woodstock
Final Approach
Hi everyone
still really bummed about the accident at my airport a few days ago. I will be out there tomorrrow and Sunday - a XC and a regular more local flight.
I don't really know what happened yet but have been running possibilities over in my mind. it sounds as if it was on takeoff, and perhaps while they were turning.
if you do a regular straight ahead stall (i.e on departure), you would more or less go straight down - not nose first in the drop, right? just drop the whole plane... right?
and if you are on crosswind - just how steep of a bank is going to put you down like that? if you are really steep, but coordinated, you will lose altitude but not necessarily spin it in? being uncoordinated will just make it that much worse? (and harder to recover if at all).
I know to spin you have to stall the wings, you're going kinda slow on takeoff (let's say 75-80 or so, at Vy, slower if your nose is up more) but I know the speed goes down as you bank and steepen.
so worst case here is turning really steeply to the left... you're still hitting the right rudder because you don't know better or figure you are still climbing, etc... and your nose is higher than it should be. right?
I've talked to a friend of mine about this a few times and he said Pipers are really tough to spin but also a lot harder to get out once they are in a spin. I always thought the Cessnas were the most stable/easiest for flying but then others tell me the Pipers are much better. (not trying to get this into a high wing low wing debate!)
I'm not looking forward to tomorrow. I'm sure it's going to be really somber at the airport.
still really bummed about the accident at my airport a few days ago. I will be out there tomorrrow and Sunday - a XC and a regular more local flight.
I don't really know what happened yet but have been running possibilities over in my mind. it sounds as if it was on takeoff, and perhaps while they were turning.
if you do a regular straight ahead stall (i.e on departure), you would more or less go straight down - not nose first in the drop, right? just drop the whole plane... right?
and if you are on crosswind - just how steep of a bank is going to put you down like that? if you are really steep, but coordinated, you will lose altitude but not necessarily spin it in? being uncoordinated will just make it that much worse? (and harder to recover if at all).
I know to spin you have to stall the wings, you're going kinda slow on takeoff (let's say 75-80 or so, at Vy, slower if your nose is up more) but I know the speed goes down as you bank and steepen.
so worst case here is turning really steeply to the left... you're still hitting the right rudder because you don't know better or figure you are still climbing, etc... and your nose is higher than it should be. right?
I've talked to a friend of mine about this a few times and he said Pipers are really tough to spin but also a lot harder to get out once they are in a spin. I always thought the Cessnas were the most stable/easiest for flying but then others tell me the Pipers are much better. (not trying to get this into a high wing low wing debate!)
I'm not looking forward to tomorrow. I'm sure it's going to be really somber at the airport.