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#21
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![]() "Jim Logajan" wrote in message So far all I've ever flown is a Schweizer SGS 2-33. Not only can't I turn it with the brake, I can't reach the brake during taxi anyway since I'm outside the cockpit during those times. ;-) You've never landed and then "taxied to parking"? BT, CFI-G |
#22
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On Sep 15, 12:44*pm, "Ol Shy & Bashful" wrote:
I'm deligthted to see I'm managing to get some arguments and discussion going. And if you notice, No Profanity? I challenge my students to learn to taxi without brakes. and I come down hard if they beat up the airplane with unecessary braking instead of staying ahead of the airplane. (sometimes even with profanity! Can you imagine that?) How about you? If you had to pay for the brakes, tires, and maintenance, would YOU beat up the airplane? Ol S&B A lot of students and/or renters aren't thinking about brake burnout. They've grown up driving cars that had pretty good brakes, so they treat the airplane's brakes the same. They often don't know what the "L" in "PRNDL" is for, or the "3-2-1" in "PRND321." They never use those settings when going down hills, or if they have a standard, they use the brakes on it, too, instead of gearing down. So brakes become the fix for most instances of speed control. So they taxi around with too much power and use the brakes to fix that. Or land long and fast and use the brakes to fix that, too, except that the wings are still lifting and there's little weight and traction on the tires, so the tires suffer as well as the brakes. And sooner or later the surface conditions are less than good and the brakes can't fix the problem anymore and some damage ensues. When I was instructing I was always asking the student to pull that throttle back, please, and stop riding the brakes. Brakes that are held on during taxi get very hot and their metallic compounds start to weld to the disc and raise little burrs that cut the daylights out of the pads. Those $160 discs wear out much faster, even aside from the burrs. Tires that have to resist the thrust constantly scrub a little and wear out quickly. And with the thrust line at the prop hub and the drag at the surface, a rotational couple is created that pulls the nose down so that the propeller, which is turning too fast and moving much more air than necessary, sucks up all the little rocks and other hard bits that eat the propeller before its time. Such sloppy piloting costs a lot, see, and it only makes the aircraft owner raise his rates to cover the maintenance expenses. A private owner that's had to pay for this sort of thing becomes acutely aware of his bad habits. Dan |
#23
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On 2008-09-15 11:44:12 -0700, "Ol Shy & Bashful" said:
I'm deligthted to see I'm managing to get some arguments and discussion going. And if you notice, No Profanity? I challenge my students to learn to taxi without brakes. and I come down hard if they beat up the airplane with unecessary braking instead of staying ahead of the airplane. (sometimes even with profanity! Can you imagine that?) How about you? If you had to pay for the brakes, tires, and maintenance, would YOU beat up the airplane? Ol S&B Naw. In fact, I challenge my students not to use brakes even when they are flying! :-) (Sorry, OSB. Couldn't help it.) -- Waddling Eagle World Famous Flight Instructor |
#24
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When renting, on most landings ('xcept the last of the day), I'll land
short and brake hard (just hard, no squealing) to minimize hobbs time when taxing back for departure by making the first turnoff... T Ol Shy & Bashful wrote: I'm deligthted to see I'm managing to get some arguments and discussion going. And if you notice, No Profanity? I challenge my students to learn to taxi without brakes. and I come down hard if they beat up the airplane with unecessary braking instead of staying ahead of the airplane. (sometimes even with profanity! Can you imagine that?) How about you? If you had to pay for the brakes, tires, and maintenance, would YOU beat up the airplane? Ol S&B |
#25
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"BT" wrote:
"Jim Logajan" wrote in message So far all I've ever flown is a Schweizer SGS 2-33. Not only can't I turn it with the brake, I can't reach the brake during taxi anyway since I'm outside the cockpit during those times. ;-) You've never landed and then "taxied to parking"? Sure - but have yet to sit in the aircraft during "taxi to parking" because the 2-33 is a monowheel glider. (Caveats on the monowheel. It has small wheels near the wingtips and a small tailwheel.) After landing one gets out, waits for the tow vehicle (in our case a riding lawn mower) and someone has to pick up the low wing and level it and then walk alongside the glider while mower pulls the glider along. Steering is by walking faster or slower than the mower. It's a grass strip so trying to manually move the glider more than a few dozen feet is a chore. This is the field: http://maps.google.com/maps?hl=en&ie...16522&t=h&z=17 |
