alaskan9974
Pre-takeoff checklist
Landing tail low vs tail first? I get mixed messages, first cfi I flew with said no to both. Second one I flew with more said as long as I don’t hit the tail too hard it’ll be ok.
At one time I could drag the tailwheel of my Maule for a couple thousand feet and then go around...probably made up for the care I gave it otherwise.I tried to instill in my students having this as the goal, feeling for the runway with the tailwheel, and still have this mental image on the now rare occasion I get to fly a tailwheel.
In many hours of teaching tailwheel transition courses in Citabrias I found that, conditions permitting, the very best landings - or at least the least exciting - had the tailwheel rolling on slightly first, with the mains dropping on a second or so later. I tried to instill in my students having this as the goal, feeling for the runway with the tailwheel, and still have this mental image on the now rare occasion I get to fly a tailwheel.
Personally, I found with all the gear touching together, the plane felt more “skittery” for a few seconds as the wings still had some lift to dissipate, and those few seconds of nervousness were where students could get behind the plane and begin to swerve. Tailwheel first felt more like the airplane was done flying, and hence easier.
No. Wheel landings are often deliberately tail-low in order to get a low touchdown speed, and the tail is raised a bit to reduce the AoA and therefore the lift after the mains touch. There is nothing wrong with that at all; one just learns to do it. It's the preferred way to reduce the wear and tear on that tailwheel. That tiny tire spins at awesome speeds, meaning accelerated wear, and shimmy is more likely at those speeds, too. Shimmy breaks stuff. Keeping that wheel off until the airplane slows saves money.I may be misunderstanding the question but I was always of the opinion that you pick your landing type and you do that. If you're going to 3-point it, you 3-point it which means the goal is that all 3 touch at the same time or within 1/2 a second of each other. If you're going to wheel it on, you wheel it on which usually means the tail is up at something close to normal flight attitude. Tail low is what happens when pilots aren't willing to commit to either landing type so they're just bringing it in and letting the plane decide what kind of landing it wants to do.
I may be misunderstanding the question but I was always of the opinion that you pick your landing type and you do that. If you're going to 3-point it, you 3-point it which means the goal is that all 3 touch at the same time or within 1/2 a second of each other. If you're going to wheel it on, you wheel it on which usually means the tail is up at something close to normal flight attitude. Tail low is what happens when pilots aren't willing to commit to either landing type so they're just bringing it in and letting the plane decide what kind of landing it wants to do.
I notice this more on the grass, but as a comparatively low time tailwheel pilot (compared to a lot of you folks here!) I notice the "slightly first with the tailwheel" landings tend to pull and line the airplane up straight if there's any remaining hint of a crab in a crosswind, before the mains touch.
Yup...drag behind the CG reduces the tendency for the CG to pass the mains.I notice this more on the grass, but as a comparatively low time tailwheel pilot (compared to a lot of you folks here!) I notice the "slightly first with the tailwheel" landings tend to pull and line the airplane up straight if there's any remaining hint of a crab in a crosswind, before the mains touch.
Tail low is also what happens when a pilot wants to do a wheel landing as slowly as possible.I may be misunderstanding the question but I was always of the opinion that you pick your landing type and you do that. If you're going to 3-point it, you 3-point it which means the goal is that all 3 touch at the same time or within 1/2 a second of each other. If you're going to wheel it on, you wheel it on which usually means the tail is up at something close to normal flight attitude. Tail low is what happens when pilots aren't willing to commit to either landing type so they're just bringing it in and letting the plane decide what kind of landing it wants to do.
Which can be a recipe for disaster in certain airplanes.Tail low is also what happens when a pilot wants to do a wheel landing as slowly as possible.
Yup...drag behind the CG reduces the tendency for the CG to pass the mains.
Tail low is also what happens when a pilot wants to do a wheel landing as slowly as possible.
Which can be a recipe for disaster in certain airplanes.
What you describe was my preferred landing technique in the spray planes. Especially the big ones.No. Wheel landings are often deliberately tail-low in order to get a low touchdown speed, and the tail is raised a bit to reduce the AoA and therefore the lift after the mains touch. There is nothing wrong with that at all; one just learns to do it. It's the preferred way to reduce the wear and tear on that tailwheel. That tiny tire spins at awesome speeds, meaning accelerated wear, and shimmy is more likely at those speeds, too. Shimmy breaks stuff. Keeping that wheel off until the airplane slows saves money.
Must remember that a "normal flight attitude" also means normal flight speeds. The relationship between angle of attack and airspeed is one that so many pilots seem completely unaware of, and it causes some of them considerable grief in landings. The PPL training is rather poor these days.
I made a wooden jig to measure the actual chordline angle in ground attitude on a Citabria. It's 12 degrees. The means that in the flare, parallel to the runway surface, the AoA is 12 degrees, a long way from its stall angle of 17 degrees. If an airplane sat at stall angle in the three-point attitude it would stand out like a sore thumb. You'd sure notice it.
