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exactly. Its in the pdf I linked.piston Malibu overshot the turn to final and tried to save the landing. Stalled it cross-controlled,
exactly. Its in the pdf I linked.piston Malibu overshot the turn to final and tried to save the landing. Stalled it cross-controlled,
I like the OP's thought process!
That's the thing about OSH. You can't count on a "standard pattern". On 27, for example, you might get sent out over the lake for spacing for slower airplanes ahead on final, or you might get asked to turn inside them (in which instance it won't be a square pattern for any of the faster airplanes). You might have to land on the threshold, or long on another colored dot. And they might change the aiming point when you are on short final. I've dealt with all of these arriving at OSH in the Aztec.
When I was there in 2015 someone piloting a piston Malibu overshot the turn to final and tried to save the landing. Stalled it cross-controlled, fortunately low enough to pancake it roughly wings level onto the runway, starting a fire as the engine separated. Bad scene. Just one example.
A skid is cross controlled too.I read the NTSB report on the Malibu. Sounds like he may have been in a ‘skid,’ not cross controlled.
A skid is cross controlled too.
It is.Oh. I always figured it to be opposite aileron and rudder.
Ok. What am I missing here. Isn't a skid to much rudder or to little aileron, but both in the same direction? Not opposite?It is.
Ok. What am I missing here. Isn't a skid to much rudder or to little aileron, but both in the same direction? Not opposite?
Lateral stability would cause the bank angle to increase when the excess rudder is (mis)applied, thus opposite aileron is (mis)applied.
I'm still not getting it. Take the classic overshoot final scenario. I over shoot, lets make it left traffic. So I give it left rudder to get the plane back to center line. But I don't add enough left aileron along with the rudder to keep it coordinated, ball centered. I'm now in a skid. Call it to much left rudder or not enough left aileron, but I have left of both. This is 'cross controlled'??
When a pilot sees an impending overshoot to final they invariably skid around the corner out of fear of steepening the bank and raising stall speed. The skid causes an overbank which they stop with opposite aileron. This ironically sets them up for an aggravated stall where the lowered wing stalls first, in my opinion caused by fuselage induced turbulence due to the skid. Others would say the lowered aileron raises the angle of attack, but I've neutralized the ailerons before the break and it doesn't change the stall behavior one iota.I'm still not getting it. Take the classic overshoot final scenario. I over shoot, lets make it left traffic. So I give it left rudder to get the plane back to center line. But I don't add enough left aileron along with the rudder to keep it coordinated, ball centered. I'm now in a skid. Call it to much left rudder or not enough left aileron, but I have left of both. This is 'cross controlled'??
I am thinking 25° bank, but perhaps this is airplane specific and tied to turn rate?
@dtuuri & @dmspilot , I think I’m getting the picture now. You don’t get out of the skid, but by putting in a little opposite control pressure to ‘lessen’ the skid, so to speak, you are cross controlled. You haven’t flipped it all the way over to the other side into a slip yet, but you have little up aileron on the right wing as you try to reduce the bank angle or just stop the rate of roll to the left while still holding left rudder. Is that about right?
I find pictures to be worth 1000 words, to coin a phrase. See page 126 here. While that plane is shown in level flight it could as easily be drawn in a turn either way by tilting the horizon one way or the other. I.e., it could be either skidding or slipping, depending on your point of view. Assume the drawing is made just as the plane hangs on the precipice of a stall and assume the pilot has recognized that fact and made the ailerons neutral (to eliminate a confounding factor). What happens next is the trailing wing stalls. It stalls before the leading wing despite having an apparent lower angle of attack due to the dihedral of the wings. Why does this happen? I don't exactly know for sure. It does, though, and I'd bet my life on it. I think (and Bill Kershner did too) it's caused by turbulence across the fuselage disturbing the laminar flow over the wing. Maybe it's a local change in the relative wind direction against the trailing wing as it bends under the fuselage and swoops up toward the bottom of the trailing wing (that doesn't explain why the same thing happens in a low wing). Who knows? Maybe Nauga knows? For Leighton Collins' treatise on all this, see here, page 337.@dtuuri & @dmspilot , I think I’m getting the picture now. You don’t get out of the skid, but by putting in a little opposite control pressure to ‘lessen’ the skid, so to speak, you are cross controlled. You haven’t flipped it all the way over to the other side into a slip yet, but you have little up aileron on the right wing as you try to reduce the bank angle or just stop the rate of roll to the left while still holding left rudder. Is that about right?
I love math as much as the next guy, but holy crap talk about over complicating things.
I bet if someone asked some of you for a cookie recipe, you'd go all the way back to describe how the planting needs to be done for the wheat to make the flour along with raising the chickens for the eggs, etc...