Chris, 
 
It IS a myth.  Stall is related to critical angle of attack and has 
absolutely nothing to do with airspeed.  The quoted stall speeds are based 
on very important assumptions of configuration and power setting.  Typically 
when people talk about the stall speed of an airplane, they mean V0, which 
is clean, flaps up, power off. 
 
You can stall the airplane at Vne if you pull hard enough.  There are enough 
warbird accidents where the pilot stalled at the bottom of the loop and 
flopped flat into the ground to prove the theory. 
 
Shawn 
"Chris Hoffmann"  wrote in message 
... 
 The first thing that jumped out at me from your report is this: 
 
  Another myth cited in the AOPA study is "watch your airspeed, or 
  you're going to stall this airplane!" 
 
 Pardon me, but if your airspeed gets below stall speed, you ARE going to 
 stall. Further, if your airspeed is below the usual 1.3 Vso safety 
cushion, 
 you are getting to the point where all it takes is a turn too steep, or a 
 bit of tailwind, or a yank back on the yoke, and you are LIKELY to stall. 
 This is not "myth". 
 
 On the other hand, this: 
 
 "Just don't let airspeed get below a safe value and 
  stalls are not a problem." 
 
 is not an axiom to fly by. Students *should* know/be taught that a stall 
can 
 occur at any speed, any attitude, of course. But I see nothing wrong with 
 training students to keep their airspeed where it's supposed to be in the 
 pattern and on approach, which, I believe, is the context from which those 
 two quoted remarks were taken. 
 
 -- 
 Chris Hoffmann 
 Student Pilot @ UES 
 30 hours 
 
 
 
 
 
		
	
		
		
		
		
		
	
		 
			
 
			
			
			
				 
            
			
			
            
            
                
			
			
		 
		
	
	
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