Stewartb
Final Approach
To this thread topic? Keeping flaps out and climbing into a crosswind is a bad idea.
Unless you’re in a taildragger.EDIT: just remembered you want neutral elevator with the head winds.
Unless you’re in a taildragger.
Almost every "driver" of an airplane I know retracts flaps after landing. Masters of the art don't.
.Art Mattson, who was the undisputed master of the Cherokee, recommended full flaps for all landings, crosswind or no, and retracting after touchdown on rollout to load the wheelso to keep it on the ground and rolling straight. He also had a technique to clear obstacles that requires two notches of flaps at rotation on the takeoff roll. When you're a good driver, you're not afraid to use the tools at hand.
For a new pilot, solo, another good way to find the proper approach speed is to set up approach configuration at 3,000 feet or higher, slow the plane until the stall horn sounds, add 5 K, and you have the best speed to fly the approach.
I have essentially no time in 172s and very little in Cessnas period. So I'll ask a question. How much adverse yaw does a 172 have? In airplanes I fly, all taildraggers, adverse yaw is significant. Aileron then becomes a significant steering mechanism. Opposite aileron is really important in a crosswind and/or a steering maneuver. Having said that, did I read correctly that the airplane is going right regardless of the crosswind direction? If so there is something else going on.
Virtually noneHow much adverse yaw does a 172 have?
But I haven't seen anyone give what I think is the best way of doing that: Whatever *pressure* you're putting on the controls at touchdown is what you want to hold.
Yes. Most any high-wing Cessna will fly, in ground effect with flaps, at a speed where control is marginal, or worse. (I have a trophy propeller from an incident in those conditions.) Get those flaps up, or use less of them, or even none of them. My favorite steep approach with a crosswind involves no flaps and a sideways airplane.
Actually, you want to increase the pressure as you slow down and your ailerons becomes less effective.
When all three points are on the ground, you should have full deflection because you aren't going fast enough to fly again.
Wasn't there a video posted just in the last day or so about a Mooney that turned a landing into a wheels up when the copilot retracted gear rather than flaps at touchdown?
Did not mean to imply that. The ailerons are a useful addition to the rudder, essential in some airplanes - my 1929 ATO for example. Opposite to the rudder which means into the wind doesn’t it?Never rely on adverse yaw effect to steer an airplane (except a floatplane in slow taxi). Use the rudder. Using opposite aileron ina crosswind would mean banking away from the wind, sure to bust the airplane.
Actually, you want to increase the pressure as you slow down and your ailerons becomes less effective. When all three points are on the ground, you should have full deflection because you aren't going fast enough to fly again.
Wasn't there a video posted just in the last day or so about a Mooney that turned a landing into a wheels up when the copilot retracted gear rather than flaps at touchdown?
I’m not so sure it’s ‘pressure’ you increase as it slows down. What’s the word I’m looking for here, amplitude? Anyway you have to move the control surface ‘farther’ to get the same effect when you slow down. But does the ‘pressure’ increase? I don’t think so. You hit on it with ‘full deflection.’
Yes, in contrast to what I perceived as being opposite to the wind.Opposite to the rudder which means into the wind doesn’t it?
As I'm sure has been said, just keep your crosswind correction in. A lot of pilots release the correction once they touch down. My instructor says it's like being pregnant. You are are or you aren't. There's no such thing as being a little pregnant, and there's no such thing as a little crosswind correction on the ground. It's always a full correction.
Almost every "driver" of an airplane I know retracts flaps after landing. Masters of the art don't.
BS. Come operate in and out of short, narrow, obstructed strips in the wind and there are two types of pilots. Those who manipulate flaps and those who stay home.
.Art Mattson, who was the undisputed master of the Cherokee, recommended full flaps for all landings, crosswind or no, and retracting after touchdown on rollout to load the wheels to keep it on the ground and rolling straight. He also had a technique to clear obstacles that requires two notches of flaps at rotation on the takeoff roll. When you're a good driver, you're not afraid to use the tools at hand.
Are there airplanes where it’s really that easy to retract the gear when you think you’re retracting the flaps? How many times has this actually happened?
A few people mentioned inadvertently holding in the rudder correction when the nose wheel touches down. I found myself doing that again recently. If the crosswind is strong enough, you have a lot of rudder correction in at touchdown and it is the same direction as the crosswind. If you have a left crosswind and have left aileron in to track the centerline, you a fair amount of right rudder in to bring the nose back to the centerline. Make sure your not holding in that rudder correction too long. I still have to remind myself to take out rudder as the nose touches.
And why no squat switch to disable to gear motor when it's on the ground?
This has been a good thread. I have occasionally felt squirrely on the ground so last landing I looked down as I slowed to taxi speed and noticed I wasn't putting in full aileron deflection. I thought I was but wasn't.