it what you like) - when I whacked the rudder in while I was (obviously) still above stall speed. I ended up flick rolling and upside down and recovered just fine - but it scared the chit out of me (the turning force was really quite considerable). Opinions? Only one. Don't snap a normal OR a utility category airplane. It ain't healthy! :-)) Neither category comes near meeting aerobatic category standards. I would strongly suggest from reading what you say you were doing with a Tomahawk that you not continue that practice PLEASE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I *did* say it was years ago, about 20 to be more accurate. ![]() Still, the main question remains unanswered - re the 172 as posted by the OP. -- Duncan |
#26
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Dave Doe wrote:
In article , says... Dave Doe wrote: In article , says... Roger wrote: On Mon, 17 Mar 2008 18:38:38 -0400, Dudley Henriques wrote: Dan wrote: Anyone else have expereince with the C172E (1964)? No matter what I did I could not get that bird to spin to the right. Left spins take some work, and power helps (of course). But right it just wallows and then steep spirals. Dan Mc Try accelerating the stall a bit just before reaching the 1g stall point . Decelerate the airplane carrying just a bit of power into the stall, then just before it would break naturally, apply aggressive pitch, as the stall breaks, apply full pro-spin rudder. It should break a lot cleaner and right into the spin; assuming normal rigging. Of course an extra bit of enthusiasm could lead to a snap roll. :-)) Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com Timing Rog....TIMING!!! With women and flying.......it's all in the TIMING!!!! :-))) Question on this - snap rolls can put some big strains on the a/c - so I presume the a/c (most 172's I've flown, actually make that *all* - are in the normal cat, not utility) - is aerobatic? - or at least in the utility category? I snap rolled a Traumahawk years ago when I performed a stall turn (himmelman (sp?) - call it what you like) - when I whacked the rudder in while I was (obviously) still above stall speed. I ended up flick rolling and upside down and recovered just fine - but it scared the chit out of me (the turning force was really quite considerable). Opinions? Only one. Don't snap a normal OR a utility category airplane. It ain't healthy! :-)) Neither category comes near meeting aerobatic category standards. I would strongly suggest from reading what you say you were doing with a Tomahawk that you not continue that practice PLEASE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I *did* say it was years ago, about 20 to be more accurate. ![]() Still, the main question remains unanswered - re the 172 as posted by the OP. What remains to be unanswered? Can you be specific please? -- Dudley Henriques |
#27
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On Mar 18, 5:40 pm, Dan wrote:
On Mar 18, 8:57 pm, Roger wrote: On Mon, 17 Mar 2008 18:38:38 -0400, Dudley Henriques wrote: Dan wrote: Anyone else have expereince with the C172E (1964)? No matter what I did I could not get that bird to spin to the right. Left spins take some work, and power helps (of course). But right it just wallows and then steep spirals. Dan Mc Try accelerating the stall a bit just before reaching the 1g stall point . Decelerate the airplane carrying just a bit of power into the stall, then just before it would break naturally, apply aggressive pitch, as the stall breaks, apply full pro-spin rudder. It should break a lot cleaner and right into the spin; assuming normal rigging. Of course an extra bit of enthusiasm could lead to a snap roll. :-)) Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair)www.rogerhalstead.com An enthusiastic Cross control stall has the same effect. "Hey, I'm right side up!" "Hey, I'm upside down!" Now you're talking! Do a 180 roll, then stall, and watch the heading indicator do a fast 180, (The attitude indicator is having a fit), as you recover from a spiral dive. Most Flight Instructors are sissy pilots, that's how I qualify them, by how much they shreak. Ken |
#28
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On Mar 18, 11:07 pm, Dave Doe wrote:
In article , says... Dave Doe wrote: In article , says... Roger wrote: On Mon, 17 Mar 2008 18:38:38 -0400, Dudley Henriques wrote: Dan wrote: Anyone else have expereince with the C172E (1964)? No matter what I did I could not get that bird to spin to the right. Left spins take some work, and power helps (of course). But right it just wallows and then steep spirals. Dan Mc Try accelerating the stall a bit just before reaching the 1g stall point . Decelerate the airplane carrying just a bit of power into the stall, then just before it would break naturally, apply aggressive pitch, as the stall breaks, apply full pro-spin rudder. It should break a lot cleaner and right into the spin; assuming normal rigging. Of course an extra bit of enthusiasm could lead to a snap