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#51
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![]() Jim Macklin wrote: Boeing airliners are designed to have the nose wheel firmly on the ground, some even have a brake. But no airplane is designed to have the nose forced/slammed down except maybe a carrier based fighter. But back to the GA aircraft and effective nose wheel steering... steering works with the weight on the main landing gear and the nose wheel applies force to move the nose. If you apply forward elevator you'll be loading the nose wheel and shifting the pivot point [fulcrum] to the nose wheel, this will cause the airplane to weathervane even more and result in loss of directional control. wrote in message oups.com... Matt Whiting wrote: Dan wrote: All, When touching down in a crosswind, after the mains and the nosewheel have all touched down firmly and are rolling, would it be proper procedure to apply slight forward pressure to get better steering from the nosewheel? Often, noseweel steering seems ineffective, and this seems to have helped my control on rollout. Any cautions? I have heard about "wheelbarrowing" but is that more of a takeoff issue than landing issue? Under what circumstances would "wheelbarrowing" occur? --Dan I was taught to basically use neutral elevator during the roll-out. You really shouldn't need to add forward pressure to get solid steering. Wheelbarrowing is a possibility if you apply aggresive nose down elevator right after landing when you speed is high, but as you slow down the ability to do this obviously decreases. What are your symptoms of ineffective nosewheel steering? Are you not able to hold the airplane on the centerline? Are you rolling in aileron into the wind as you slow down such that you have full aileron into the crosswind as you get to taxi speed? I happened to bump into this:- http://www.aaib.dft.gov.uk/cms_resou...pdf_507740.pdf It discusses forward pressure immideately after landing says:- Boeing 757-2T7, G-MONC Nature of Damage: Structural damage to forward fuselage in area of nose landing gear .... Having developed an incorrect landing technique, it is possible that it was simply a matter of time before the timing in the application of full nose-down elevator caused an incident I thought that there was a resonance with this discussion. If a supervised, recurrently-trained, co-piloted, airline Captain can go astray like this what chance is there for a GA pilot on his own? Phew! In the full text I think that it suggests that he may have "performed" differently in his check rides than in his day to day flying. Nothing malicious (intended by me or him - think it was a man), just somehow gone down an incorrect path. |
#52
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![]() I agree 100% that the elevator can generate an upward force and pushing the stick forward in a tricycle plane to put weight on the nose is NOT a good idea in general. I would think it would be very easy to over do it. Danny Dot The bigger problem in wheelbarrowing is the too-fast touchdown. The wing, if you remember your groundschooling, generates more lift at a lower angle of attack at a higher airspeed, and a fast landing is at a flatter attitude. Since the nosewheel usually keeps the airplane slightly nose-high on the ground compared to flight attitude, the nosewheel will land first, and without the control the mains offer, the airplane becomes a really nasty taildragger. Forcing the elevator down only make it worse, and having flaps deployed lowers the nose even further for a given airspeed. Years ago one of our students ran a 150 off the runway into the snow and overturned it, just because he wouldn't slow the airplane to the proper approach speed and get in on the right glidepath. Trying to fix a bad approach by diving at the runway and then forcing the airplane on long before it should land is a sure way to get hurt and bust your airplane, sooner or later. This thread was about crosswind landings. The biggest and most common mistake I see there is the belief that the flight is over after the wheels are on the ground. He will neutralize the controls, including the ailerons, and in the rollout the wind could pick up the upwind wing and flip the airplane over. More and more aileron should be applied after touchdown until it's all used up, and then held there until the rollout is complete. Even in taxing in a stronger wind the controls should be used to prevent upset. Dan |
#53
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![]() Capt. Geoffrey Thorpe wrote: "Dan" wrote in message ps.com... My impression that the elevator applied varying levels of downward force to balance the plane about the center of lift. I am not aware that the elevator could even produce _upward_ force on the tail. If the elevator couldn't generate an _upward_ force, then you couldn't pick up the tail on an taildragger, right? Let me assure you, you can pick up the tail on a taildragger. Sure you can, but much of that lift is a pitch couple generated by the prop's thrust line being so far above the locked mains while standing still, and lifting of the tail while moving is largely due to the wing's CP being well behind the mains. If you can see the elevator in cruise flight you'll see that it is down some, to counteract the downforce of the stabilizer. The elevator's lifing force in some airplanes might not be enough to maintain nose-up in inverted flight; aerobatic airplanes have more elevator travel and the CP and CG may be closer together to reduce the inherent stability. |
#54
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On 29 Dec 2006 05:28:48 -0800, "mad8" wrote:
that was a very interesting read ![]() wrote: I happened to bump into this:- http://www.aaib.dft.gov.uk/cms_resou...pdf_507740.pdf Even with aircraft designed for using the nose gear with braking, this shows it's not a good idea to force the nose down. :-)) That and you sure can tell the report writer was using English English instead of American English:-)) Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com |
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