kgruber
Final Approach
To each his own. I've always used full flaps. Same on skis in gray light.
Still time to learn new and better techniques.
The "always" full flap camp is "always" wrong!
To each his own. I've always used full flaps. Same on skis in gray light.
So you come in with less than full flaps and drooping ailerons rather than just using full flaps? I don't get it.
Full flaps default for all landings
20 for glassy water
The book says 20, also in practice 20 feels more stable and provides a better profile for glassy water IMO
Does the book say Robertson on the front? Seriously, does the Robertson supplement alter any float procedures?
Personally I'll stick with what I was taught. I have some great mentors. I've never thought much of Cessna's books. They had to address the lowest functioning pilots in the audience. Hey, No Pilot Left Behind!
Hey, I can do it with full flaps, Karl prefers less, you're experimenting, it's all good. There are many ways to land a Cessna floatplane. I am curious about your aileron droop and the Cessna procedures, though.
For takeoff, 20 is too much in a 172N -- adds a lot of drag. If you look in the 172N POH, it recommends zero flaps for both normal and short-field takeoffs;10 flaps are recommended only for soft-field takeoffs. FWIW, the later 172P POH recommends 10 flaps for short-field as well as soft-field, but there's no aerodynamic difference between the N and P, and when I asked Cessna, they said they had no explanation for the difference. However, I tend to do what the book says unless there a good reason to do otherwise, so I'll do 10 flaps for short-field in a P, but zero flaps in an N.
For landings, while the book just says "as recommended" for normal landings, and that normal landings "can" be made with any flap setting The POH also specifically recommends full flaps for short-field landings. Further, the airplane as enough lateral and directional control to make landings with full flaps in crosswinds of twice the demonstrated maximum crosswind component, so there's no need to reduce flaps for a higher approach speed in crosswinds. Further, my experience is that most pilots do best that which they do most often, and those who vary the parameters on every landing tend not to make good landings routinely. All things considered, my feeling is that if you want to be good at landings, you should use one setting all the time unless you have a really good reason to do otherwise (the occasional no-flap landing to practice for electrical power loss excepted). Which setting? Well, full flaps maximizes drag to reduce float (and thus landing distance) as well as allowing the lowest landing speed, minimizing wear on the tires and brakes. So, I land 172's with full flaps, period, using 1.3 Vs0 for the actual landing weight (typically about 55-60 knots IAS depending on load). I use 10 on downwind, 20 on base, and full flaps on final. Also, trying to set 30 flaps with your system is not likely to give you a consistent flap position, which is why I recommend sticking with the detented positions of 10, 20, and 40.
BTW, a 152 won't float significantly on landing with flaps extended unless you're landing too fast, but that's not an issue for you now.
You're also effectively increasing the angle of attack, you could do much the same thing by simply pulling the nose up a little instead of deploying more flaps................... On a long runway with normal take-off flaps add power and lift the tail. Reduce power to keep the tail up but not fly. Pull more flaps. You're flying. .......................