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1) Where is Charlie Nixon? He is an old flying buddie. Former Navy
F6F pilot, Airline and NASA Exec. Lived in DC area. We are QB members. He was my sponsor. I moved to Houston TX and still have his landing gear from a 1947 Bonanza he owned. I want to give him his gear. 2) About spins: I am new at flying a 172. 25 hours. Owned two Pitts Specials but never a 172. Only have 25 hours in a 172... My question: In a 172, can a spin be accelerated (made to spin faster) by a) starting the spin with full rudder and full back stick elevator and then b) once the spin gets going, then moving the stick to half back, not full back? Anybody tried it in a 172? Any problems? Just curious. |
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Mike Smith wrote:
2) About spins: I am new at flying a 172. 25 hours. Owned two Pitts Specials but never a 172. Only have 25 hours in a 172... My question: In a 172, can a spin be accelerated (made to spin faster) by a) starting the spin with full rudder and full back stick elevator and then b) once the spin gets going, then moving the stick to half back, not full back? Anybody tried it in a 172? Any problems? Just curious. NASA has some good video of the tests they did in the 1980's. Certification only requires two turns. NASA had to use their spin chute for recovery on at least one occasion as I recall. |
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Mike,
Your accelerated rate of rotation question is a good one. The reduction in back pressure as you do in a Pitts or Decathlon doesn't work in a 172. The vast majority of the time in 172s built in the late '60s, '70s and '80s (haven't flown the earlier ones enough to comment) if you relax the back pressure at all, the airplane unstalls and enters a diving spiral. It takes full aft elevator to enter and remain in the spin in most all circumstances. You may find some that are very reluctant to break, and it make take power on the entry to get the stall to progress. You can significantly affect the rotation rate with the ailerons, they are very effective at the stall. In fact, opposite aileron can stop or seriously delay spin entry, despite full rudder application. Aileron with the rotation will speed it up a bunch. On recovery, aileron use can help hit a specific point to stop the rotation, although the normal recovery is with ailerons neutral. Have fun with the airplane, it's good old shoe. All the best, Rick (Mike Smith) wrote in message . com... 1) Where is Charlie Nixon? He is an old flying buddie. Former Navy F6F pilot, Airline and NASA Exec. Lived in DC area. We are QB members. He was my sponsor. I moved to Houston TX and still have his landing gear from a 1947 Bonanza he owned. I want to give him his gear. 2) About spins: I am new at flying a 172. 25 hours. Owned two Pitts Specials but never a 172. Only have 25 hours in a 172... My question: In a 172, can a spin be accelerated (made to spin faster) by a) starting the spin with full rudder and full back stick elevator and then b) once the spin gets going, then moving the stick to half back, not full back? Anybody tried it in a 172? Any problems? Just curious. |
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