I really don't care either way except to be ready for the different feel on takeoff and the flare. On takeoff the nose can "pop" up in a different manner than a more conventional tail. And on the landing roll the tail can seem to lose authority all at once with the nose coming down.
So I make it a point to "fly" the nose more deliberately with t-tail airplanes.
T-tails were the marketing fad of the 1970s. DC-9s and King Airs had them, and Cherokees should too, so the reasoning went. Interesting that Cessna test-flew a T-tail prototype Model 187 (a Cardinal-like design intended to replace the C-182, and IMHO hideously ugly with the T-tail), and Beech tried a T-tail stretched 36 Bonanza (sacrilege!), and neither went to production. After a few years even Piper reversed itself and went back to low tails on the PA-28R and PA-32R models.On light airplanes, the primary reason that T-tails were used was aesthetics.
Piper also claimed -- correctly -- that the T-tail reduced trim changes with landing gear and flap operation.What you get is the horizontal stab up out of the prop wash, which reduces inflight vibration -- the reason, I believe, which Piper did it.
I've never met a T-tail that I thought was attractive.
How about this one:
I'd buy one if I won the lottery.
I've always liked the B-200.
Marketing.
It got them more weight and less authority in the TO roll and flare....
I dunno.....I've always thought the 727 was one sexy looking aeroplane.I've never met a T-tail that I thought was attractive.
Nahh...the 90 and 100 were pretty good lookin' birds. The 200 and 300 not so much.
But admittedly it's a "beauty is in the eye of the beerholder" topic!
Aside from the aforementioned lack of propwash, because a T-tail is usually further aft and has more lever arm, it can be made smaller, with less overall drag.
The DA20 is a nice plane, but that skinny tail boom just plain wrecks the aesthetics. Yeah, I know the part aft of the wing's center of lift multiplied by the arm of the tail is good enough to make it fly, but for Pete's sake...I like the DA20,
And about 20 years ago there was a PBS TV flight training series that featured a Skipper. It was a pretty good show. Wonder what happened to the CFI, the students, and for that matter, the Skippers....But the only other T I've flown is a Skipper.
... Like this?And it weighs more, because the vertical stab has its original task (yaw stability and control) as well as now having to take the horizontal stab's pitch loads, and the torque loads that a horizontal stab can also generate due to spiralling propwash, turbulence, and so on.
But when you got authority, you got it RIGHT NOW.
With the elevator in the slipstream, you got some elevator authority from the prop blast. With the T-tail, you didn't. So when you began your takeoff roll with the elevator "full up", the elevator was stalled.
And at some speed it unstalled, taking you from very little downforce on the tail to a whole lot, virtually instantly. That caused more than a few tail strikes.
Awesome explanation. I took at face value everyone's word that the Tomahawk had a tendency to pitch up aggressively on takeoff. Now the reason for that makes sense. Thanks.I have about 200 hours in a T tail Lance and do some instructing in it.
The stabilator is out of the prop wash on the take off roll.
For the hamfisted flyers who feel the need to call out their rotate speed and jerk back on the yoke forcing the airplane off the groud - this airplane is a great tool to teach them to chill out and start performing good take offs.
As soon as you do an agressive rotate - the stabilator drops into the prop wash and goes from barely effective to very effective - the nose instantly shoots up and you better be ready to shove forward on the yoke till the hamfisted pilot gets a better grasp on it.
Its realy not a big deal if you understand the airplane and fly accordingly.
In flight - hard to tell a differance.
Stabalized approaches and landing - no real differance.
Big changes in power settings during approach and landing - can also get interesting.
But when you got authority, you got it RIGHT NOW.
With the elevator in the slipstream, you got some elevator authority from the prop blast. With the T-tail, you didn't. So when you began your takeoff roll with the elevator "full up", the elevator was stalled.
And at some speed it unstalled, taking you from very little downforce on the tail to a whole lot, virtually instantly. That caused more than a few tail strikes.
It worked the other way too. You'd be rolling out with the nosewheel off the ground and at some speed, elevator authority would just fall off a cliff.