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Jim
It's just one guy (as far as I've noticed). Thus the troll tag in the first reply.Is this the week for Stupid Pilot Tricks on POA?
C’mon guys.
It's just one guy (as far as I've noticed). Thus the troll tag in the first reply.Is this the week for Stupid Pilot Tricks on POA?
C’mon guys.
Well, he better be a teenager because he sure is acting like one.It's just one guy (as far as I've noticed). Thus the troll tag in the first reply.
And don't do it in someone else's airplane.If you do it, please make sure there are cameras running so you can at least serve as an example.
Yep.Anybody remember "I think I can roll this baron?"
IRL?…citabria ( that’s all I’ve rolled)…
A Bob Hoover video I've not seen before. He was one of the first, if not the first, aerobatic performers I saw at OSH in 1980 when it was just the "EAA Fly In". A friend who flew F14s just shook his head in awe after watching Hoover fly that Commander like a Pitts. Thanks for that vid link!Or you could roll with the engines off.
We call that the barrel dive over here in UPT land. Its pretty common. In aircraft with undersized ailerons and travel like most spam cans, that becomes more aggravated. To wit, looping the-- ah ha! Not today!
Cessnas roll signficantly faster than my old Pitts though.Start with a stable 60* bank to the left, then roll to a 60* bank to the right. Have someone time it. An actual aileron roll will take roughly three times that long. That should be enough to discourage you.
Ugh....all I want to be able to do in the Cessna 170 that I've started my PPL training on is do a decent take off (check...ish), fly with decent control authority (check) and land that beautiful old ship without too much tail-wagging (need lots of practice) and hurting it, or me and others, in the process. Then, I read something like this and feel it unbecoming of the private aviation community that I've viewed with high esteem. Does experience/time without incident degrade or corrupt good judgement? I'd rather go west as an old pilot than a bold one.Here's the final on the "I think I can roll this Baron" crash
Ugh....all I want to be able to do in the Cessna 170 that I've started my PPL training on is do a decent take off (check...ish), fly with decent control authority (check) and land that beautiful old ship without too much tail-wagging (need lots of practice) and hurting it, or me and others, in the process. Then, I read something like this and feel it unbecoming of the private aviation community that I've viewed with high esteem. Does experience/time without incident degrade or corrupt good judgement? I'd rather go west as an old pilot than a bold one.
Dual engine failure?Classic panic halfway through the roll and attempt to pull the airplane through from inverted nose down attitude and overspeed/stress. Any airplane with better ailerons than a Curtiss Jenny is quite easy to roll, just not for those who "think" they can.
The Cessna 150 gets broken rear windows, most commonly, from bird-strikes.Over a decade ago I saw a Cessna 150 with a busted back window… there was a reason it was busted. If you don’t actually know what you’re doing, you are actually endangering the lives of those underneath you.
Can confirm. The worst part is when they make it inside, and instantly change the CG while simultaneously exceeding the baggage area weight limit.The Cessna 150 gets broken rear windows, most commonly, from bird-strikes.
That guy did all kinds of things with the engines off and on. All kinds of things that are not supposed to be done in a non aerobatic airplane. But then again Bob Hoover.Or you could roll with the engines off.
When I was a teen watching Bob Hoover perfom at OSH (back when it was just the Fly In Convention) I overheard someone say he could do aerobatics with a kitchen table if dropped from a C-130.That guy did all kinds of things with the engines off and on. All kinds of things that are not supposed to be done in a non aerobatic airplane. But then again Bob Hoover.
Or rather get some real aerobatic training first.They will spin…and probably barrel roll just fine. But, I’d do one or two with an acro pilot first.
Most basic aerobatic can be done well within the limits of a Normal Category airplane. The problem comes when you screw up a maneuver and have to pull more G to recover.
But, what you find out through 180 degrees of roll is regardless of how much you pitch up to begin with, you're already pointing down at the ground like a badmitten off a poorly hit serve.
This is correct. But there is very little room for error from an aerodynamic or structural standpoint. The video with the Cessna rolling illustrates this very well. When the roll entry is executed poorly, you exit in a nose-low diving spiral in which recovery requires high-g loading at high speed... The absolute worst scenario for an inflight break up.Most basic aerobatic can be done well within the limits of a Normal Category airplane. The problem comes when you screw up a maneuver and have to pull more G to recover.
All true but for the casual readers here it should be understood that everything described above applies to pilots who have had little or probably NO training, and attempt stupid things they are totally unqualified for. It takes very little skill to safely roll nearly any airplane, but you need to have had just enough training and experience to know the pitfalls and to KNOW you can do it safely rather than just THINK you can. A little quality training goes a long way.This is correct. But there is very little room for error from an aerodynamic or structural standpoint. The video with the Cessna rolling illustrates this very well. When the roll entry is executed poorly, you exit in a nose-low diving spiral in which recovery requires high-g loading at high speed... The absolute worst scenario for an inflight break up.
Even aerobatic-rated aircraft can easily be overspeeded or overstressed when ham-fisted pilots botch maneuvers. An example is an RV. Any one of the RV's in the RV4-8 model series are sturdy and excellent control authority. What pilots don't realize is a RV is a small and clean airframe and picks up speed VERY quickly on the downline, or if a roll/spin exit is incorrect. As a result multiple RV's have been lost due to inflight break up.
Be that as it may, no one - other than possibly highly trained airshow pilots - should even think about rolling a non-aerobatic plane. Ever. Or even an aerobatic plane, without adequate training.It takes very little skill to safely roll nearly any airplane, but you need to have had just enough training and experience to know the pitfalls and to KNOW you can do it safely rather than just THINK you can.
I disagree. Don't put "airshow pilots" on a pedestal, they are just regular people who fly airshows as a hobby for the ego stroke and fun. Their talent and skill levels range from very modest to very high, just like recreational aerobatic pilots in general. Becoming an airshow pilot is more about marketing yourself and working through the ICAS levels and rules designed to prevent pilots from crashing their airplane into the spectators. Nothing about the process ensures only pilots with world class skills and judgment end up flying in front of crowds. The actual evaluation maneuvers are quite simple for any decent aerobatic pilot, even weekend warriors who have have had good training and who have above average dedication to the art and safety of aerobatics. YouTube is littered with videos of "airshow pilots" drilling holes in the ground because their skills were inadequate for what they were attempting. Not all airshow pilots are Rob Holland and David Martin types. VERY far from it.Be that as it may, no one - other than possibly highly trained airshow pilots - should even think about rolling a non-aerobatic plane. Ever.