roll. :-)) Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com Timing Rog....TIMING!!! With women and flying.......it's all in the TIMING!!!! :-))) Question on this - snap rolls can put some big strains on the a/c - so I presume the a/c (most 172's I've flown, actually make that *all* - are in the normal cat, not utility) - is aerobatic? - or at least in the utility category? I snap rolled a Traumahawk years ago when I performed a stall turn (himmelman (sp?) - call it what you like) - when I whacked the rudder in while I was (obviously) still above stall speed. I ended up flick rolling and upside down and recovered just fine - but it scared the chit out of me (the turning force was really quite considerable). Opinions? Only one. Don't snap a normal OR a utility category airplane. It ain't healthy! :-)) Neither category comes near meeting aerobatic category standards. I would strongly suggest from reading what you say you were doing with a Tomahawk that you not continue that practice PLEASE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I *did* say it was years ago, about 20 to be more accurate. ![]() Still, the main question remains unanswered - re the 172 as posted by the OP. -- Duncan You must have missed Dudley's reply. The technique works. I'm the OP, and I approved this message. Dan Mc |
#29
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![]() "Dudley Henriques" wrote in message ... Dave Doe wrote: In article , says... Dave Doe wrote: In article , says... ---------------some sniped--------------- I snap rolled a Traumahawk years ago when I performed a stall turn (himmelman (sp?) - call it what you like) - when I whacked the rudder in while I was (obviously) still above stall speed. I ended up flick rolling and upside down and recovered just fine - but it scared the chit out of me (the turning force was really quite considerable). Opinions? Only one. Don't snap a normal OR a utility category airplane. It ain't healthy! :-)) Neither category comes near meeting aerobatic category standards. I would strongly suggest from reading what you say you were doing with a Tomahawk that you not continue that practice PLEASE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I *did* say it was years ago, about 20 to be more accurate. ![]() Still, the main question remains unanswered - re the 172 as posted by the OP. What remains to be unanswered? Can you be specific please? -- Dudley Henriques Just guessing, but I really don't think he was attempting an Emmelman or was even all that far above the normal stall speed--it seems more likely that he was just trying to duplicate the "turn to final" scenario and added some bottom rudder at the entry of an accellerated stall. Peter |
#30
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Dan wrote:
On Mar 18, 11:07 pm, Dave Doe wrote: In article , says... Dave Doe wrote: In article , says... Roger wrote: On Mon, 17 Mar 2008 18:38:38 -0400, Dudley Henriques wrote: Dan wrote: Anyone else have expereince with the C172E (1964)? No matter what I did I could not get that bird to spin to the right. Left spins take some work, and power helps (of course). But right it just wallows and then steep spirals. Dan Mc Try accelerating the stall a bit just before reaching the 1g stall point . Decelerate the airplane carrying just a bit of power into the stall, then just before it would break naturally, apply aggressive pitch, as the stall breaks, apply full pro-spin rudder. It should break a lot cleaner and right into the spin; assuming normal rigging. Of course an extra bit of enthusiasm could lead to a snap roll. :-)) Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com Timing Rog....TIMING!!! With women and flying.......it's all in the TIMING!!!! :-))) Question on this - snap rolls can put some big strains on the a/c - so I presume the a/c (most 172's I've flown, actually make that *all* - are in the normal cat, not utility) - is aerobatic? - or at least in the utility category? I snap rolled a Traumahawk years ago when I performed a stall turn (himmelman (sp?) - call it what you like) - when I whacked the rudder in while I was (obviously) still above stall speed. I ended up flick rolling and upside down and recovered just fine - but it scared the chit out of me (the turning force was really quite considerable). Opinions? Only one. Don't snap a normal OR a utility category airplane. It ain't healthy! :-)) Neither category comes near meeting aerobatic category standards. I would strongly suggest from reading what you say you were doing with a Tomahawk that you not continue that practice PLEASE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I *did* say it was years ago, about 20 to be more accurate. ![]() Still, the main question remains unanswered - re the 172 as posted by the OP. -- Duncan You must have missed Dudley's reply. The technique works. I'm the OP, and I approved this message. Dan Mc Yes, but did you stay at a Holiday Inn Express last night? :-)) -- Dudley Henriques |
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