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#11
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I just got my taildragger endorsement in a Cessna 140, and I'm curious
which taildragger out there (J-3, citabria, pacer, 120/140, etc) most approximates a Nieuports' handling characteristics...(if any)? |
#12
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Colin: I was riding in a friends Bell 47 GB3 the other day and I looked at
him and he had both hands up adjusting the visor on his helmet. Needless to say my right hand got awfully close to the cyclic while he fooled around. Can you provide instruction on chewing gun and hovering? Do you look further out or in close? It would help avoid fatigue in my jaw muscles and at least that is one set of muscles to start on. Some of the others are going to require special attention. -- Kathy Fields Experimental Helo magazine P. O. Box 1585 Inyokern, CA 93527 (760) 377-4478 (760) 408-9747 general and layout cell (760) 608-1299 technical and advertising cell www.vkss.com www.experimentalhelo.com "COLIN LAMB" wrote in message .net... I know a guy who flies a Fokker Triplane and he says if you let go of the controls and leave it to its own devices it slews off into a left wing down sideslip and will stay like that all the way to the ground. Helicopters will not fly themselves, either. But, after awhile, you just get used to it. Pretty soon, you can chew gum while you fly. I even figured out how to change channels on the radio. The scale Neuport that I saw was beautiful - but it had a horizontal bar right in front of the dash and I could not help but wonder where that would be if the airplane stopped flying before my head did. Colin |
#13
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"Stuart & Kathryn Fields" wrote:
Can you provide instruction on chewing gun and hovering? I hope that was a typo, and not a request for instructions for a truly memorable suicide... Mark Hickey |
#14
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I was having a terrible time getting the hovering down. It was continually
chasing things. I was about ready to give up. Then, one day on the way to the airport, I got something in my eye. My eye was watering and I could not get it out. I was uncomfortable and the eye was getting most of my attention. I was going to cancel the flight, but it was such a nice day I was hoping that my eye would just fix itself. We started out and the first thing we did was go over to the practice area and hover until the instructor got sick of it. Once settled, the instructor said "you have the controls". My eye still hurt. However, I noted the helicopter was not moving. I looked over at the instructor's hands and they were off the controls. My thought was then, "who in the hell is flying this thing?". It was some time before I realized I was hovering. It was the first time I stopped thinking about the controls and kept thinking about my eye. All of a sudden, a big smile came across my face and I forgot about the eye. So, I finally figured out how to fly a helicopter - you do it with your mind. Driving home, I was hovering all the way. Days like that are what flying is all about. Colin |
#15
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![]() "Morgans" wrote in message ... "Big John" wrote in message ... Original birds in WWI operated off grass fields and had 'skags' (sp). With full back stick you dug the 'skag' in ground and didn't need brakes to stop. If you build a prototype today you need brakes as most, if not all, flying is off hard surface. Big John I wonder if anyone has tried using a skag, only cutting the tread section off of an old auto tire and bolting it onto the bottom. It seems to me that many of the same attributes would be attained, and some of the same ground handling characteristics. -- Jim in NC You can make the tailskid work on pavement with a boot. I have seen them with wooden sacrificial blocks on them. The real problem with a tailskid isn't landing on the runway. They are an absolute bugger to taxi on the ramp! Especially if you have any airplanes to dodge. It takes a healthy blast to get the tail up so you can kick it around and with no brakes you will also get moving pretty fast with a couple of close turns. A friend of mine has a Waco 10 with an OX-5 engine and a tailskid with no brakes. We park it as close to the runway as we can to avoid taxi. Especially at flyins! :-) Highflyer Highflight Aviation Services Pinckneyville Airport ( PJY ) |
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