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#11
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OK, It's winter time and I'm bored, so let me throw my 2 cents in here. The
only flight I ever had in a ship with flaps only was in a PIK-20B. It was a test flight after a broken fuselage. Things went well until it got time to land. I rolled in 45 degrees of flaps and everything looked just about right. Came over the fence at 50 knots and waited for her to settle down. I waited and waited and waited. By now I had floated down most of the 4000 foot runway and I'm still floating about 1 foot off the ground. What do I do? Musn't dump the flaps or she will drop like a stone, right? Finally got the wheel on the ground and jumped on the brake. That night I read the flight manual and it said to slowely crank off the flaps in this situation. I think the flaps only ships are OK, but require a different set of skills that must be mastered. Probably not for the low time pilot or those who don't read the flight manual before flight. My real problem was being about 5 knots too fast. Proper speed control is critical. JJ Sinclair |
#12
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Wallace Berry wrote:
As for getting sucked into a cloud, I would have an easier time keeping that HP-16 out of the cloud than my Libelle with it's relatively ineffective divebrakes. I have been in the gear down, full divebrakes and full slip configuration diving for the edge of the cloud at high speed to keep from getting sucked in. The 301 definitely has weak spoilers (good wheel brake, though!), which is one reason I moved to an ASW 20C. -- ----- Replace "SPAM" with "charter" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#13
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JJ Sinclair wrote:
OK, It's winter time and I'm bored, so let me throw my 2 cents in here. The only flight I ever had in a ship with flaps only was in a PIK-20B. It was a test flight after a broken fuselage. Things went well until it got time to land. I rolled in 45 degrees of flaps and everything looked just about right. Came over the fence at 50 knots and waited for her to settle down. I waited and waited and waited. By now I had floated down most of the 4000 foot runway and I'm still floating about 1 foot off the ground. What do I do? Musn't dump the flaps or she will drop like a stone, right? Finally got the wheel on the ground and jumped on the brake. That night I read the flight manual and it said to slowely crank off the flaps in this situation. I think the flaps only ships are OK, but require a different set of skills that must be mastered. Probably not for the low time pilot or those who don't read the flight manual before flight. My real problem was being about 5 knots too fast. Proper speed control is critical. So I'm told. Our club had a member from Long Island, where the club there had a 1-35. He said they got rid of it after a while because they got tired of pulling it out of the weeds at the end. Without a landing flap equipped two seater, they weren't able to train their low time pilots well enough to land it properly. I think there would be a lot more acceptance of HP style flaps if we had two seaters to train in. -- ----- Replace "SPAM" with "charter" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#14
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Wayne Paul wrote:
Here are some pictures of Jim Harper's HP-16: http://www.soaridaho.com/Schreder/HP...rst_Flight.htm Wayne http://www.soaridaho.com/ "Wallace Berry" wrote in message ... Wayne, what's it like to land an HP in a strong, gusty wind? Do you use a higher approach speed and only partial flap? -- ----- Replace "SPAM" with "charter" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#15
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Earlier, JJ wrote:
I rolled in 45 degrees of flaps and everything looked just about right. Came over the fence at 50 knots and waited for her to settle down... If it's floating down the runway, you just don't have enough flaps cranked in. Dick Schreder pointed this out when he wrote the instructions on test flying the HP-11: http://www.soaridaho.com/Schreder/HP...t_Testing.html which says: : If the HP-11 is floating down the : runway and doesn't want to slow down, : you just don't have enough flap : cranked down. That was in 1963, and I'm pretty sure that it still applies. The same advice is also repeated in the test flight instructions for the HP-14 and HP-18. When flying my HP-11 at Air Sailing when the wind favored 21 I generally stopped right in front of the windmill near the intersection. Just as I cross the edge of the sage along runway 17 I would crank on the full 90, flare across 17, and come to a halt within less than 100 yards of touchdown. And that's landing downhill in a ship equipped with a go-kart style band-on-tire wheel brake. The secret to the HP landing technique is to be proactive about increasing stick forward pressure as you crank on the flaps. If you try to be reactive, and wait until you see the airspeed change, you've already gotten too slow. So the technique that works well is to get the stick moving in the right direction as you crank the flaps on or off, and worry about refining the speed control later. Control system engineers call this a "feed forward" system, since there's just not time to wait for feedback before starting corrective action. As far as getting sucked into a cloud, the