So can tail high...so can 3-point...so can full stall...not being stupid is theoretically part of being a pilot.Which can be a recipe for disaster in certain airplanes.
...not being stupid is theoretically part of being a pilot.
It's not. It's in the physics textbooks.Where is that in the PTS/ACS?
Give us an example, please.Which can be a recipe for disaster in certain airplanes.
Which can be a recipe for disaster in certain airplanes.
SNIP
I made a wooden jig to measure the actual chordline angle in ground attitude on a Citabria. It's 12 degrees. The means that in the flare, parallel to the runway surface, the AoA is 12 degrees, a long way from its stall angle of 17 degrees. If an airplane sat at stall angle in the three-point attitude it would stand out like a sore thumb. You'd sure notice it.
Trying to understand the point. The discussion is tailwheel low wheel landings. Is it the low airspeed or the attitude that presents the possibility of disaster?
We hardly even get close. This is borne out by the many taildraggers that can lift off and fly along the runway, tail on the runway and the mains well up off the runway. It we were close to the stall in the three-point attitude, this would hardly be possible.There seems to be much confusion about this point. Much of it is caused by pilots referring to three point landings as "full stall." There really are three types of landings in a taildragger - wheel, three point, and full stall. But there are only two commonly used names. Even full stall is not quite correct since we rarely get full boundary layer separation. Ground effect and a desire to maintain control mean we get close but don't quite get to that critical angle.
If your flight path was angled downward instead of horizontal at the instant of 3 point touchdown, you could be stalled.
I used to get an accelerated stall in my Maule when rounding out after coming in steep over the trees. Had to roll it up on the mains to keep it on the ground, though. Same with the Pawnee dragging 200 ft of rope over the fence.If your flight path was angled downward instead of horizontal at the instant of 3 point touchdown, you could be stalled.
Even then it's usually just sink. I've had students do it, flaring too high and levelling off three feet up, and then it slams down hard but the stall warning never says anything. The stall-proof Ercoupes were sometimes wrecked just this way; get them slow and they'd pancake on and get busted up. They didn't need to stall to have an accident.If your flight path was angled downward instead of horizontal at the instant of 3 point touchdown, you could be stalled.
I dunno...11:1 is pretty close to the best glide ratio of most light singles. That’s not a “steep fall”, that’s a touchdown 550 feet downfield from over a 50-foot obstacle with no round out or flare...probably worth comparing to the numbers in your performance charts.To get the relative wind to add say, another five degrees to the AoA, taking our hypothetical 12-degree three-point Citabria up to stall at 17 degrees, we'd need to fall three feet in 33 feet. That's a steep fall. The airplane itself is 22 feet long, so in one and a half airplane lengths you have to drop three feet. Three feet is a pretty big drop.
How many here understand that airflow from the prop providing thrust affects slow flight and stall so they look different than power off?How many here have done slow flight training? Nose way high, stall warning howling, power set to maintain altitude: the relative wind is level with the ground, yet the airplane is in an attitude NEVER seen during landing.
The airflow over the wing roots does help a bit, but it makes no difference to the rest of the wing. You can do a power-off stall, raising the nose at a rate making sure the altimeter doesn't budge, and the nose is still way high when it lets go.How many here understand that airflow from the prop providing thrust affects slow flight and stall so they look different than power off?
What’s the pitch attitude when it “lets go” on landing?The airflow over the wing roots does help a bit, but it makes no difference to the rest of the wing. You can do a power-off stall, raising the nose at a rate making sure the altimeter doesn't budge, and the nose is still way high when it lets go.
The slow flight thing demonstrates what a stall attitude might be in the flare. It's very steep, and the geometry of the airplane won't permit it without striking the tail with the mains still a long way up.What’s the pitch attitude when it “lets go” on landing?
I guess I’m confused as to the relevance of the slow flight statement...if you never see a “stall attitude” on landing, it simply means you’re never doing a full stall landing.
That is often the case, as has been previously stated in the thread.The slow flight thing demonstrates what a stall attitude might be in the flare. It's very steep, and the geometry of the airplane won't permit it without striking the tail with the mains still a long way up.
That would be an entirely different discussion, but in this context, it simply means you haven’t been doing full stall landings.The sudden drop after a too-high flare that I consider sink rather than a stall is often at a normal landing attitude, sometimes even fairly flat. The nose doesn't even begin to fall as the airplane drops, which tells me that it wasn't a stall. And as an instructor I occasionally saw it, and the stall horn didn't sound either. It should have, if the wing was stalling.
How many of the tufts need to be turbulent before you’re “stalled”?Put tufts of yarn on the wing. That will tell you if you are stalled or not.