whifferdill
Line Up and Wait
I was going to follow up on this post I made, but figured I'd move it to the acro section. Since I'm coming from the acro competition world, I guess I'm a little more of a technique freak than most. Anyway, just a little perspective on what makes a "perfect" hammerhead in the precision acro world: Pivoting such that the CG of the airplane moves laterally no more than 1/2 a wingspan, Staying perfectly vertical in pitch and yaw before and after the pivot, Making a clean pivot with consistent yaw rate, while staying perfectly on plane. Unofficial factors that go into a good hammerhead is timing the pivot such that the up/down trajectory is symmetrical about the 180 degree pivot rotation...meaning that by the time the airplane has pivoted 90 degrees, it momentarily has zero up/down movement. Some examples below. These videos should be cued up.
This one is a nice hammerhead and would score well in competition, but compared to the perfection standard, the kick was very slightly early. The pivot radius could have been very slightly smaller by waiting a moment longer. Everything else about it was virtually perfect.
This is shamefully presented as one of mine. Hard to find good videos of hammerheads good or bad. This one scored well, but judged against the unofficial perfection standard, the kick was a tiny hair late. The airplane came virtually to a complete stop before pivoting, meaning the up/down trajectory was not perfectly centered about the pivot rotation. Though this is not a judging criterion in IAC competition. To maintain the max. pivot radius before deductions are made, you'll more likely achieve this by kicking very slightly late than slightly early. It takes an airplane with a higher power-to-weight ratio and a bigger rudder than mine to do a good pivot from zero vertical momentum.
This one is an example of a hammerhead that would not score well in competition. Yeah, I know this is airshow flying and nobody cares. But I still like to see precision and skill applied to airshow flying. This pivot was initiated very early and "flown over". There was a wide pivot radius, the pivot near the end did not have a consistent yaw rate, and the pilot started stopping the pivot too early, which made for a "soft" stop, and ended up underpivoting and dragging his right wing on the vertical downline (not perfectly vertical in yaw).
And below an example of one person's learning process in a low-performance airplane (Citabria 7ECA). I'm only picking on Diana because she was cool enough to post this video early in her aerobatic "career" when first learning this maneuver. I'm sure she does them very nicely now. You can see the progression, and some interesting hammer attempts in the first few while she's sorting out the timing of the pivot, remembering full throttle, and working on the proper rudder, aileron, and elevator inputs. To me, a perfect hammerhead is one of the prettiest maneuvers there is. Deceptively complex.
This one is a nice hammerhead and would score well in competition, but compared to the perfection standard, the kick was very slightly early. The pivot radius could have been very slightly smaller by waiting a moment longer. Everything else about it was virtually perfect.
This is shamefully presented as one of mine. Hard to find good videos of hammerheads good or bad. This one scored well, but judged against the unofficial perfection standard, the kick was a tiny hair late. The airplane came virtually to a complete stop before pivoting, meaning the up/down trajectory was not perfectly centered about the pivot rotation. Though this is not a judging criterion in IAC competition. To maintain the max. pivot radius before deductions are made, you'll more likely achieve this by kicking very slightly late than slightly early. It takes an airplane with a higher power-to-weight ratio and a bigger rudder than mine to do a good pivot from zero vertical momentum.
This one is an example of a hammerhead that would not score well in competition. Yeah, I know this is airshow flying and nobody cares. But I still like to see precision and skill applied to airshow flying. This pivot was initiated very early and "flown over". There was a wide pivot radius, the pivot near the end did not have a consistent yaw rate, and the pilot started stopping the pivot too early, which made for a "soft" stop, and ended up underpivoting and dragging his right wing on the vertical downline (not perfectly vertical in yaw).
And below an example of one person's learning process in a low-performance airplane (Citabria 7ECA). I'm only picking on Diana because she was cool enough to post this video early in her aerobatic "career" when first learning this maneuver. I'm sure she does them very nicely now. You can see the progression, and some interesting hammer attempts in the first few while she's sorting out the timing of the pivot, remembering full throttle, and working on the proper rudder, aileron, and elevator inputs. To me, a perfect hammerhead is one of the prettiest maneuvers there is. Deceptively complex.
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