Funkeruski
Pre-takeoff checklist
So are you guys saying that I don't have to remove this tattoo that I got on my left bicep a couple of weeks ago after all?
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So are you guys saying that I don't have to remove this tattoo that I got on my left bicep a couple of weeks ago after all?
I would be curious to know how much flap you had hanging out. In gusty crosswinds I use 10 or none, to give me better control. The increase in speed isn't that critical, and when you set your upwind wheel on the runway you still have enough speed to maintain good directional control.
Why is that?
Higher speed = more airflow over the control surfaces, plus with the higher stall speed you don't get as much float from gusts. (IMHO)
My instructor said that if it is gusty I should land with 10 degrees (as opposed to 20 degrees) of flaps and that will make me less susceptible to catching a gust... so that's what ( (we) do when it's gusty. What say you?With full flaps you can add throttle using mechanical energy to maintain your control and then pull it as soon as your mains touch and you will stop flying and with full flaps, the drag added is greater than the lift added so it's helping you slow down from high speed rather than hindering you like 10* flaps does.
You're missing a few things and making the situation more dangerous than it has to be. You can still fly the higher speed if you desire with full flaps in by just adding some throttle, and when you do that, you'll find that the increased prop wash across the tail will give you even greater control authority increase (and more stability as well) at a lower speed than you were landing at with O-10 flaps in. Next is slowing down. With flaps 10 and the extra speed you've got way more lift going on with little increase in drag which means you you are light on your wheels longer which increases your susceptibility to being blown off the runway and at a greater speed. Since kinetic energy (the stuff that causes damage and death) increases with the square of speed, any thing that goes wrong will have a much larger portion of damage that comes with it.
With full flaps you can add throttle using mechanical energy to maintain your control and then pull it as soon as your mains touch and you will stop flying and with full flaps, the drag added is greater than the lift added so it's helping you slow down from high speed rather than hindering you like 10* flaps does.
You use flaps to regulate lift, you use flaps to regulate drag, you DO NOT use flaps to regulate speed, you use pitch and power for that.
Hey! I resemble that remark!Students bounce airplanes a lot harder and higher than old hands.
That point didn't come until very late, and I was only inches off the ground. I do remember the idea of doing a go around did flash through my mind, but I just felt like it was too late, if there is such a thing. I have done a go around in a similar situation before, but I was higher when the go around decision was made that time.
Hey! I resemble that remark!
You're missing a few things and making the situation more dangerous than it has to be. You can still fly the higher speed if you desire with full flaps in by just adding some throttle, and when you do that, you'll find that the increased prop wash across the tail will give you even greater control authority increase (and more stability as well) at a lower speed than you were landing at with O-10 flaps in. Next is slowing down. With flaps 10 and the extra speed you've got way more lift going on with little increase in drag which means you you are light on your wheels longer which reduces your braking effectiveness and increases your susceptibility to being blown off the runway and at a greater speed. You are also risking floating, ballooning, porpoising and all those other fun bouncy things that in a strong crosswind puts planes on their backs in the grass. Since kinetic energy (the stuff that causes damage and death) increases with the square of speed, any thing that goes wrong will have a much larger portion of damage that comes with it.
With full flaps you can add throttle using mechanical energy to maintain your control and then pull it as soon as your mains touch and you will stop flying and with full flaps, the drag added is greater than the lift added so it's helping you slow down from high speed rather than hindering you like 10* flaps does.
You use flaps to regulate lift, you use flaps to regulate drag, you DO NOT use flaps to regulate speed, you use pitch and power for that.
My instructor said that if it is gusty I should land with 10 degrees (as opposed to 20 degrees) of flaps and that will make me less susceptible to catching a gust... so that's what ( (we) do when it's gusty. What say you?
I figured that. My point in asking the question really, was to find out why people agree or disagree, so that I could learn something.I'd say you could fly with a great many instructors who would disagree, including quite a few on this forum.
I'd say you could fly with a great many instructors who would disagree, including quite a few on this forum.
My instructor said that if it is gusty I should land with 10 degrees (as opposed to 20 degrees) of flaps and that will make me less susceptible to catching a gust... so that's what ( (we) do when it's gusty. What say you?
