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#31
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![]() "John Galban" wrote in message om... A Lieberman wrote in message ... I found that taxing a low wing is much easier to handle in high winds situation. Is it because the CG is lower to the ground? After all, the weight of the fuel is lower to the ground over the wheels, thus harder to tip over? Lower CG is part of it. The weight of not only the fuel, but the wing spar and internal structure significantly contributes to the lower CG. The other part is that the gear stance is usually wider on a low wing, since it is often attached to the wing spar instead of the fuselage. The triangle formed by the nose, left and right wheel is wider and less prone to tip to one side or the other. For a low center of gravity, consider the Rockwell JetProp (now Twin Commander) when the bottom of the fusalage is only nine inches off the pavement. This can make the body act like an air dam for crosswind taxiing. |
#32
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Although all planes differ, the general answer is... yes.
Lot of factors here, but the wing being lower, helps..center of gravity is lower, and the main gear stance is wider , not being confined to mounting on the fuselage. I remember a landing a Comanche in a X-wind..(no cross rny- BTW, landings are mandatory) that would have sent our Cessna end over end. 3rd attempt, right foot in the firewall.. I would have been plain dumb to try this with a 182.. I have some time on a Warrior, - short, sturdy wide spaced gear.. Worked well in x-winds, but the rudder on the Comanche seemed to be more effective in the slip... Cheers! Dave on the On Sat, 21 Feb 2004 07:51:29 -0800, A Lieberman wrote: BTIZ wrote: Lets just say I've seen more than one Cessna flipped onto its back when tie downs failed in high winds.. But Pipers seem to stay upright. I wondered about this. I found that taxing a low wing is much easier to handle in high winds situation. Is it because the CG is lower to the ground? After all, the weight of the fuel is lower to the ground over the wheels, thus harder to tip over? Allen |
#33
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In article , Dan Luke
wrote: "Roger Bartholomee" wrote: The author says "It's important to leave a little slack in each line, especially if you are expecting gusty wind conditions. Slack will allow the airplane to move a little. Without any slack, a strong gust could damage the airframe." Utter bulls---. AOPA should fix this. There is, however, an exception. In some airplanes, like a Bonanza or Debonair, the CG moves aft as fuel is burned. If you tie down such an airplane when you return with empty tanks and make the tail tiedown very tight, then when the FBO comes along and fills the tanks the CG will move forward putting a lot of stress on the tail tiedown. This cannot be good for the airframe. And if someone still happens to be sitting in the back seat while you are tying the tail down tightly it will make this problem even worse. I either wait for the fuel truck before tying down or leave a little slack in the tail tiedown when I tie down the Bo or the Deb with tanks not full. |
#34
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![]() Tom Fleischman wrote: In some airplanes, like a Bonanza or Debonair, the CG moves aft as fuel is burned. If you tie down such an airplane when you return with empty tanks and make the tail tiedown very tight, then when the FBO comes along and fills the tanks the CG will move forward putting a lot of stress on the tail tiedown. This cannot be good for the airframe. And if someone still happens to be sitting in the back seat while you are tying the tail down tightly it will make this problem even worse. I either wait for the fuel truck before tying down or leave a little slack in the tail tiedown when I tie down the Bo or the Deb with tanks not full. That seems a little far-fetched to me. The tanks are what, a few inches ahead of the CG? and the tail tie-down is what, 6 feet (at least) behind the CG? and the weight of the added fuel is what, maybe 100 lbs? Doesn't seem like that should produce "a lot of stress". But then you're there and I'm not, and it's your airplane. Dave Remove SHIRT to reply directly. |
#35
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![]() "Tom Fleischman" wrote in message rthlink.net... In article , Dan Luke wrote: "Roger Bartholomee" wrote: The author says "It's important to leave a little slack in each line, especially if you are expecting gusty wind conditions. Slack will allow the airplane to move a little. Without any slack, a strong gust could damage the airframe." Utter bulls---. AOPA should fix this. There is, however, an exception. In some airplanes, like a Bonanza or Debonair, the CG moves aft as fuel is burned. So what? Even Cessnas do that. If you tie down such an airplane when you return with empty tanks and make the tail tiedown very tight, then when the FBO comes along and fills the tanks the CG will move forward putting a lot of stress on the tail tiedown. Only if the nose is not already resting on its gear. If you are worried about that, then you sure don't want to see what happens in the maintenance hangar when they are working on your nose gear. Pulling on a tail tiedown should not damage it. If it does, the tiedown is too weak to be useful in a windstorm anyway. The thing that damages tail tiedowns is smacking them on the runway during poorly executed takeoff and landing operations. That can strip the threads on the tiedown and buckle the bulkhead that the tiedown is attached to. |
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