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#1
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![]() "Paul Tomblin" wrote in message ... In a previous article, "Roger Long" om said: "JJS" jschneider@REMOVE SOCKSpldi.net wrote in message ... I had a flying buddy do something similar last fall in a Velocity. Sort of a falling leaf maneuver that he inadvertently entered and A Velocity is a Canard, isn't it? They have some weird issues with mushing. Leaving my plane trimmed for the bottom of the green arc, I was Yeah, they get into something called "deep stall". I don't know the aerodynamics exactly - something about the wing and the canard being stalled at the same time or something, but I do remember a test pilot (and Shuttle astronaut) getting killed testing this phenomena on a canard. Actually, the Velocity will not get into a "deep stall." There was one example that did do this a few years ago -- twice! Both times the plane landed in water and was salvaged. The pilot was unhurt both times. The second time was deliberate. The test pilot even tried to climb out onto the nose to break the stall. Although he was wearing a parachute, he elected to ride the airplane down as it was descending more slowly than a parachute would. A Velocity rep told me that this plane had been modified from the original design. Mounting the airplane on a flatbed truck with a hydraulic lift to raise the nose identified a problem with the trailing edge of the wing. There was a lot of discussion about it in Velocity groups, but the "deep stall" problem was peculiar to just this one airplane. Canard aircraft are designed to have the canard stall before the main wing, forcing the nose to drop and break the stall. Consequently you can never achieve maximum lift from the main wing because the canard will always stall before the wing can reach its maximum angle of attack. Canard aircraft therefore need longer runways and often need more runway to land than they need to take off. Soft field capability is also limited by the canard design. OTOH canard aircraft have less drag in level flight since both the canard and the wing generate upward lift. They tend to be much more fuel efficient than their tail-feathered counterparts. There are a few canard aircraft that do have a problem with deep stalls. IIRC the Dragonfly is one. And of course the original Wright Flyer was not only a canard design, but also was a pusher type with counter-rotating props and a variable geometry wing -- just like the "advanced" designs that NASA is looking at today. |
#2
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C.J.,
Most of what you say is true. His was an early model without vortilons and had the smaller main wing and larger fuel capacity. His was a newly purchased airplane. He did not build it. He was doing slow flight trying to find the edge of the envelope and determine a safe minimum landing speed. He should have gotten specific training in a Velocity. There have been many changes since these early ones. See the following links. http://www.ez.org/cp76-p2.htm http://www.ntsb.gov/NTSB/brief2.asp?...LA019& akey=1 Anyway, my point was that I personally would not ride a mush all the way to the ground. Joe Schneider 8437R "C J Campbell" wrote in message ... "Paul Tomblin" wrote in message ... In a previous article, "Roger Long" om said: "JJS" jschneider@REMOVE SOCKSpldi.net wrote in message ... I had a flying buddy do something similar last fall in a Velocity. Sort of a falling leaf maneuver that he inadvertently entered and A Velocity is a Canard, isn't it? They have some weird issues with mushing. Leaving my plane trimmed for the bottom of the green arc, I was Yeah, they get into something called "deep stall". I don't know the aerodynamics exactly - something about the wing and the canard being stalled at the same time or something, but I do remember a test pilot (and Shuttle astronaut) getting killed testing this phenomena on a canard. Actually, the Velocity will not get into a "deep stall." There was one example that did do this a few years ago -- twice! Both times the plane landed in water and was salvaged. The pilot was unhurt both times. The second time was deliberate. The test pilot even tried to climb out onto the nose to break the stall. Although he was wearing a parachute, he elected to ride the airplane down as it was descending more slowly than a parachute would. A Velocity rep told me that this plane had been modified from the original design. Mounting the airplane on a flatbed truck with a hydraulic lift to raise the nose identified a problem with the trailing edge of the wing. There was a lot of discussion about it in Velocity groups, but the "deep stall" problem was peculiar to just this one airplane. Canard aircraft are designed to have the canard stall before the main wing, forcing the nose to drop and break the stall. Consequently you can never achieve maximum lift from the main wing because the canard will always stall before the wing can reach its maximum angle of attack. Canard aircraft therefore need longer runways and often need more runway to land than they need to take off. Soft field capability is also limited by the canard design. OTOH canard aircraft have less drag in level flight since both the canard and the wing generate upward lift. They tend to be much more fuel efficient than their tail-feathered counterparts. There are a few canard aircraft that do have a problem with deep stalls. IIRC the Dragonfly is one. And of course the original Wright Flyer was not only a canard design, but also was a pusher type with counter-rotating props and a variable geometry wing -- just like the "advanced" designs that NASA is looking at today. |
