MauleSkinner
Touchdown! Greaser!
It has to stall in order to spin, and I had a guy show me how to do that once.But the Ercoupe won't stall, so ailerons are fine, especially if that's all you have.
It has to stall in order to spin, and I had a guy show me how to do that once.But the Ercoupe won't stall, so ailerons are fine, especially if that's all you have.
Good training kicks in when you need it.it's funny how the training kicks in when you need it.
I’ve found that when people talk about the wing being “unloaded”, you pretty much have to ignore that part of the conversation because different people use the term differently, and most can’t explain what it means the way they use it.
@SixPapaCharlie and Carl maybe?That's standard procedure. Who would teach aileron use in a stall?
Low wing recovery in a stall using ailerons is almost a sure way of learning about spin recovery.
Yep, and in some cases it makes no sense. Presumably unloaded means less than the normal G's for the manouver, but even in the poster's example, just lowering the nose doesn't necessarily unload anything.I’ve found that when people talk about the wing being “unloaded”, you pretty much have to ignore that part of the conversation because different people use the term differently, and most can’t explain what it means the way they use it.
Well, hopefully spin recovery as well.You mean spin entry.
My instructor showed me spins on the second lesson (OK, he was a little crazy, but then again he did end up being my roommate). Just because a wing drops during a stall doesn't mean you're spinning, it's just something that needs correction.
The asymmetric condition is what is likely got the spin to start in the first place. You want the AOA on the wings to be the same and reduced while you stop the rotation with the rudder. You also want to remove energy from the system for a couple of reasons, so you close the throttle.
But the Ercoupe won't stall, so ailerons are fine, especially if that's all you have.
So "unloaded" to you means the wing is generating zero lift. What do you call the process of getting the wing from "loaded" to "unloaded."If the airplane's flight path is level or descending or climibing at a steady rate, the wing is not unloaded.
Dumb? "Load" is what turns the plane. It's the result of deflecting the flight path with lift from the wing. Turning by banking is defeated by then "unloading" the very factor causing the desired turn.So "unloaded" to you means the wing is generating zero lift. What do you call the process of getting the wing from "loaded" to "unloaded."
Yes, you really can. And are. Every single time you take off....but if you're going straight and keep the wings level with the rudder, you can't really be out of coordination.
ContextYes, you really can. And are. Every single time you take off.
How a certificated pilot could make this statement is pretty baffling.
The "process" of unloading is what I commented on, not whether or not unloading means zero g. It makes no sense to "unload" your bank by "pulling less than is required" when your objective is trying to line up with final. It'll straighten the turn and you'll overshoot your objective.I’ve never known “unload” to be limited to only zero G.
It’s obvious the original post about unloading was in error, the nose being below the horizon has nothing to do with load factor in the way he described it. But what he described is easily understandable. He’s pulling less than is required to maintain altitude for a given bank angle (or bunts the nose), the nose falls and preserves energy available at a stable power setting.
Pulling less than is required to maintain level flight. Because you're on final and descending. And pulling too hard will cause a stall.The "process" of unloading is what I commented on, not whether or not unloading means zero g. It makes no sense to "unload" your bank by "pulling less than is required" when your objective is trying to line up with final. It'll straighten the turn and you'll overshoot your objective.
AOA is one aspect energy management/performance.Now tell me, please, what's this "preserves energy" you speak of, anyway? Same as "energy management" concept? I prefer "angle of attack management",
I’ve never known “unload” to be limited to only zero G.
It’s obvious the original post about unloading was in error, the nose being below the horizon has nothing to do with load factor in the way he described it. But what he described is easily understandable. He’s pulling less than is required to maintain altitude for a given bank angle (or bunts the nose), the nose falls and preserves energy available at a stable power setting.
Or in reducing the pull/not pulling in a turn.The only time load factor falls is in some pushover such as levelling of from a climb, or initiating a descent.
AOA is the only aspect I need. Manage that and you don't worry about "energy". Could it be that "energy management" is a concept rooted less in aerodynamics than cost analysis? A large body of student pilots trying to learn to land at minimum controllable airspeed in very expensive aircraft, for example, might not as a group be reliably able to master the technique? Cheaper to buy more concrete and invest in arresting apparatus and aircraft braking systems than order replacement aircraft, so "conserving energy" as a mental objective will tend to err on the side of excess speed rather than the potential loss of aircraft due to inartfully flying too slow. Just a guess, since I never ever thought in "energy" terms, but have seen pilots burning in too hot out of fear of not having enough of it.AOA is one aspect energy management/performance.
