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#51
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No. Too low tech.
-- Bert Willing ASW20 "TW" "Jackal" a écrit dans le message de news: ... Possibly looking through the string and just observing the direction the world is moving and inputting rudder in the direction counter to the direction of motion might have merit? |
#52
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At 11:30 21 January 2005, Jackal wrote:
Possibly looking through the string and just observing the direction the world is moving and inputting rudder in the direction counter to the direction of motion might have merit? Yes - I think there is no choice. I started the thread because that is apparently not always as easy to do in an unexpected spin as in a practice or training spin - and was prompted by the posting from a professional test pilot that even he had once used the wrong rudder in a spin recovery in a jet. The suggestion about considering using the string was based on Helmut Reichmann's comment in Cross Country Soaring (P147 Revised Edition) that 'the string always points to the inside in a spin'. Two interesting things have come out of the feedback within the thread and directly: 1) Confirmation that even experienced pilots and instructors can get disorientated about rotational direction an unexpected spin. 2) Reichmann's assertion has been undermined and consequently the behaviour of the string can't be said to be reliable enough to advocate as the primary reference for which rudder to use in a fully developed spin. John Galloway |
#53
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![]() "Stewart Kissel" wrote in message ... 4)All sailplanes should have yaw strings. So what is the logic for no yaw string?...I had the occasion to fly in a private two seater once, that did not have one. Some logic I did not understand about using the T+B ball instead. What's the logic? You mean besides the fact that the string will just jump around randomly all the time? Unless, of course, you mount it on the INSIDE of the windscreen. Then, if you had a weight on it, would work pretty good as a heads up yaw indicator. But, of course, it would work opposite from a string mounted on the outside of a glider... And, on the third hand, it would work on the outside if you were flying a big daddy twin (excluding the Cessna Skymaster, of course). But since most of they guys that fly big daddy twins mostly started out in single engine spam cans, their bad habits are pretty much ingrained. Eh? jimk |
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