#3
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![]() Roger Long wrote: I prefer doing long controlled mush descents instead of classic stalls because it provides more of the really valuable part of the stall practice, That would be true if you want to practice stalls. I prefer to practice *recovery* from a stall, or, better yet, stall *avoidance*. George Patterson If you don't tell lies, you never have to remember what you said. |
#4
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Actually, that is exactly what I am practicing. When I look at how much
work and intent is required to stall a 172 I can't imagine doing it accidentally. What I can easily see happening is letting speed get too low while close to the ground and suddenly discovering that I have to tiptoe out of the situation without dropping the nose while possibly maintaining some directional control due to surrounding terrain. The slow transition into the mush without using speed to zoom up slightly into a more nose high attitude and shoving on the throttle and yoke at the break provides much more time to experience the way the plane feels just before the sink starts. Maintaining control in the sink is handling it at the absolute minimum controllable airspeed. Riding the sink down engrains the feel so that you are more likely to recognize it in time. Actually, what it shows you is that you could easily not notice the sink and better be paying attention during slow flight. There is much less buffet once the mush starts and less in the transition to the mush than in the textbook practice stall. If you were looking at a nude beach, you could easily miss it ![]() Transitioning out of the mush gracefully, perhaps with a direction change at the same time, is the best part. Try arresting the descent and then transitioning in and out of the mush. This may be a 172 characteristic and I would only do it in a plane I knew to break cleanly without wing drop. I don't think I would try it at my 200 hours in a 150 or 152 which will flip over much more readily in this flight regime. -- Roger Long "G.R. Patterson III" wrote in message ... Roger Long wrote: I prefer doing long controlled mush descents instead of classic stalls because it provides more of the really valuable part of the stall practice, That would be true if you want to practice stalls. I prefer to practice *recovery* from a stall, or, better yet, stall *avoidance*. George Patterson If you don't tell lies, you never have to remember what you said. |
#5
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![]() Roger Long wrote: Actually, that is exactly what I am practicing. When I look at how much work and intent is required to stall a 172 I can't imagine doing it accidentally. What I can easily see happening is letting speed get too low while close to the ground and suddenly discovering that I have to tiptoe out of the situation without dropping the nose while possibly maintaining some directional control due to surrounding terrain. Ah. Different strokes, then. It's pretty easy to stall a Maule at low power settings if you don't pay attention, but you'd have to be asleep to not notice. They tend to buck a bit before they stall. You *can* get a pretty high descent rate at about 1.3 times the stall speed with full flaps, but the plane isn't mushing, and it handles pretty well. George Patterson If you don't tell lies, you never have to remember what you said. |
#6
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Roger Long wrote:
This may be a 172 characteristic and I would only do it in a plane I knew to break cleanly without wing drop. Y'know, what's up with that? I've had a few harrowing wing drops and, although I've largely gotten past my stall fear, I'm starting to wonder why coordinated flight doesn't necessarily guarantee a straight ahead break. After one particular "oh ****" incident early in my training, I've paid close attention to the ball when practicing stalls to avoid dropping a wing. But some planes (I've only flown 152's and 172's) just seem to say, "Nice job keeping the ball centered; now watch me roll over! Yee ha!" I've asked various instructors about this and they just say, "Yeah this one tends to do that." Hmm. I know not all vehicles are created equal and there are other factors like wind, turbulence, airframe wear, etc. Maybe it's the older Cessna's? I haven't seen this with the newer S and R models. -Scott |
#7