AOA is the only aspect I need. Manage that and you don't worry about "energy". Could it be that "energy management" is a concept rooted less in aerodynamics than cost analysis? A large body of student pilots trying to learn to land at minimum controllable airspeed in very expensive aircraft, for example, might not as a group be reliably able to master the technique? Cheaper to buy more concrete and invest in arresting apparatus and aircraft braking systems than order replacement aircraft, so "conserving energy" as a mental objective will tend to err on the side of excess speed rather than the potential loss of aircraft due to inartfully flying too slow. Just a guess, since I never ever thought in "energy" terms, but have seen pilots burning in too hot out of fear of not having enough of it.
That gets you a spiral. A lower laod factor for a few seconds that turns into a high load factor.Or in reducing the pull/not pulling in a turn.
Like I said, I never thought in those terms. In my experience it doesn't apply to light general aviation aircraft whose pilots often go into short runways where the major worry should be to avoid coming in too fast, i.e., with lots of energy, the very thing energy management, apparently, seeks to conserve.I honestly don’t know what you’re getting at. I’m also not in the mood to argue, I simply clarified what I thought @aftCG was getting at, which made sense to me.
If you’re referring to FCLP, or carrier landings then you’re way off. And also seemingly contradictory. How can those tasked with landing at minimum controllable speed also err on the side of excess speed?
Ignoring the concept of energy, and focusing only on AOA makes no sense. AOA is a single factor. Also relevant and necessary for understanding approach turn and landing is power settings, AOB and how it affects lift, and vertical speed. You can fly into the ground, or the back of the boat at the proper AOA.
It applies, but less so because the tendency is to be overpowered in GA aircraft. The cause for concern in jets is getting underpowered, so the need for focusing on the total energy state is more apparent.Like I said, I never thought in those terms. In my experience it doesn't apply to light general aviation aircraft whose pilots often go into short runways where the major worry should be to avoid coming in too fast, i.e., with lots of energy, the very thing energy management, apparently, seeks to conserve.
Modulating the pull gets you a spiral? That seems like quite an exaggeration.That gets you a spiral. A lower laod factor for a few seconds that turns into a high load factor.
Like I said, I never thought in those terms. In my experience it doesn't apply to light general aviation aircraft whose pilots often go into short runways where the major worry should be to avoid coming in too fast, i.e., with lots of energy, the very thing energy management, apparently, seeks to conserve.
Same here, not trying to start a fight with anyone. Mental pictures are important when learning to fly, according to Wolfgang Langewiesche, so thinking of the airplane as a sort of bobsled doesn't work for me. Understanding how a wing is flown, also according to Langewiesche, and picturing that in the mind's eye does.I’m just saying it for the thread.
Energy management does not have increasing energy as a set goal. It has management as it’s goal.Like I said, I never thought in those terms. In my experience it doesn't apply to light general aviation aircraft whose pilots often go into short runways where the major worry should be to avoid coming in too fast, i.e., with lots of energy, the very thing energy management, apparently, seeks to conserve.
Or quite the misunderstanding.Modulating the pull gets you a spiral? That seems like quite an exaggeration.
When I transitioned to the 22 we did a stall and the left wing dropped on me. Up until then they had all been boring. This one caught me by surprise, I'm sure I was coordinated. Anyway, as soon as that wing dropped I automatically kicked the right rudder, then remembered to add a little aileron. It was really nothing, it's funny how the training kicks in when you need it.
My mom told me to do one thing, and do it well!There’s a lot of talking and not much listening going on in this thread.
Did you have a little power in? Does not take much to get uncoordinated.
When I transitioned to the 22 we did a stall and the left wing dropped on me. Up until then they had all been boring. This one caught me by surprise, I'm sure I was coordinated. Anyway, as soon as that wing dropped I automatically kicked the right rudder, then remembered to add a little aileron. It was really nothing, it's funny how the training kicks in when you need it.
Yep, "automatically" is the operative word when it comes to rudder use. An ME pilot doesn't need to think which pedal to push when one quits on takeoff. The thinking doesn't begin until identifying which engine to feather.Power was pulled. I blamed it on the airplane, but I'm sure I screwed something up OR maybe my instructor messed with me because it was about the 5th stall and they were all cake.
“More right rudder” wins over that one. Bwahahahahaha.
Power on maybe, not necessarily power off of course.