MAKG1
Touchdown! Greaser!
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- Jun 19, 2012
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MAKG
I trained in a 150 and I rarely used full 40 degree flaps. One day I was coming in for a landing while training. CFI was on board..Full flaps out set up nicely on final. Just as the wheels were about to touch he yells go around..I jammed the throttle in and wouldn't you know the nose pitched up like mad! It took everything I had to push the nose forward. I had to lock my elbows so I would go nose high. I said at that point I wont use full 40 degree flaps. That's just me.
I've done go-arounds in older 182s, which also have 40 deg electric flaps. Except the yoke pressures are quite a lot higher.
Just about every Cessna requires significant forward pressure during a full flap go-around while trimmed for a low power approach, to avoid a trim stall. It's manageable even in a 182.
Cessna seems to have eliminated 40 deg flaps along with the transition to 180 HP engines in 172s. It may have to do with liability -- that's also when they raised the number of sump ports from 3 to 13 (3 for the pilot, 10 for the lawyers). But given that 180 HP STCs on older 172s seem to require limiting flaps to 30, I suspect it just means the pitch up is that much more pronounced with the stronger engine.
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