dmspilot
Final Approach
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Why is this one a myth?6) Someone suggested in a strong enough wind, a plane that was not tied down could eventually just hover.
Why is this one a myth?6) Someone suggested in a strong enough wind, a plane that was not tied down could eventually just hover.
Why is this one a myth?
There's a video online that I'll try to find*.
The instant the tires are clear of the ground, the plane will simply accelerate downwind, unless tethered somehow. If tethered, of course, it can hover, much like a kite.
I don't follow. If I fly an airplane at 60 knots in a 60 knot headwind, it will hover.
I am of the opinion that all those "stick and rudder moments" are fake, in that the pilots who eschew those beliefs ("plane can sense the wind") know the truth, but like to pull our chain. I guess it works.
Of course. Not contested and I've done it.
I thought the "not tied down" part made it clear I was talking about a parked plane. I guess I could have been clearer.
I can only say that they are all genuine, and while it's possible they're trolling, most seemed quite sincere in their beliefs.
I guess the problem with a parked plane is that there is no pilot to control it. It doesn't seem to have much to do with wind.
Hard to see a subtle wink on the internet.
. But if one holds that the elevator is less effective in a tailwind, I think that's a reach, or at least open to easy misinterpretation.
If you were truly a Navy flyboy, you'd have installed the meatball. Boooooo
Shows how subtle effects can be missed.
I still hold that as soon as the last tire leaves the surface, the entire plane will simply move laterally with the air mass, and not "weathervane". It's definitely my experience. Lots of pilots hold that it will, but I think it's because they are so used to crabbing into the wind after takeoff that it seems to happen on its own.
I posted my little experiment before. Here it is again:
I could detect zero tendency for the model to "weathervane"' and that leaf blower was really honkin'!
Most of the myths you mentioned are harmless misunderstandings, but dealing with a significant tailwind is not...
Sometimes people get hung up on a point and are eager to make it at the expense of all others. I've seen it here before and sensed you were headed in that direction, but maybe I misread what you were saying.
Nearly all airplanes will definitely will crab into the wind (done it many times). Here is why...
Brian
CFIIG/ASEL
Crosswind video just shows "private" message.
Now it works. Amount of weather vane effect depends on offset between CG and center of lateral effort while the plane is being accelerated sideways up to crosswind speed.Sorry! Got marked as private somehow.
Try it now.
Now it works. Amount of weather vane effect depends on offset between CG and center of lateral effort while the plane is being accelerated sideways up to crosswind speed.
When I first got serious about lessons, I called a couple of CFIs. One, an older guy, told me to read that book first, then start lessons. I later found out he had a stroke not long after we talked, and I've read that book a couple more times since.Stick and Rudder.
One of my favorite books, ever. I think I first read it when I was 12 years old.
The book was considered top shelf when it appeared and for many years after. His son is also a gifted author and well regarded.In another thread a pilot opined that wind made a difference in cooling in a Seneca. I searched every which way and cannot find my original post on "Stick and Rudder Moments". So, I thought I would amend it (example #5) with the current example and re-post it:
As background, Stick and Rudder is a book written by Wolfgang Langewiesche in 1944. Though a little dated, it still makes good on what the subtitle promises: “An Explanation of the Art of Flying”.
Much time is spent in the book describing what makes flying so different and challenging compared to ground based activities.
We spend most of our lives anchored to the ground in one way or another. In fact, to say someone is “well grounded” or that he or she “has their feet on the ground”, is generally considered a compliment.
But all that time spent on the surface may make it difficult to shift gears when the wheels of a plane leave the ground. It takes a while to adjust and to understand, and even experienced pilots can slip up from time to time.
It has to do with frames of reference. One is the ground. We think of it as stationary, but standing on the surface of the planet you may be moving up to about 1,000 mph, depending on your latitude. But if you know how to juggle, you don’t have to factor in the speed at which you’re moving - relative to the surface you’re stationary, and that’s all that matters. Similarly, if you’re juggling on a moving train - since your frame of reference is now the train, no allowance for its movement need be made.
The essence is that, once in the air, the plane has zero reference to the ground as far as flight characteristics go. Your frame of reference now becomes the air mass in which you are moving. The implication is that a steady wind has no effect on the plane, other than its path over the ground. The plane is simply flying in an air mass which is itself moving. Disregarding gusts and shear, once a plane is in the air, like a free balloon, there is no wind.
I wish to clarify what I mean when I call something a “Stick and Rudder Moment”. A pilot will do or say something where a lightbulb goes off in my head and I suspect they may not be adequately making the transition from ground-based to flight-based thinking. The upside is that it can often become a "teachable moment".
Here are some examples I’ve come across, and I’m sure you guys can come up with many more.
1) The “Dreaded Downwind Turn”.