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![]() Scott Lowrey wrote: Y'know, what's up with that? Usually it's caused by the typical dings and such common to trainers. One of the 150's in which I trained would drop the left wing every time. Another would drop either one, but the drop was pretty nasty. My '69 model wouldn't drop a wing at all. George Patterson If you don't tell lies, you never have to remember what you said. |
#8
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Aircraft need to be tuned, like pianos. The angles of the wings, the flight
control surfaces, the cable tensions, and lots of other things can be adjusted. It's a time consuming process and not a legal airworthiness item so its rare for school and rental planes. The planes you are flying could be fixed but it would come off the FBO's bottom line. OTH, maybe it's good for students to learn to deal with wing drop. (Ingrain in your mind not to use the yoke. Step briskly on the top rudder pedal "If you think you will die, step on the sky.") The significant difference between the 152 and the 172 is that the 152 will flip over in an eyeblink with clumsy rudder usage but you would really have to work at it to flip a Skyhawk. I've heard a lot of reports of the new Cessnas being delivered terribly rigged but they have probably gotten on top of that by now. Little things can make a big difference. Our plane used to fly terribly. Full right rudder trim all the time and you would still have your foot cramp up after half an hour trying to keep the ball centered. On climbout, you would have the pedal all the way to the firewall. Interestingly, when I agitated to get it fixed, the board and a number of experienced pilots in the club said, "Fix what? So, you need a little rudder, big deal." We eventually got a new shop and a new maintenance officer (me). Our new guy knew more than just how to take broken things out and put new ones in like the pictures in the book. He replaced the little $100 piece of metal that centers and aligns the nose gear. It was offset in flight and working like a rudder right there behind in the prop blast. With a couple other minor tweaks, it was a totally new airplane. The difference was astounding. It was like going from a beat up old car with misaligned suspension and a low tire to a well set up sports car. Looking back, I can't believe I horsed that thing around the sky as long as I did. Until you've flow a really well rigged plane, you have no idea how enjoyable and sensual it can be. -- Roger Long "Scott Lowrey" wrote in message news:JeCmc.43813$kh4.2295957@attbi_s52... Roger Long wrote: This may be a 172 characteristic and I would only do it in a plane I knew to break cleanly without wing drop. Y'know, what's up with that? I've had a few harrowing wing drops and, although I've largely gotten past my stall fear, I'm starting to wonder why coordinated flight doesn't necessarily guarantee a straight ahead break. After one particular "oh ****" incident early in my training, I've paid close attention to the ball when practicing stalls to avoid dropping a wing. But some planes (I've only flown 152's and 172's) just seem to say, "Nice job keeping the ball centered; now watch me roll over! Yee ha!" I've asked various instructors about this and they just say, "Yeah this one tends to do that." Hmm. I know not all vehicles are created equal and there are other factors like wind, turbulence, airframe wear, etc. Maybe it's the older Cessna's? I haven't seen this with the newer S and R models. -Scott |
#9
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Roger Long wrote:
The significant difference between the 152 and the 172 is that the 152 will flip over in an eyeblink with clumsy rudder usage but you would really have to work at it to flip a Skyhawk. Interesting you say that. Now that I think about it, it was a 152 that originally scared the crap out of me. It dropped left so fast and hard that I felt like I did a 360 before I had time to react. When I recovered, my heading had changed 180 degrees. The 172's were much more docile when dropping a wing - still unnerving but not so surprising. On the spin topic, though, I asked two different instructors (at two different schools) for some spin recovery demonstrations. Although it was probably frowned upon by the FBO's, both CFI's were happy to oblige. ![]() the 172 did it with ease. Maybe it was instructor technique, maybe it was other factors... -Scott |
#10
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![]() "Scott Lowrey" wrote in message news:JeCmc.43813$kh4.2295957@attbi_s52... After one particular "oh ****" incident early in my training, I've paid close attention to the ball when practicing stalls to avoid dropping a wing. But some planes (I've only flown 152's and 172's) just seem to say, "Nice job keeping the ball centered; now watch me roll over! Yee ha!" Put vortex generators on that 172 and it won't do that. In my 182 you can go into a 45 degree bank turn, full opposite rudder, full back stick and idle power. The normal 172/182 will roll over into the high wing as it stalls. Put VG's on the plane and you will just sit there in your 45 degree bank dropping at 1500 fpm. |
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