Lindberg
Final Approach
I may get to fly a Pawnee for the first time. Obviously will have to get checked out without dual. Give me your tips.
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One of my biggest things when I'm jumping into a single-seat or anything tailwheel without dual is to get a a really, really good impression of your pitch attitude on taxi. You can even cheat with a grease pin or dry-erase marker (Make sure to erase it afterwards) so you have some visual references when you're coming in for landing. Also, go over where EVERYTHING is in the cockpit three or four times. Blindfolded is best, but know where to find stuff before you need to. Oh, and actually read the flight manual.I may get to fly a Pawnee for the first time. Obviously will have to get checked out without dial. Give me your tips.
All good tips! Thanks!One of my biggest things when I'm jumping into a single-seat or anything tailwheel without dual is to get a a really, really good impression of your pitch attitude on taxi. You can even cheat with a grease pin or dry-erase marker (Make sure to erase it afterwards) so you have some visual references when you're coming in for landing. Also, go over where EVERYTHING is in the cockpit three or four times. Blindfolded is best, but know where to find stuff before you need to. Oh, and actually read the flight manual.
Bwaaahahahahahahaha! A flight manual in a Pawnee! Hahahahahahha!Oh, and actually read the flight manual.
That's how I always felt in my 170.Unlike the majority of taildraggers, the nose is quite flat in the 3-point attitude. It looked To me like I was in a dive during the round-out.
I think it's a good idea to avoid landing with a tailwind in any tailwheel aircraft. You lose rudder and aileron control sooner on the rollout and have to depend on differential braking or tailwheel steering to avoid ground looping, at least in theory. A little crosswind gust can swing the tail (and the CG) around the wheels.Pawnee's don't like landing with a tailwind. It will just stop flying and plant you on the ground.
Interesting how an attached glider tends to neutralize that effect.If you’re used to lower-powered tailwheel aircraft, be cautious raising the tail on takeoff. You may get a lesson that gyroscopic precession is more than theoretical if you do it too quickly.
DAMHIK.
I'm comfortable in the super cub, so that's good to know.If you can fly a Super Cub, you can fly a Pawnee. You just sit higher, have more HP, and get a stronger right arm and right leg.
I'm curious WHY you're flying a Pawnee in the first place. Not that there's anything wrong with flying one just for the hell of it, but they do have limited utility.I'm comfortable in the super cub, so that's good to know.
Glider towingI'm curious WHY you're flying a Pawnee in the first place. Not that there's anything wrong with flying one just for the hell of it, but they do have limited utility.
Yeah…they don’t have enough room for your wife‘s luggage or your wife.I'm curious WHY you're flying a Pawnee in the first place. Not that there's anything wrong with flying one just for the hell of it, but they do have limited utility.
No longer an issue.Yeah…they don’t have enough room for your wife‘s luggage or your wife.
Somehow, I just LOVE towing gliders in the Pawnee. I'm guessing you will too.Glider towing
We had a house thermal half a mile from the runway one day…lift off, left turn, enter thermal.With the right person in the glider I can thermal on tow and take advantage of wave and/or ridge when it's active.
My dad got a checkout when he bought his Ag Wagon…he said it was a little crowded with two of them on the seat.AgTruck or AgHusky as I recall. No way to get checked out, of course.
My 1st Take off on a Kitfox Model I with Dan Denny was a Right Turn off the runway and launch. OHHHH, that's right the prop turns the other way and it has Right turning tendencies. Along with that an my 100hrs of dealing with Left Turning tenancies. Fortunately by the edge of the runway we had flying speed and Dan just pulled back on the stick for me. I think he was sort of expecting it to happen, and was a good demonstration of how short it could get off the ground.On first takeoff, I got up some speed and pushed the stick forward to lift the tail. The plane swung hard to the left - at least 30 to 40 degrees - and I barely got it in the air before taking out some runway lights or signage. Lesson learned.
My first stall in a glider was like that…turns out you don’t need to add right rudder as you slow down.My 1st Take off on a Kitfox Model I with Dan Denny was a Right Turn off the runway and launch. OHHHH, that's right the prop turns the other way and it has Right turning tendencies. Along with that an my 100hrs of dealing with Left Turning tenancies. Fortunately by the edge of the runway we had flying speed and Dan just pulled back on the stick for me. I think he was sort of expecting it to happen, and was a good demonstration of how short it could get off the ground.
Brian
I love towing them in the super cub, so I hope so. Although my only experience is with that and an L19, which some people like more but I don't.Somehow, I just LOVE towing gliders in the Pawnee. I'm guessing you will too.
On one of my best tows last year we hit lift at about 300 to 400 hundred feet with an instructor and student in the glider. I made a fairly sharp left turn and after 360 degrees remaining in the lift I just kept circling in the same turn, climbing at about 1,000 feet per minute, which about twice the rate in no lift. My next turn on the entire flight was in the pattern.We had a house thermal half a mile from the runway one day…lift off, left turn, enter thermal.