#26
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Jim Logajan wrote in
: "BT" wrote: "Jim Logajan" wrote in message So far all I've ever flown is a Schweizer SGS 2-33. Not only can't I turn it with the brake, I can't reach the brake during taxi anyway since I'm outside the cockpit during those times. ;-) You've never landed and then "taxied to parking"? Sure - but have yet to sit in the aircraft during "taxi to parking" because the 2-33 is a monowheel glider. (Caveats on the monowheel. It has small wheels near the wingtips and a small tailwheel.) he meant rolling it to the tiedown after touchdown.. Bertie |
#27
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Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
Jim Logajan wrote in : "BT" wrote: "Jim Logajan" wrote in message So far all I've ever flown is a Schweizer SGS 2-33. Not only can't I turn it with the brake, I can't reach the brake during taxi anyway since I'm outside the cockpit during those times. ;-) You've never landed and then "taxied to parking"? Sure - but have yet to sit in the aircraft during "taxi to parking" because the 2-33 is a monowheel glider. (Caveats on the monowheel. It has small wheels near the wingtips and a small tailwheel.) he meant rolling it to the tiedown after touchdown.. Ah - I misunderstood - no. See, there is this shallow drainage ditch in the grass between the tie down area and the landing field that would make for some nasty pranging at anything above walking speed. Plus the tow plane is typically too close to the tie down area to do that safely. |
#28
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Jim Logajan wrote in
: Bertie the Bunyip wrote: Jim Logajan wrote in : "BT" wrote: "Jim Logajan" wrote in message So far all I've ever flown is a Schweizer SGS 2-33. Not only can't I turn it with the brake, I can't reach the brake during taxi anyway since I'm outside the cockpit during those times. ;-) You've never landed and then "taxied to parking"? Sure - but have yet to sit in the aircraft during "taxi to parking" because the 2-33 is a monowheel glider. (Caveats on the monowheel. It has small wheels near the wingtips and a small tailwheel.) he meant rolling it to the tiedown after touchdown.. Ah - I misunderstood - no. See, there is this shallow drainage ditch in the grass between the tie down area and the landing field that would make for some nasty pranging at anything above walking speed. Plus the tow plane is typically too close to the tie down area to do that safely. Yeah, it's not something you can do just anywhere! Bertie |
#29
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On Mon, 15 Sep 2008 12:55:09 -0700 (PDT), Dudley Henriques
wrote: The way I would present this issue is to simply say that brakes are put on the airplane to hold it for the run up check and for use ONLY when your pre-planned use of aerodynamic forces available to you, or your steering capabilities won't make the necessary change in direction. In other words, you shouldn't be using them on takeoff, landing, and even while taxiing if your planning is adequate for the situation. I like the general rule that dictates that brakes on an airplane should be used as little as possible. Dudley Henriques you know that I posted a comment along this exact line of thought about a month ago I got bagged by nearly everyone for over a week. I'm still correct in what I wrote and you evidently are in agreement. :-) Stealth Pilot |
#30
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On Sep 15, 1:55*pm, wrote:
Ol Shy & Bashful wrote: I'm deligthted to see I'm managing to get some arguments and discussion going. And if you notice, No Profanity? I challenge my students to learn to taxi without brakes. and I come down hard if they beat up the airplane with unecessary braking instead of staying ahead of the airplane. (sometimes even with profanity! Can you imagine that?) How about you? If you had to pay for the brakes, tires, and maintenance, would YOU beat up the airplane? Ol S&B I fly a Tiger. Got any suggestions on how to turn without brakes? Back when I was flying 172's I never found it necessary to use the brakes unless I had to make a REALLY tight turn, so I see your point. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. Jim Well ya got me there! But even so, careful use of flight controls can certainly mitigate brake use. I started flying the old AA-1 back in the early 70's and it wasn't much different than taxiing one of the old Volpar Beech conversions that required braking in place of nose wheel steering. Ol S&B |
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