Stewartb
Final Approach
You use 60° banks in the pattern? Ya, me neither.
So I have been wondering if stalls from base to final are more likely if the downwind lag is closer to the airport? The pilot makes the turn to base and then has to turn final when closer to the approach end therefore over/undershooting the approach. So my question is based on this assumption,if this is one of the leading causes of crashes wouldn't it make more sense to teach wider patterns? Of course people are going to say to stay close to the airport in case of an engine out but it seems like we are worried about something that would happen less frequently i.e engine out vs. stall. I mean we are worried about an engine out near an airport.
Please correct me if i'm wrong.
Not usually, but base to final turn stalls occur when things get out of whack. Like a tail wind on base so you overshoot, tighten the turn to not overshoot and end up with 60 degrees of bank.You use 60° banks in the pattern? Ya, me neither.
A stall occurs when you exceed the critical AOA. That’s is controlled by elevator. Bank angle has nothing to do with it Other than people have a tendency to pull back on the elevator to keep the nose up at higher bank angles.
Shows poor planning and lack of reasonable bank limits in the pattern.You use 60° banks in the pattern? Ya, me neither.
So I can't do an aileron roll without stalling?Any time you bank, you are trading some vertical lift for some horizontal lift. Convert too much vertical lift to horizontal lift and you stall out of the sky. Bank angle has very much to do with potential stalls. AOA automatically bakes bank angle into the equation, so while you are incorrect about the elevator, you are correct about AOA.
This may only be semantics but here goes. Lift is lift and it is a force generally perpendicular to the surface of the wing. Lift can have either a horizontal component or a vertical component or some combination of the two depending on bank angle. In other terms, lift is a vector sum of the vertical vector and the horizontal vector. You can have all horizontal lift and never exceed the critical angle of attack--you will spiral into the ground and never stall. A graveyard spiral is just that. A graveyard spin occurs when a pilot sees he's descending too fast and speed is building in a graveyard spiral so he pulls back on the stick to slow the rate of descent and speed but due to not lessening the bank, he exceeds the critical angle of attack and stalls. Both will kill you.Any time you bank, you are trading some vertical lift for some horizontal lift. Convert too much vertical lift to horizontal lift and you stall out of the sky. Bank angle has very much to do with potential stalls. AOA automatically bakes bank angle into the equation, so while you are incorrect about the elevator, you are correct about AOA.
Yup. No problem. But when most here refer to banking, they're talking turning, not aerobatics. No aerobatics in the pattern; that's for airshow performers.So I can't do an aileron roll without stalling?
The wing never stalls because it never exceeds critical AoA, because the pilot reduces elevator input as the bank angle increases. The aircraft can momentarily maintain a somewhat level flight path because the side of the fuselage provides lift. The pilot increases rudder input through knife edge, which increases AoA and lift. Key word is "momentarily".So I can't do an aileron roll without stalling?
...soooooo much mental masturbation just to avoid teaching angle of attack.
Nauga,
indexed
Ok. But the post I responded to says nothing about turning. And this is how misconceptions get perpetuated. Banking, does not by itself increase the stall speed or make you stall.Yup. No problem. But when most here refer to banking, they're talking turning, not aerobatics.
Which simply reveals serious deficiencies in the training. Gimmicks won't fix that. Making it harder to get a CFI ticket will fix it.Yet sitting by the runway, I regularly see students at 20° of bank turning final with rudder because they've been told steep banks in the pattern will kill them.
“You do you!”But That’s Just Me - You do you!
Bless your heart……. Jk“You do you!”
Is that the PC way of saying “Go <blank> yourself!”? I might have to adopt that!
More like “Different Strokes”.“You do you!”
Is that the PC way of saying “Go <blank> yourself!”? I might have to adopt that!
Yes.The wing never stalls because it never exceeds critical AoA, because the pilot reduces elevator input as the bank angle increases. The aircraft can momentarily maintain a somewhat level flight path because the side of the fuselage provides lift. The pilot increases rudder input through knife edge, which increases AoA and lift. Key word is "momentarily".
Good point, I wasn't paying attention.Yes.
But an aileron roll is an all positive G maneuver. You raise the nose, reduce back pressure and roll.
What you are describing is a slow roll. There you are doing a roll along a line, and use rudder and forward elevator to maintain staight flight while rolling.
Yep, zero G, no weight on your butt. Unsecured objects will float in the cabin. Seen it happen several times.Nope, not zero G. You have weight on your butt throughout the maneuver. Less than 1 G yes, but not zero or negative. You can easily do one in a carburetor engine without the engine quitting.
A slow roll you do hang in the harness.
Airspeed doesn't cause or prevent stalls.Just watch your airspeed, that's really all there is to it.
Do tell. Go fly your plane at 30 mph on final. We’ll watch the news for the story.Airspeed doesn't cause or prevent stalls.
If you haven't gotten the horn 20kts above Vs, you're not living...Do tell. Go fly your plane at 30 mph on final. We’ll watch the news for the story.
indicated, calibrated, equivalent, true, or groundspeed?Do tell. Go fly your plane at 30 mph on final. We’ll watch the news for the story.
In your example you've added constraints such that the critical angle of attack will be exceeded trying to maintain your additional constraints at that low airspeed. In that case stall is *still* a function of angle of attack, with airspeed as a fallout of the condition ("final", i.e. 1g flight) you specified.My Cub flies rock solid at 20 mph. My Cessna? Not so much. In my example it’s aerodynamics, not skill.
"Useful flying" for many seems to include a lot of misconceptions that could be cleared up with a chalkboard.Tell the OP. I’m not interested in chalkboard aviation as much as useful flying.
I have seen 3 failed engine outs from the pattern at our airport, Plane came up less then 1000 feet short in all 3 cases.
I seen zero stall spin accidents from the pattern.
Brian
1st one 10 miles from the airport climbing away from it.I was told by my instructor that engine outs happen more near an airport because you are changing things to the engine. An hour or 2 at cruise is the same conditions to the engine. Now you are changing air/fuel ratios, prop speeds and power settings when you land. I dont know if thats really true, but it stuck with me.
Misconceptions are probably miscommunications. In either case a newish pilot like the OP is told to refer to his POH for guidance, and them engineer fellers translated all them fancy chalkboard values into airspeeds so the little people could herd these contraptions around without killing themselves."Useful flying" for many seems to include a lot of misconceptions that could be cleared up with a chalkboard.
Nauga,
and stability and control for the hard of hearing
Pretty sure the guy who told you that doesn't know either, that's how "facts" like that get passed on. No data, no evidence, just sounds good.... I dont know if thats really true, but it stuck with me.
A statement that is both true and false at the same time. Absent an angle-of-attack indicator, airspeed is the next best measurement, but requires knowing what causes the relationship between airspeed and AoA to change.Airspeed doesn't cause or prevent stalls.
Probably!Pretty sure the guy who told you that doesn't know either, that's how "facts" like that get passed on. No data, no evidence, just sounds good.
Whenever necessary.You use 60° banks in the pattern? Ya, me neither.
In a slow roll, yes. Aileron roll is low G.Yep, zero G, no weight on your butt. Unsecured objects will float in the cabin. Seen it happen several times.
I agree that a constant descent-rate is no different than level flight in terms of load factor and stall speeds. However, the main message on that video is not to pull back on the yoke during the turn. If you let the nose fall and let the airspeed build, then you are less likely to stall. In other words, it is the increase in airspeed and not the suggested reduction in stall speed that is providing the extra safety. Sometimes people have the right concepts but have less precise explanations.