only time it happened to me it was scary, but other than that rather tame. I cranked on about 75 degrees of flaps, put out the wheel to silence the warning buzzer, and trundled out the bottom in a 45-degree dive at about 50 knots. The important thing is to get the flaps out before you exceed the Vfe speeds. On another branch of this thread, Eric observes that one reason that flaps are an issue is that there are so few two-seaters with 90-degree flaps. I agree; this is one of the primary reasons that the next HP kit will not be developed with 90-degree flaps. If anybody really wants one, I can set the wings up for it, but the primary configuration will have airbrakes. Personally, I really do prefer the flaps over airbrakes. However, I do not have the resources to prosecute an ideological battle on their behalf. If anybody wants to know the depth to which I've sold out in pursuit of a successful career as a sailplane developer, feel free to let this be the measure of it. Thanks, and best regards to all Bob K. http://www.hpaircraft.com/hp-24 |
#16
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Eric Greenwell wrote:
JJ Sinclair wrote: OK, It's winter time and I'm bored, so let me throw my 2 cents in here. The only flight I ever had in a ship with flaps only was in a PIK-20B. It was a test flight after a broken fuselage. Things went well until it got time to land. I rolled in 45 degrees of flaps and everything looked just about right. Came over the fence at 50 knots and waited for her to settle down. I waited and waited and waited. By now I had floated down most of the 4000 foot runway and I'm still floating about 1 foot off the ground. What do I do? Musn't dump the flaps or she will drop like a stone, right? Finally got the wheel on the ground and jumped on the brake. That night I read the flight manual and it said to slowely crank off the flaps in this situation. I think the flaps only ships are OK, but require a different set of skills that must be mastered. Probably not for the low time pilot or those who don't read the flight manual before flight. My real problem was being about 5 knots too fast. Proper speed control is critical. So I'm told. Our club had a member from Long Island, where the club there had a 1-35. He said they got rid of it after a while because they got tired of pulling it out of the weeds at the end. Without a landing flap equipped two seater, they weren't able to train their low time pilots well enough to land it properly. I think there would be a lot more acceptance of HP style flaps if we had two seaters to train in. Flaps only ships are very rare in France and kowledge about their handling is probably even more rare. I wonder how one can handle in such a ship what is described in our flight Bible, the "blue book" (Manuel du pilote Vol a Voile, i.e. glider pilot's manual) as the 3 most common mistakes when landing: 1) flare to high; 2) flare with excessive back stick action; 3) bounce. In this 3 cases the glider comes a few feet above the ground at a speed just marginally above stall speed and quickly decaying due to the drag of open airbrakes. The immediate action to avoid that the glider falls on the ground like a stone in the following seconds is to retract the air-brakes, so that the drag stops killing your speed and you regain some lift, then try to land better ahead. But what can you do with no air-brakes? |
#17
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Bob Kuykendall wrote:
On another branch of this thread, Eric observes that one reason that flaps are an issue is that there are so few two-seaters with 90-degree flaps. I agree; this is one of the primary reasons that the next HP kit will not be developed with 90-degree flaps. If anybody really wants one, I can set the wings up for it, but the primary configuration will have airbrakes. Personally, I really do prefer the flaps over airbrakes. However, I do not have the resources to prosecute an ideological battle on their behalf. If anybody wants to know the depth to which I've sold out in pursuit of a successful career as a sailplane developer, feel free to let this be the measure of it. Are there engineering or manufacturing issues that make spoilers a more desirable choice these days? For example, a fiberglass wing might be more flexible than a metal one, which would make a 90 degree flap harder to implement. The early ASW 20 had problems this way with it's 60 degree flap setting. -- ----- Replace "SPAM" with "charter" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#18
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![]() "Robert Ehrlich" wrote in message ... Eric Greenwell wrote: JJ Sinclair wrote: OK, It's winter time and I'm bored, so let me throw my 2 cents in here. The only flight I ever had in a ship with flaps only was in a PIK-20B. It was a test flight after a broken fuselage. Things went well until it got time to land. I rolled in 45 degrees of flaps and everything looked just about right. Came over the fence at 50 knots and waited for her to settle down. I waited and waited and waited. By now I had floated down most of the 4000 foot runway and I'm still floating about 1 foot off the ground. What do I do? Musn't dump the flaps or she will drop like a stone, right? Finally got the wheel on the ground and jumped on the brake. That night I read the flight manual and it said to slowely crank off the flaps in this situation. I think the flaps only ships are OK, but require a