ebykowsky
Cleared for Takeoff
- Joined
- Dec 12, 2012
- Messages
- 1,405
- Display Name
Display name:
goalstop
By now, I'm more than comfortable with power-off stalls and love taking daring pax up for the oh so fun power ons, but the envelope on my comfort is really not very broad, and I'm not sure what is inoculant and what could kill me when my wings are stalled. First of all:
If a wing starts to dip: Use my rudder, not my ailerons. I know this, but using rudder opposite the wing dip could lead to a spin, right? At which point is it too much rudder and thus an uncoordinated stall that turns into something worse? At what point do I stop using aileron and switch to rudder (edit: I know to use rudder all along, I mean switch to exclusively rudder.)? A few seconds before the stall? At the buffet? Once it develops?
Another: I've been told a prompt break of the stall with a fast pushover. While this is done because it's good practice if I ever stall near the ground, can I just slowly nose over? As in slowly enough that I just feel a little light in the seat and not .5G?
Also, on the first question, how does the plane not risk a spin in the falling leaf stall? Isn't full rudder deflection used? I really want to know how far you have to go for a spin.
I plan on taking a CFI up for a little spin training and advanced stall training this summer--hopefully an hour or so will do. If you know anyone good in the SC area, let me know--I'd be willing to drive a couple hours. My FBO's aircraft is not spinnable as per insurance... I hate insurance limits.
If a wing starts to dip: Use my rudder, not my ailerons. I know this, but using rudder opposite the wing dip could lead to a spin, right? At which point is it too much rudder and thus an uncoordinated stall that turns into something worse? At what point do I stop using aileron and switch to rudder (edit: I know to use rudder all along, I mean switch to exclusively rudder.)? A few seconds before the stall? At the buffet? Once it develops?
Another: I've been told a prompt break of the stall with a fast pushover. While this is done because it's good practice if I ever stall near the ground, can I just slowly nose over? As in slowly enough that I just feel a little light in the seat and not .5G?
Also, on the first question, how does the plane not risk a spin in the falling leaf stall? Isn't full rudder deflection used? I really want to know how far you have to go for a spin.
I plan on taking a CFI up for a little spin training and advanced stall training this summer--hopefully an hour or so will do. If you know anyone good in the SC area, let me know--I'd be willing to drive a couple hours. My FBO's aircraft is not spinnable as per insurance... I hate insurance limits.
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