Doc Holliday
En-Route
Was that all 727’s? Was doing that because of an accident?
Yes, all of them. Brought about by 3 crashes of a high sink rate by landing flaps 40.
Last edited:
Was that all 727’s? Was doing that because of an accident?
Flaps change the camber of the wing, When you deflect the flaps you're tilting the chord line of the wing, so its effective AOA is greater for a given deck angle.If what I’m reading above is true, that there is almost no difference in stall speeds between 30 and 40, then it’s not a lower AOA. You get a lower ‘deck angle’ and steeper angle of descent, but not AOA.
Flaps change the camber of the wing, When you deflect the flaps you're tilting the chord line of the wing, so its effective AOA is greater for a given deck angle.
I beg to differ; I learned to fly in 150s just as the 152 came out. The lack of that last 10° of flaps upset a lot of people, it was just another useful tool pilots had, and then didn't have any more.
We always almost used full flaps for landing. In the event of a go around we were taught to retract the flaps in increments, slowly, and give the plane time to accelerate.
'Course that was a long time ago, and I've never owned a plane with flaps at all. But all of my planes have haou d adequate rudder so I never missed 'em.
There's a LOT more to it that stall speed. I haven't used less than full flaps to land my Cessna in 20 years. No exaggeration. Full flaps allows a pilot to fly a steeper final in a useful attitude with easy speed control. And contrary to what you guys think? Given adequate power 40* flaps is a very useful takeoff tool in some conditions.
Cessna recommends less flap in crosswinds for good aerodynamic reasons. Full flaps give more turning moment than zero flaps because the downwind flap is in the lee of the fuselage.
This is EASILY demoed in a floatplane, where turning into the wind on the water is faster with flap than without.
I beg to differ; I learned to fly in 150s just as the 152 came out. The lack of that last 10° of flaps upset a lot of people, it was just another useful tool pilots had, and then didn't have any more.
We always almost used full flaps for landing. In the event of a go around we were taught to retract the flaps in increments, slowly, and give the plane time to accelerate.
'Course that was a long time ago, and I've never owned a plane with flaps at all. But all of my planes have had adequate rudder so I never missed 'em.
Lots of pilots are freaked out by the "steep" descent of a 172 power off with full flaps.
Someone here had mentioned that the reason is the turbulent airflow wears out some bearing in the rudder assembly? No idea if that's true or notI suspect the emoji there is supposed to clue the poor hapless poster into realizing the above is sarcasm. But in case he didn't catch it, THERE'S NO REASON NOT TO SLIP A 150 with full flaps.
There's darned little reason to even be concerned about it in certain 172 where some manuals advise against it.
If you are talking 172, in my experience the 160 hp versions really are barely able to climb (if at all) at 40 deg flaps. Heck, even maintaining level slow flight needs a lot of juice. The 180 hp versions I'm not sure, the ones I have flown though only go to 30 deg. Pro's.. more drag so you can be more steep and touch down a little slowerWhat’s pro & cons of using that much flaps?
Cessna recommends less flap in crosswinds for good aerodynamic reasons. Full flaps give more turning moment than zero flaps because the downwind flap is in the lee of the fuselage.
It’s a valid aerodynamic point, but I just looked through three Cessna POHs from the pre-restart/pre-lawyer days and can’t find that instruction. Perhaps I checked too quickly but I don’t see it. It’s certainly not a checklist item.
Along with the hand held microphone, ash tray, and ADF.Why would Cessna go to the trouble of certifying airplanes with 40 degrees of flaps if they did not intend them to be used??
Bob Gardner
Along with the hand held microphone, ash tray, and ADF.
Why would Cessna go to the trouble of certifying airplanes with 40 degrees of flaps if they did not intend them to be used??
Bob Gardner
My point.All of which were used a lot when the airplane was built.
All of which were used a lot when the airplane was built.
The C-150 manual says, "Normal landings are made power-off with any flap setting."Why would Cessna go to the trouble of certifying airplanes with 40 degrees of flaps if they did not intend them to be used??
Thompson again:I think there’s an implication that limiting flaps to 30° in the 152 was due to declining pilot skills over the years, leading to accidents.
“Idiot-proofing” as it were.
40 deg doesn't lower stall speed any more than 30, it just adds extra drag, which is good for landing.
-1 knot is lower
See Post #39 in this thread.Source for 1KT difference between 30 and 40?
See Post #39 in this thread.
On the C-150 it's actually 1 mph (0.87 knot) difference in stall speed between 20 degrees and 40 degrees of flap. You'll have to look awful hard to see what it is between 30 and 40 degrees.
60 degrees, but they needed external hinges to do it.Didn't Birddogs have 50*? Same wing.
1967 Cessna 150G:
View attachment 83317
1966 Cessna 172G:
View attachment 83318
1978 Cessna 172N:
View attachment 83319
1985 Cessna 172P:
View attachment 83320
2010 Cessna 172S:
View attachment 83321
In Cessna - Wings for the World: The Single-Engine Development Story, former Cessna Manager of Flight Test and Aerodynamics William Thompson wrote in his chapter on the development of the Model 172, "[...] wing-low drift correction in crosswind landings is normally performed with a minimum flap setting (for better rudder control) [...]" [emphasis in original]
I wonder why the H model with a 1600lb gross has a lower stall speed than my C with 1500lb gross? Mine is listed at 54 flaps up, 53 flaps 10, and 50 flaps 40
Different wing, probably. The 182 changed wings at some point.I wonder why the H model with a 1600lb gross has a lower stall speed than my C with 1500lb gross? Mine is listed at 54 flaps up, 53 flaps 10, and 50 flaps 40
Another change was balanced elevators and rudder on the 150D, along with increased gross weight from 1500 to 1600 lb.The Camberlift leading edge didn't work on the 150 and was never added. The only important change after the C model was the addition of the rear window. Gross weight and stall speeds appear to be paper numbers.
When I learned to fly we used that handheld mike and the ADF. Headets were rare and expensive. VORs in my part of the world were rare and a long way apart. Broadcast stations were handy and far more powerful than any NDB. GPS was science fiction.Along with the hand held microphone, ash tray, and ADF.
I think there’s an implication that limiting flaps to 30° in the 152 was due to declining pilot skills over the years, leading to accidents.
“Idiot-proofing” as it were.
I would routinely land my C-150F with flaps 20, gently on the mains with stall horn blaring, and hold the nose off until elevator power dissipated (longer than is possible at flaps 40) and the nose gear touched at a speed barely above a fast walk, and make the first turnoff with no braking or added power at all. I’d submit that’s easier on the undercarriage (especially the relatively fragile nose gear).
That 150 nosegear is stronger than a 172's. It's attached to the stout steel-tube engine mount. The 172's gear attach is via relatively small brackets on the firewall, supported by a light aluminum tunnel structre behind the firewall. Easy to wreck.