different set of skills that must be mastered. Probably not for the low time pilot or those who don't read the flight manual before flight. My real problem was being about 5 knots too fast. Proper speed control is critical. So I'm told. Our club had a member from Long Island, where the club there had a 1-35. He said they got rid of it after a while because they got tired of pulling it out of the weeds at the end. Without a landing flap equipped two seater, they weren't able to train their low time pilots well enough to land it properly. I think there would be a lot more acceptance of HP style flaps if we had two seaters to train in. Flaps only ships are very rare in France and kowledge about their handling is probably even more rare. I wonder how one can handle in such a ship what is described in our flight Bible, the "blue book" (Manuel du pilote Vol a Voile, i.e. glider pilot's manual) as the 3 most common mistakes when landing: 1) flare to high; 2) flare with excessive back stick action; 3) bounce. In this 3 cases the glider comes a few feet above the ground at a speed just marginally above stall speed and quickly decaying due to the drag of open airbrakes. The immediate action to avoid that the glider falls on the ground like a stone in the following seconds is to retract the air-brakes, so that the drag stops killing your speed and you regain some lift, then try to land better ahead. But what can you do with no air-brakes? The landing is executed in a way as not to use full 90 degree flap in the final stages of the final. Rather manage the final approach in a way that allows the use of less flap. You will have some flap action in reserve to arrest any excessive sink, similar to using only partial spoiler. In Fact, when looking at my flying style with the flap only glider, I use the flap, like you would use the spoiler. I constantly make use of them during the pattern to place my self at any point I would like to be. When making misjudgements it is no different to correct them, as with spoilered gliders. It is best for a newcomer to place the glider relative high on final crank in full flaps and aim for the beginning of the run way. That way you will have enough speed for corrections if you make a misjudgement and if you are on glide path you burn of all the energy very quickly. It really does not matter if you use and extra 200 feet. In the end it the touch down speed that counts. As for out landings into small fields with high obstacle, it requires different approaches and only practice at your home field will make you proficient. Udo |
#19
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![]() "Robert Ehrlich" wrote in message ... Eric Greenwell wrote: JJ Sinclair wrote: OK, It's winter time and I'm bored, so let me throw my 2 cents in here. The only flight I ever had in a ship with flaps only was in a PIK-20B. It was a test flight after a broken fuselage. Things went well until it got time to land. I rolled in 45 degrees of flaps and everything looked just about right. Came over the fence at 50 knots and waited for her to settle down. I waited and waited and waited. By now I had floated down most of the 4000 foot runway and I'm still floating about 1 foot off the ground. What do I do? Musn't dump the flaps or she will drop like a stone, right? Finally got the wheel on the ground and jumped on the brake. That night I read the flight manual and it said to slowely crank off the flaps in this situation. I think the flaps only ships are OK, but require a different set of skills that must be mastered. Probably not for the low time pilot or those who don't read the flight manual before flight. My real problem was being about 5 knots too fast. Proper speed control is critical. So I'm told. Our club had a member from Long Island, where the club there had a 1-35. He said they got rid of it after a while because they got tired of pulling it out of the weeds at the end. Without a landing flap equipped two seater, they weren't able to train their low time pilots well enough to land it properly. I think there would be a lot more acceptance of HP style flaps if we had two seaters to train in. Flaps only ships are very rare in France and kowledge about their handling is probably even more rare. I wonder how one can handle in such a ship what is described in our flight Bible, the "blue book" (Manuel du pilote Vol a Voile, i.e. glider pilot's manual) as the 3 most common mistakes when landing: 1) flare to high; 2) flare with excessive back stick action; 3) bounce. In this 3 cases the glider comes a few feet above the ground at a speed just marginally above stall speed and quickly decaying due to the drag of open airbrakes. The immediate action to avoid that the glider falls on the ground like a stone in the following seconds is to retract the air-brakes, so that the drag stops killing your speed and you regain some lift, then try to land better ahead. But what can you do with no air-brakes? Flaps, once deflected beyond about 10 degrees, produce mainly drag. In steady-state glides, drag is drag whether produced by flaps or spoilers. For a given amount of drag, a flapped glider will have the nose much further down than a glider with spoilers, however. This gives a much better view of the runway. The main difference is in the transients as the drag devices are extended or retracted. The trick with flaps is to manage the transients. Yanking on flaps from the retracted position will produce a upward