rottydaddy
En-Route
Yeah, it can be scary the first few times with max power... throw in a turn to simulate a typical departure stall (climbing out of the pattern on a new heading, or changing heading right after takeoff to go "straight out") and it gets scarier. But it's pointless, IMHO, if you don't get near max power. Even without the prop effects, it's different from power-off stalls. The ratio of thrust to everything else is different; the wing behaves differently.
The key, for me, to doing them right is "feet on the horizon, keep the ball in the right spot, and move the wings with your feet." I think Sparky was right about the offset ball when you have lots of power... but of course you don't want to be staring at the ball when doing this stuff. Give me a yaw string any time...
I agree that the falling leaf exercise is brilliant for honing those skills... likewise, turning stalls without recovering straight and level: let the stall start, then release a little back pressure to stop it, while continuing the turn. That will also wake your feet up, keep you thinking about the angle of attack needed for the airspeed and wing load, and keep you from doing anything stupid with the ailerons when the wing is not flying very well. For some reason, I was never taught that kind of turning stall "R&R" until I started flying gliders, but it works in any plane, and the goal is to not let a full stall develop, anyway, so it's a useful exercise.
The key, for me, to doing them right is "feet on the horizon, keep the ball in the right spot, and move the wings with your feet." I think Sparky was right about the offset ball when you have lots of power... but of course you don't want to be staring at the ball when doing this stuff. Give me a yaw string any time...
I agree that the falling leaf exercise is brilliant for honing those skills... likewise, turning stalls without recovering straight and level: let the stall start, then release a little back pressure to stop it, while continuing the turn. That will also wake your feet up, keep you thinking about the angle of attack needed for the airspeed and wing load, and keep you from doing anything stupid with the ailerons when the wing is not flying very well. For some reason, I was never taught that kind of turning stall "R&R" until I started flying gliders, but it works in any plane, and the goal is to not let a full stall develop, anyway, so it's a useful exercise.