The cross country guys would release when we hit the thermal at about 400 feet. Some guys would hang on to 1000 or 2000 feet while I thermaled the towplane. Some would hang on just long enough to recover from their panic and find the release knob.
And some I just kept flying figure 8s that intersected at the thermal, because they weren’t experienced enough on tow.
Incidentally, since we're on the topic, I'll share our engine-sparing management on tow. First, above around 4,000 feet MSL we lean the mixture even in the climb. On release we pull the mixture back to mid-point and maintain about 2400 RPM during the initial descent and then dropping the RPMs a hundred at a time during the descent, keeping the airspeed at around 100 mph to avoid excessive cooling.I love towing them in the super cub, so I hope so. Although my only experience is with that and an L19, which some people like more but I don't.
If it were, Wikipedia claims that the Pawnee can carry a jump seat in the hopper, allowing a mechanic to ride along to remote operations. They don't show a picture of this configuration, so it is not clear if the jump seat is a folded (not folding but folded) lawn chair or how much legroom there is between the passenger's chin and armpits. But I figure that, with a modern noise-cancelling headset, a guy could put his wife up front and be single before he gets into the landing pattern, without even hearing a complaint.No longer an issue.
A tow to 4000 MSL would be out of the ordinary here, but I'll see if their procedures are any different from this. In the cub, I would keep it at around 2100 and 100 mph until pattern attitude and it didn't seem to cool too fast.Incidentally, since we're on the topic, I'll share our engine-sparing management on tow. First, above around 4,000 feet MSL we lean the mixture even in the climb. On release we pull the mixture back to mid-point and maintain about 2400 RPM during the initial descent and then dropping the RPMs a hundred at a time during the descent, keeping the airspeed at around 100 mph to avoid excessive cooling.
We rarely if ever have to replace cylinders, while a neighboring operation (no longer in operation) seemed to go through several overhauls every season. They would chop power on release and dive down to the next tow, which might be more fun and might increase tows per hour, but it's murder on the engine.
On your first few takeoffs, without a glider in tow, to climb at 65mph IAS, the nose is high. After you are comfortable, try a couple takeoffs with the RPM limited to about 2200-2300. That will lower the nose down to about the attitude you will have with a glider on tow at 65-75mph. The long snout should be about parallel to the ground with a glider in tow at full power. I'm sure others have more Pawnee glider tow hours than I. I have about 650hrs in a Pawnee with a glider at about 4-5 tows per hour.I'm comfortable in the super cub, so that's good to know.
Consider your "Density Altitude" tow altitude in NE Texas. Out west, an airport at 2800MSL can have a DA above 5000 very easily. Towing from a 5500MSL airport, DA is approaching 9K on the ground and you will only get about 3000ft AGL before the O-540 and the Pawnee wings have met their performance ceiling.A tow to 4000 MSL would be out of the ordinary here, but I'll see if their procedures are any different from this. In the cub, I would keep it at around 2100 and 100 mph until pattern attitude and it didn't seem to cool too fast.
Looks like a Cessna 188 AgWagonNobody asked, but…
I learned tailwheel in a Cub.Then bought a Citabria, and even taught in it.
I was asked if I could ferry a Cessna cropduster. AgTruck or AgHusky as I recall. No way to get checked out, of course.
On first takeoff, I got up some speed and pushed the stick forward to lift the tail. The plane swung hard to the left - at least 30 to 40 degrees - and I barely got it in the air before taking out some runway lights or signage. Lesson learned.
One such cropduster:
I think this was Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic, refueling after the leg from South Caicos.
Could be. Long time ago, but no doubt it’s in one of my old logbooks somewhere.Looks like a Cessna 188 AgWagon
This one had square tips with stall fences. Stuck down about two inches below the wing and extended back past the wing trailing edge. Yes, the bottom has been filed on the runway from max performance crosswind work. Not much green grass around to stain the tips.But the limiting factor in a crosswind is grass stains on the wing tip.
Well I've got less than a hundred hours towing, so I am grateful to learn from anyone.On your first few takeoffs, without a glider in tow, to climb at 65mph IAS, the nose is high. After you are comfortable, try a couple takeoffs with the RPM limited to about 2200-2300. That will lower the nose down to about the attitude you will have with a glider on tow at 65-75mph. The long snout should be about parallel to the ground with a glider in tow at full power. I'm sure others have more Pawnee glider tow hours than I. I have about 650hrs in a Pawnee with a glider at about 4-5 tows per hour.
I can’t tell the difference between a Wagon, Truck, or Husky from that pic, but from the paint job I’d guess Ag Wagon.Looks like a Cessna 188 AgWagon
What usually gets Pawnee or any glider tow pilots, is the stupid glider pilot on the other end of the rope.any new model, good idea to read up on what got the other guys; NTSB report search function