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On Sat, 9 Feb 2008 15:58:05 -0800 (PST), Tina
wrote: OK, our way is like this, It's a Mooney, and the gear comes up in visual conditions at about 100 feet agl or when there's not enough runway ahead to land. In hard IMC it's sometime after the transition to instrument controlled flight if the ceiling is pretty low. We've looked thru a bunch of complex SEL NTSB findings, haven't found anything that suggests we're missing something that causes accidents (other than staying on the ground and NOT driving to the airport).. Is there a better way? I'm not sure what your question is. Manual or electric gear? With the J-Bar (I used to fly a Ranger with manual gear), the only caveat is to be at a slow enough speed during gear retraction so as to make gear retraction physically undemanding (puts less stress on the mechanism, also). I now fly an M20E with electric gear and have had about 2500 hrs in this airplane. I raise the gear no earlier than "no usable runway ahead" and no later than Vy. If I had manual gear, I'd probably raise it during the transition between Vx to Vy, but I haven't flown a manual gear Mooney in many years. IFR vs VFR is not an issue (for me). The gear retraction is quick and the flying characteristics don't change noticeably during the process. --ron |
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swinging the J bar is a distraction, especially if you're also
transitioning between the marginal VFR during the take off run to instruments. I doubt there has been an accident caused by a pilot following either one, but I was a lot more comfortable getting established on instruments in the climb before swinging the Joe bar, instead of during the acceleration to climb speed. |
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On Fri, 15 Feb 2008 11:00:48 -0800 (PST), Tina
wrote: swinging the J bar is a distraction, especially if you're also transitioning between the marginal VFR during the take off run to instruments. I doubt there has been an accident caused by a pilot following either one, but I was a lot more comfortable getting established on instruments in the climb before swinging the Joe bar, instead of during the acceleration to climb speed. I did my primary instrument training in a Mooney with the J-Bar, while also transitioning to the Mooney from flying non-retractable Pipers and Cessnas. If your Mooney has a JBar, you will find that, with practice and experience, retraction will become a non-event. Until then, do whatever you find comfortable. However, the recommended (by the MAPASF courses) normal IFR climb speed is faster than the speed at which you can easily retract the gear with the JBar. So if you are getting established in the climb at, let us say 105KIAS or so, it will be more difficult to retract the gear as you are accelerating through Vx. --ron |
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