This is the grandaddy of "Stick and Rudder Moments". Many pilots believe that the turn from crosswind to downwind is especially dangerous. Why? The plane may stall as it is picking up a tailwind during the turn, putting it closer to the stall.
Such is not the case. If planes do tend to stall there, it is due to the illusion of increased speed leading them to slow down too much or not realize speed is decaying. There is no “wind” pushing against the rear of the plane, causing it to stall.
2) A fellow on the Cirrus Owner’s site observed that a quartering tailwind seemed to push his plane ahead by more than the wind velocity. For example, he’d be flying along with a TAS of 190k and a quartering tailwind of 10k and find his groundspeed being greater than the combination of 190+10. He figured it was like a sailboat “tacking”, and that some sort of trigonometry was letting the quartering tailwind “squeeze” his plane forward faster than the wind velocity.
The thread (“Winds?”) went on for hundreds of posts with other pilots and instructors trying every imaginable explanation and analogy to show him the error of his reasoning. I don’t know if we ever did, and the same theme was continued in another thread by the same fellow. But it was a fun, if somewhat aggravating ride.
3) Flying a demo Cirrus northbound in FL, I noticed on autopilot it was flying slightly right wing down. I mentioned it to the demo pilot, who opined that it was probably just the autopilot correcting for the right crosswind.
4) A pilot posted that when he approached in a crab with a crosswind from a certain direction, he could feel it in his prop.
5) I’ve heard it said cowl flaps are especially useful when flying downwind, when cooling would otherwise be compromised by the tailwind. More recently, a forum poster here thought winds affected cooling in a Seneca, possibly due to cowling shape. Then he doubled down with: "On my 206 I've notice a 5-10 degree change in CHT based on a strong wind. I am not a fluid dynamics expert, so I have no idea exactly why. Perhaps a slight pressure change in the cowl as I mentioned, or slight turbulence in the relative wind, IDK."
6) Someone suggested in a strong enough wind, a plane that was not tied down could eventually just hover.
7) Many have expressed that banking the airplane may cause fuel to flow unevenly from wing tanks. When queried, they were not referring to uncoordinated flight.
8) And, of course, there was the suggestion to use an iPad app’s speed readout as an aid when landing.
One thought exercise is to imagine that you’re flying a plane capable of 50k slow flight in a 50k wind. Start directly into the wind with a zero groundspeed. Then start doing 360’s. With each 360 your groundspeed goes from zero to 100k and back to zero. Imagine how that will feel as you speed up to 100k only to slow back down to zero. How will that feel? How will that sound? You surely will be able to tell when you’re upwind and when you’re downwind, right? The answer is so nonintuitive that you might not believe it, but its true. Try it some time under the hood and the answer will be clear - though not what you might think.
Anyway, let me open the floor to discussions of any of the above, or feel free to add your own “Stick and Rudder Moments".
It has to do with frames of reference. One is the ground. We think of it as stationary, but standing on the surface of the planet you may be moving up to about 1,000 mph, depending on your latitude.
At the equator, you'll be moving around the rotational axis at a bit less than 1000 MPH. But the earth is orbiting the sun, which is orbiting in the Milky Way Galaxy, which is flying outward from the center of the universe at enormous speed. We're all doing way more than 1000 MPH through space, and it's relative to space that inertia is effective.
I happened on it just before I started dying lessons, not long ago.
Wow. Those must be intense!
it's relative to space that inertia is effective
To be more precise, it would be relative to other matter not space.
Not a physicist here, but you mentioned things that meet the definition of matter, with the exception maybe of microwave radiation. Inertial reference is meaningless without reference to some form of matter, right? No training in those things, so set me straight if I'm way off. Does microwave radiation apply force to any object?No, not really. Accelerated matter does not determine an inertial reference frame. People used to assume stars determined the rest frame of the universe. Now we have the microwave background, and know that stars and galaxies are not at rest.
But it won't make much difference in an airplane.
Matter is not necessary to determine an inertial reference frame, and the microwave background is an example.Not a physicist here, but you mentioned things that meet the definition of matter. Inertial reference is meaningless without reference to some form of matter. No training in those things, so set me straight if I'm way off.
EDIT:Matter is not necessary to determine an inertial reference frame, and the microwave background is an example.
In the context of an airplane, we define inertial reference in terms of gyroscopes. Those do not require outside matter to work, and if you throw baseballs past them, they don't notice.
Yes, it needs correction. The microwave background is not an object, and you can measure velocity and acceleration relative to it. Space itself determines inertia, even if it has nothing in it. You can still determine if you are accelerating even in an empty universe and even if you can't look outside. That's Einsteins elevator thought experiment.Ok, to the post I responded to he said that speed is relative to space. My point is that speed and inertia aren't measured in relation to space but to other objects, singular or plural. Does that need to be corrected or not?