I do the "set it and forget it" at 20 degrees for landing. I don't land with 40-- that scares me for a go around. Even 30 makes me a wee bit nervous for a go around, although I know it's possible.Hmm... What's your normal flaps setting for landing in the 172?
Less flaps in gusty conditions can help, but normally I'd say you'd use 20 degrees instead of the 30 or 40 that a 172 might have.
No, for a short field landing it's full flaps.Huh. OK do it that way if your examiner does it that way. Then once you pass, get some experience landing with full flaps.
Do you do that even for a short-field landing or have you not worked on those yet?
Our school teaches full flaps for every landing except where gusty winds come into play.
I can only provide my thoughts on the subject-I figured that. My point in asking the question really, was to find out why people agree or disagree, so that I could learn something.
Not Tim, but yes, I have, in an older C-172. Climb away, then raise the flaps in stages like you describe.No, for a short field landing it's full flaps.
You've done a go-around with 40 degrees of flaps? I'm guessing that you hold it in a fairly level attitude until airspeed is high enough and you begin to show a positive rate of climb, and then begin to raise the flaps?
Not Tim, but yes, I have, in an older C-172. Climb away, then raise the flaps in stages like you describe.
Ok. Thank you. And thanks for the list that you posted above. That's helpful!Not Tim, but yes, I have, in an older C-172. Climb away, then raise the flaps in stages like you describe.
Yes, that I have felt. And had to fight with... "no nose, you are staying DOWN."You just have to be ready for the pitch-up and put forward pressure on the yoke as needed.
Trim is, indeed, my friend. I learned that on the "your nose is staying DOWN" fight.Yes. on bigger airplanes like the 182, you can get even more aggressive pitch-ups, but you just need to be ready for it. Trim is your friend.
My instructor said that if it is gusty I should land with 10 degrees (as opposed to 20 degrees) of flaps and that will make me less susceptible to catching a gust... so that's what ( (we) do when it's gusty. What say you?
No Mr Duct Tape, I do not. I was wondering if you might want to explain why this might not be a good idea.Do you think what I said above changes because you asked?
Yes. on bigger airplanes like the 182, you can get even more aggressive pitch-ups, but you just need to be ready for it. Trim is your friend.
Ok what you said seems like a good idea and what my instructor said seems to make sense too... so I was thinking out loud (my first mistake) and trying to think thru which would be better/safer for me to practice.My instructor said that if it is gusty I should land with 10 degrees (as opposed to 20 degrees) of flaps and that will make me less susceptible to catching a gust... so that's what ( (we) do when it's gusty. What say you?
Yes, I do. (A normal landing with flaps 20).Don't tell me you do a normal landing flaps 20?
I do the "set it and forget it" at 20 degrees for landing. I don't land with 40-- that scares me for a go around. Even 30 makes me a wee bit nervous for a go around, although I know it's possible.
Anyway, my flight school teaches landing with 20.
I teach students to do landings full flaps no matter the wind in all the airplanes I've instructed primary students in them. I have them practice partial flaps and no flaps but that is just incase they had a flap failure.Ok what you said seems like a good idea and what my instructor said seems to make sense too... so I was thinking out loud (my first mistake) and trying to think thru which would be better/safer for me to practice.
And a go around is no problem with that configuration? I guess it wouldn't be, as long as you could hold it level while the airspeed goes up, right?I've done full flap landings in winds gusting to 50 knots which had a 30 knot component.
Tracey, that seems odd to me because all the planes I've flown do 30° or 40° flaps, but some planes may have less flaps. What plane are you using?Yes, I do. (A normal landing with flaps 20).
A 172, it goes to 30 degrees of flaps, we dont' land with full flaps.Tracey, that seems odd to me because all the planes I've flown do 30° or 40° flaps, but some planes may have less flaps. What plane are you using?
Going around in most certified airplanes with full flaps is a non issue in most conditions else it wouldn't be a certified airplane. See FAR Part 23 for all the rules (lots of our airplanes were certified under CAR3 but its pretty close).And a go around is no problem with that configuration? I guess it wouldn't be, as long as you could hold it level while the airspeed goes up, right?
Your instructor needs some training or he's just a whacko. A normal landing in that 172 is with 30 degrees of flaps and that is what he should be teaching.Tracey said:A 172, it goes to 30 degrees of flaps, we dont' land with full flaps.