MauleSkinner
Touchdown! Greaser!
My Lyon’ eyes pretty much agree with what’s 29 miles away, so...I can't tell much from that wx rpt. It was 29 miles away. Which do you believe, the wind 29 miles away or your lyin' eyes?
My Lyon’ eyes pretty much agree with what’s 29 miles away, so...I can't tell much from that wx rpt. It was 29 miles away. Which do you believe, the wind 29 miles away or your lyin' eyes?
Well, I never said it was a "direct" tailwind. If it were a direct crosswind you should be able to see in the mouth of the sock from that angle. All I can see is the side. I can't figure how to grab a screen shot from full screen. Maybe somebody with better computer skills...My Lyon’ eyes pretty much agree with what’s 29 miles away, so...
It’s a lot easier to jump to stupid pilot trick when the pilot says he was doing stupid things, like adjusting indicated airspeed due to high DA.
Piper Cherokee also has direct connection to nosegear. Its pilots learn quickly to straighten it momentarily as nose comes down and then immediately dial that rudder back, to avoid an uncomfortable side jolt as the moment of contact. But that's all there is to it. I don't have any time in Bellanca but if what you say holds for it, then there must be more to its design than just a rigid connection of pedals to nosegear.The BSV can be a little touchy on the ground, since it's got solid connections from the pedals to the nosegear.
Piper Cherokee also has direct connection to nosegear. Its pilots learn quickly to straighten it momentarily as nose comes down and then immediately dial that rudder back, to avoid an uncomfortable side jolt as the moment of contact. But that's all there is to it. I don't have any time in Bellanca but if what you say holds for it, then there must be more to its design than just a rigid connection of pedals to nosegear.
Flare? Nyet! Approach iz fine!
This is the first flight of Yak-152 with the chief test pilot of OKB Yakovlev, Vasily Sevastyanov at the controls.
I usually speed up a bit with bad crosswinds...Probably not the first to loose it in a crosswind and won't be the last.
We had a particularly nasty gusty crosswind day a couple days ago. I went up. Wish I hadn't. Similarly glad no one was filming. My landings probably made yours look perfect....
Did a few crosswind landings a couple weeks ago. They sucked pretty hard too, glad no one was filming.
Yep. The best reason I ever heard for adding speed due to crosswind was to prevent flap strikes on the ground in a B-727. In that case, you used less flap, hence a higher speed.If and when you do "loose" it in a crosswind, extra speed will not be your friend. Speed up for gusts, not for steady crosswinds.
In my whole flying career I've yet to see steady winds of any kind. If you've got a crosswind you can bet it'll be gusty. A little extra speed will make things a bit better so long as the field is sufficiently long so not to worry about an overrun.If and when you do "loose" it in a crosswind, extra speed will not be your friend. Speed up for gusts, not for steady crosswinds.
My recommendation to you would be to become proficient in one configuration and speed and use it every time.In my whole flying career I've yet to see steady winds of any kind. If you've got a crosswind you can bet it'll be gusty. A little extra speed will make things a bit better so long as the field is sufficiently long so not to worry about an overrun.
Balderdash. Every situation requires its own solution. I do think it healthy to keep in mind that one solution is to simply go elsewhere.My recommendation to you would be to become proficient in one configuration and speed and use it every time.
Not an instructor, or expert of any kind, just a guy that had read a lot of your posts, and flies the same plane.
This is where I jump in again and extol the benefits of a taildragger endorsement. Very useful for drilling runway alignment into your head. Wheel landings in a taildragger are a great way to get comfortable with touching one wheel first. Plus you learn what the footrests are for.
Balderdash. Every situation requires its own solution. I do think it healthy to keep in mind that one solution is to simply go elsewhere.
In my whole flying career I've yet to see steady winds of any kind.
Do that mechanical pattern with high DA and you’ll be on the ground on base leg!
Please explain.
For anyone else, I’d agree.I agree. The “always the same” well that works if you just rent on nice days n go around town, but if you’re going to travel in your plane and face different circumstances you best be ready for that age old lesson “fly the plane”
I notice this w gold that do a mechanical pattern entry always. XXXX rpm at this point and this point, etc. I’m a flat lander n fly out west once a year. Do that mechanical pattern with high DA and you’ll be on the ground on base leg!
To fly a certain indicates airspeed it simply requires different throttle...So that rule to set for 1800 is to rigid for all scenarios...
m kind of surprised how when I fly with friends I notice how not perfectly aligned we always are at touch down..
He who is Steingar has been around long enough to know that coastal Florida, Central Michigan, and the high desert of Arizona are different places with very different challenges. No one approach fits everything you’re going to land in, so you need a big bag of tricks. Unless of course you only fly within 50 miles of your home base on sunny days. Those of us who use the airplane to travel know that different conditions often require different approaches.You guys are wasting your time. @steingar already knows he is right and will not listen to you.
That has nothing to do with what I posted.He who is Steingar has been around long enough to know that coastal Florida, Central Michigan, and the high desert of Arizona are different places with very different challenges. No one approach fits everything you’re going to land in, so you need a big bag of tricks. Unless of course you only fly within 50 miles of your home base on sunny days. Those of us who use the airplane to travel know that different conditions often require different approaches.
Every situation requires it’s own solution, but situations (and solutions) don’t change as much as a lot of pilots seem to think.Balderdash. Every situation requires its own solution. I do think it healthy to keep in mind that one solution is to simply go elsewhere.
Every situation requires it’s own solution, but situations (and solutions) don’t change as much as a lot of pilots seem to think.
So...you’ve got your “normal” landing and your “short field” landing. Pretty small bag so far.A cold winter crosswind approach to an unoccluded lengthy asphalt strip is a very different beast to a midsummer approach to an occluded turf strip. You do very different things with the aircraft. A good pilot has a big bag full of tricks. A crap pilot like me at least knows the bag exists. An accident waiting to happen is someone who thinks every approach is the same.