skynewbie
Pre-takeoff checklist
My soft field take offs suck. I have trouble knowing how and when to push forward on the yoke to avoid banging the tail as soon as the nose comes up in ground effect. And tips how to figure this one out?
I second the advice to try it from grass. I don't think I ever did a GOOD soft-field until I had to do it for real. We were on a "turf" runway that was more like 6" tall thick weeds. That will drive home the real point of the exercise.
"Get the wheels out of the weeds, and finish the takeoff just above the tops of them."
Fly on down to Frazier Lake, there's a nice grass strip down there.Awesome advice this really helps! I will plead with my new instructor to take me to a real grass strip to practice this in the Bay Area. BTW another student recently failed his checkride for banging the tail during one of these. I plan to avoid this from happening.
Fly on down to Frazier Lake, there's a nice grass strip down there.
And you think you're ready for the PP Practical Test? Sorry, Ben, too many things don't add up in your posts. I think you're beyond helping via the internet. You need a competent, qualified CFI to evaluate your knowledge and skills, and then work out a plan to get you ready for the test. Any other advice here is wasting everyone's time.My soft field take offs suck. I have trouble knowing how and when to push forward on the yoke to avoid banging the tail as soon as the nose comes up in ground effect. And tips how to figure this one out?
And you think you're ready for the PP Practical Test? Sorry, Ben, too many things don't add up in your posts. I think you're beyond helping via the internet. You need a competent, qualified CFI to evaluate your knowledge and skills, and then work out a plan to get you ready for the test. Any other advice here is wasting everyone's time.
And you think you're ready for the PP Practical Test? Sorry, Ben, too many things don't add up in your posts. I think you're beyond helping via the internet. You need a competent, qualified CFI to evaluate your knowledge and skills, and then work out a plan to get you ready for the test. Any other advice here is wasting everyone's time.
You need to experience a dirt or grass strip, teaching soft field on a paved runway is crap.
Tell your CFI what's up, find a strip on the sectional and make a plan.
Not only is this important, most good CFIs LOVE going out to grass/dirt strips.
*Also "banging the tail", really?? Never done it or had a student do it, that's a... impressive feat
And you think you're ready for the PP Practical Test? Sorry, Ben, too many things don't add up in your posts. I think you're beyond helping via the internet. You need a competent, qualified CFI to evaluate your knowledge and skills, and then work out a plan to get you ready for the test. Any other advice here is wasting everyone's time.
There are some rumors around the club about a tailstrike during a soft field takeoff in a checkride. I would have thought whanging the nosegear would have been more likely. I don't know the details, or even what aircraft was affected. None of them seem to have gone down for tail repairs. I wonder if it might have been a minor one that just polished the tail tiedown loop, or wild pitch control resulting in the DPE grabbing controls to avoid a tailstrike, and a pink slip.
Ben needs to demonstrate a soft field takeoff on a paved runway for his checkride. There are only a couple of public use turf runways in the region, and they are much too far for a checkride. It may be "crap," but it's also reality.
It's not really "soft field" unless it requires as much or more than runnup power to get the airplane to move. In those conditions unless you use proper short field techniques you might not get off the ground no matter how long the runway is.Keep in mind that grass doesn't automatically equal soft. You can get in some real trouble on shorter fields trying to do a soft field takeoff when it isn't necessary.
My PPL CFI had me envision a small tunnel that I had to keep the airplane in all the time while in ground effect. This may help you also. Think of the close walls and ceiling and keeping the plane barely off the deck. This of course is only once you get slightly airborne. The previous advice is spot on.
David
You two in the same club?
Are you sure its even possible during a soft field?
If you keep the yoke pulled back too long on rotation into ground effect without pushing the nose forward the tail will strike. Almost happened to me this weekend on practicing soft field takeoffs which concerned the CFI I flew with.
Nate, I thought 182s were "not approved" for takeoffs with more than 20 flaps. Does the STOL STC change that, or were you in test pilot mode?
The Robertson STOL changes it. Can't speak for the other STOL kits. The POH addendum document adds performance numbers for it.
My soft field take offs suck. I have trouble knowing how and when to push forward on the yoke to avoid banging the tail as soon as the nose comes up in ground effect. And tips how to figure this one out?
On second thought - I saw another one, a very heavy 182, when it came back around, it had scraped the grass and picked some up on the tail tie down.
Finally got bored enough to go see exactly where it would come off at. http://youtu.be/D01jHXn2q28