MBDiagMan
Final Approach
Need to rename the plane to Daisy or something!
That’s a robust looking tailwheel assembly. Good investment.
No, a 3-point landing assumes you touch down on all three wheels pretty much simultaneously.a 3-point landing assumes the wing is near its critical AoA when on the ground in a 3-point attitude.
The B.D. Maule Double Whomp landing.a full stall landing hits tailwheel first
If your tail hits first you're not doing a full stall landing.
I tend to touch my tail first as I get used to my slat wing Cub. Unless I'm carrying a good amount of power to maintain nose high it means I'm landing with too much speed.
I believe that a lot of that depends upon the aircraft.No. Touching tail first with the power set low means you're scrubbing speed. Slow it down a little and the elevator can't hold the nose that high. That's my take on it, anyway. Success depends on how much drag you can create, I suppose. An RV is much slipperier Than my Cub.
Describing it this way makes it seem much more tricky than it actually is. Its land the wheels, let it slow a little bit, then one simple movement of the stick and the tail is down. Pretty simple. Writing this out is required putting much more thought into it than was ever required in the plane.One of my students brought up an interesting point: when making a wheel landing, you almost have to land twice; first to gently roll it on and second, to get the tail down and slow to taxi-speed.
Or, just wait until you are stopped.One of my students brought up an interesting point: when making a wheel landing, you almost have to land twice; first to gently roll it on and second, to get the tail down and slow to taxi-speed.
One of my students brought up an interesting point: when making a wheel landing, you almost have to land twice; first to gently roll it on and second, to get the tail down and slow to taxi-speed.
I agree...I think one of the reasons pilots struggle with things like wheel landings (or W&B, or NDBs, or whatever) is that they were convinced by either themselves or their instructors that it’s hard.Describing it this way makes it seem much more tricky than it actually is. Its land the wheels, let it slow a little bit, then one simple movement of the stick and the tail is down. Pretty simple. Writing this out is required putting much more thought into it than was ever required in the plane.
Nobody has mentioned this yet, but a 3-point landing assumes the wing is near its critical AoA when on the ground in a 3-point attitude. My Vans RV-8 doesn’t have enough AoA on the ground to stall the wing, so a full stall landing hits tailwheel first with the likelihood of eventually causing damage to the bulkhead and mounting hardware. If you’re careful to not hit the tail, and do get it down on all three points simultaneously it is much squirrelier as the wing is still flying and the wheels aren’t loaded up, so it’s easy to pick up a drift, or lift a wing which then turns into a swerve as the airplane decelerates. At least in the RV series, wheel landings every time for me. I’ve 3 pointed other airplanes, Cubs, Decathlon’s, Stearmans, but the RV just doesn’t like it. So it depends on the aircraft type in my book.
Nobody has mentioned this yet, but a 3-point landing assumes the wing is near its critical AoA when on the ground in a 3-point attitude. My Vans RV-8 doesn’t have enough AoA on the ground to stall the wing, so a full stall landing hits tailwheel first with the likelihood of eventually causing damage to the bulkhead and mounting hardware. If you’re careful to not hit the tail, and do get it down on all three points simultaneously it is much squirrelier as the wing is still flying and the wheels aren’t loaded up, so it’s easy to pick up a drift, or lift a wing which then turns into a swerve as the airplane decelerates. At least in the RV series, wheel landings every time for me. I’ve 3 pointed other airplanes, Cubs, Decathlon’s, Stearmans, but the RV just doesn’t like it. So it depends on the aircraft type in my book.
Whoever was the first person to say the words 'full stall landing' needs to hunted down and beaten. A fully stalled wing is not what you want to happen during landing.A three point landing does not have to mean a full stall landing.
Why?Whoever was the first person to say the words 'full stall landing' needs to hunted down and beaten. A fully stalled wing is not what you want to happen during landing.
What happens to the nose of the plane when you practice a power off stall? Is that something you'd want to happen when you're holding it off the runway waiting for it quit flying?Why?
I don’t hold it 10 or 20 feet, or more, off the runway for a full stall landing. The wheels will support the airplane when the wing won’t, and the stab/elevator is still doing its job in most airplanes after the wing is done.What happens to the nose of the plane when you practice a power off stall? Is that something you'd want to happen when you're holding it off the runway waiting for it quit flying?
What happens to the nose of the plane when you practice a power off stall? Is that something you'd want to happen when you're holding it off the runway waiting for it quit flying?
You might be right. But every CFI' I've flown with who talked about wanting to see a full stall landing was actually looking for an eminent stall or at best partial stall landing. I can't speak for you and I can't speak for every CFI that exists. But the ones I've known would talk about wanting to see a full stall landing but then would teach a partial stall landing.Sure it is...and preferably from less than 6" in height above the runway. Most TW airplanes will touch well tailwheel first if you stall it before touchdown, so you don't do that - but there are some types that sit on the ground virtually at the stall attitude - J-3 and Stearman for example. You could definitely do a full stall landing in Champ with the longer "no-bounce" oleos. Same with planes with big bush tires. This thread is getting very pedantic.
You might be right. But every CFI' I've flown with who talked about wanting to see a full stall landing was actually looking for an eminent stall or at best partial stall landing. I can't speak for you and I can't speak for every CFI that exists. But the ones I've known would talk about wanting to see a full stall landing but then would teach a partial stall landing.
Apparently those outside the USA haven't gotten the memo that the RV-8 is near impossible to 3-point -
Unless the aircraft is on the ground and it's out of controlI co-owned a Decathlon with a partner who learned to fly in a Champ in 1946 and had about 20,000 hours, at least half of them in taildraggers. If you screwed up in a taildragger in Florida, the FAA would send you to him for remedial instruction. I asked him this question and his answer was 3 pointers always; the sooner you have the tailwheel on the ground the sooner you have the plane under control.
So he really didn’t answer the question.I co-owned a Decathlon with a partner who learned to fly in a Champ in 1946 and had about 20,000 hours, at least half of them in taildraggers. If you screwed up in a taildragger in Florida, the FAA would send you to him for remedial instruction. I asked him this question and his answer was 3 pointers always; the sooner you have the tailwheel on the ground the sooner you have the plane under control.
Huh? Looks like you posted in the wrong thread or something...starting a little aircraft engine I easy, try starting 18 cylinder 3350 wright with electric primer.
Or somethingHuh? Looks like you posted in the wrong thread or something...
I don’t thinks it’s possible to answer the question honestly and pick one. It just depends. Sometimes wheelie is better. Sometimes three point is better.So he really didn’t answer the question.