transient before the drag steepens the glide path. Yanking on spoilers will produce a downward transient before the glider settles into a steeper glide. This generally means that the pilot should not make large, sudden changes in flap settings near the ground - but this is good advice for spoilers as well. Large flap deflections change the relationship between pitch and airspeed. Large changes in pitch result in small changes in airspeed so that the nose can be steeply down and the airspeed will not increase much. This invites the technique popular with HP glider pilots of just aiming the glider steeply down at the flair point with 90 degrees of flap deployed. If the glide appears to be overshooting the aim point, pushing the nose further down steepens the glide without much increase in airspeed. If it appears that you are undershooting, just raise the nose a little and shallow the glide. Extremely accurate landings are possible with no changes made in the flap setting. The height to start the flare is a bit tricky to judge at first and the flare is greatly exaggerated compared to spoiler only gliders. If you flare too high, the recovery is to just relax some of the back stick and let the glider settle before completing the flare. "Leave 'em where they are" is good advice when landing with flaps. I really like flaps. They eliminate the discontinuity in the upper wing surface created by the spoiler box. Once mastered, they permit much lower energy landings than with spoilers. A for as a trainer, the IS28b2 Lark can be landed with flaps only although the glide is quite shallow. I looked at the flap drive geometry on my Lark with the thought that it might be modified to allow 45 degrees or more of positive flap just for training scenarios. It would be possible but the paperwork would be a nightmare. Bill Daniels |
#20
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![]() "Robert Ehrlich" wrote... Flaps only ships are very rare in France and kowledge about their handling is probably even more rare. I wonder how one can handle in such a ship what is described in our flight Bible, the "blue book" (Manuel du pilote Vol a Voile, i.e. glider pilot's manual) as the 3 most common mistakes when landing: 1) flare to high; 2) flare with excessive back stick action; 3) bounce. In this 3 cases the glider comes a few feet above the ground at a speed just marginally above stall speed and quickly decaying due to the drag of open airbrakes. The immediate action to avoid that the glider falls on the ground like a stone in the following seconds is to retract the air-brakes, so that the drag stops killing your speed and you regain some lift, then try to land better ahead. But what can you do with no air-brakes? Speed control is important in gracefully landing flaps-only gliders (spoilers-only too, of course). What I've found - and often seen - is that gliders' large-deflection flaps essentially 'quit working' as drag producing devices if landed 'too fast.' True even for HP-16's. Come in too fast and you _will_ float a long ways in flapped gliders...unless you slowly ease off on the flaps, in which case the ship will gently settle...sort of the flaps-only equivalent of easing on more spoilers if running out of field. Certainly not a Big Deal if understood beforehand. BTW, the most common mistake I've seen in flapped ships IS landing too fast...probably fallout from: 1) (U.S. centric) training in Schweizer 2-33's in which being too fast doesn't generally lead to landing alarm/excitement; and 2) (worldwide?) training in reasonably benign (in the touchdown sense) spoilers-only, nose-dragging trainers lacking a springy nosewheel. G-103's in the U.S. often tell the tale of what bad can happen when trying to force one of them on the ground at too fast a speed (PIO/fuselage damage/etc.). Regarding your specific questions, in the event someone DOES manage to flare too high (whether from doing a good flare but too high, or from over-aggressive aft-stick motion/'ballooning', or simply bounces the touchdown) in a flaps-only ship, the only proper recourse is to wait. If you're savvy enough and have time, you can re-establish the proper pitch angle for touchdown _then_ wait...but wait. Don't churn the stick and don't adjust the flap position. The bad news is drag IS high and ground-effect DOES hugely lessen as speed decays. The good news is there is usually a LOT of downwash, even on a truly botched flare with full flaps, and it's not the easiest thing to do to drop a flapped ship in from 3 feet. Certainly no more difficult IMHO than doing so in a spoilers-only ship. Dropping in either configuration is possible, of course. IMHO, about the only situation I can envision where a flaps-only ship IS worse than a spoilers-only one is that of getting low and slow on the approach. Is there a spoilers-only driver alive who doesn't take some comfort in the thought s/he can slam the spoilers shut in that situation and not distinctly improve things in the near-term future? Get yourself in that situation in a flaps-only ship and you're essentially out of options. The GOOD news is that you're much more likely to get low and slow in a ship having weak landing aids...generally not a problem in gliders having _only_ large deflection flaps as landing aids. Regards, Bob W. --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.538 / Virus Database: 333 - Release Date: 11/10/2003 |
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