steingar
Taxi to Parking
More often self-appointed internet experts are wrong.Yeah, but sometimes CFIs are just plane wrong.
More often self-appointed internet experts are wrong.Yeah, but sometimes CFIs are just plane wrong.
And sometimes not just any t/w endorsed CFI is really equipped to be teaching it.
Indeed. Once upon a time there was a local CFI who had a few hundred hours in a pretty docile bird and thought he knew everything about tailwheel flying. That bit him when he was trying to give pointers to a guy with a type he was unfamiliar with. It cost that guy a prop due to the instructor's insistence that things can only be done a certain way.
If the Decathlon is a docile bird I think I'll stick with that for a while before I move to anything challenging!
On takeoff he kept telling me "tail up, tail up, more forward pressure, get the tail up," and after one takeoff I said I really didn't want to strike his prop and he laughed and said the front seat view can seem a bit precarious but in that plane you had a lot of room before you got into trouble.
Depends a bit on the airplane. In the DC-3 you want to push the nose forward and get the tail up sooner than later. The same technique in the Beech 18 will put you in the grass!Personally, the whole push forward and get the tail up on taildraggers is a BAD HABIT.
If the Decathlon is a docile bird I think I'll stick with that for a while before I move to anything challenging!
On takeoff he kept telling me "tail up, tail up, more forward pressure, get the tail up," and after one takeoff I said I really didn't want to strike his prop and he laughed and said the front seat view can seem a bit precarious but in that plane you had a lot of room before you got into trouble.
Depends a bit on the airplane. In the DC-3 you want to push the nose forward and get the tail up sooner than later. The same technique in the Beech 18 will put you in the grass!
I definitely prefer 3 point takeoffs in the biplanes.I'll have to trust you on the DC-3 and the recent accident certainly reinforces your point. I agree on the Beech 18. I think the push and get the tail up is the exception (DC-3 noted) and a bad habit for most taildraggers. Three point takeoffs are standard for most Pitts. I know that is all I ever do in them.
I watched a friend in a new to him S1S Pitts decide to "fast taxi" he did okay until he decided to raise the tail, somewhat abruptly. He was a passenger and along for the ride at that point as the plane departed the runway and ended up in a small ditch. Fortunately, no prop strike and only a couple of small holes in the fabric on lower left wing, but he was close to really tearing it up...all because he decided to push without understanding what was going to happen.
Interesting thing about the Beech 18 is if you search the NTSB database for Beech 18 and ground loop, you find almost as many ground loops have happened on takeoff as landing. Largely due to people forcing the tail up too early.
What does the POH say about raising the tail on takeoff for the Decathlon? The instructor who checked me out in the Champ taught me that the best/shortest takeoff technique is to start with the stick about 1" forward of neutral. The tail will come up on its own that way and the plane will fly off as soon as it's ready.
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Some airplanes make a lot more work when the tail is raised early, some it doesn’t matter much. I’d put the Citabria/Decathlon in the later camp,...you could literally let go of the stick during the takeoff and it won’t matter. But, if you choose to raise the tail, it’s best done slowly, and after it’s rolled some and gathered speed, lest a vivid demonstration of gyroscopic precession is what you have in mind, and as noted, worse with a left crosswind. I’m told folks who bring the tail up real fast in a powerful airplane such as a P-51 only do that once. Never flown one, so I don’t know for sure.
Chapter 13 of FAA 8083 is a pretty good place to start.
https://www.faa.gov/regulations_pol...ation/airplane_handbook/media/15_afh_ch13.pdf
Another good book to get started, is The Compleat Taildragger Pilot,
https://www.amazon.com/Compleat-Taildragger-Pilot-Harvey-Plourde/dp/0963913700
Keeping the stick in the right position in regards to wind while taxiing will impress your instructor.
It tickles!I have been trying to be mindful of that! Apparently the rear seat is a bit tight because when I first pulled the stick back on taxi he said "not that far back!"
Does your instructor demand you always keep the stick back during taxi?
Yep! That's pretty much all he had me do first day.
Chapter 13 of FAA 8083 is a pretty good place to start.
https://www.faa.gov/regulations_pol...ation/airplane_handbook/media/15_afh_ch13.pdf
Another good book to get started, is The Compleat Taildragger Pilot,
https://www.amazon.com/Compleat-Taildragger-Pilot-Harvey-Plourde/dp/0963913700
Another VERY important book is regarding the Reserve tank, and making sure it is properly filled.
Generally located under the seat of Taylorcrafts.
View attachment 66145
Warning: Ground looping may continue after laying down.
Another VERY important book is regarding the Reserve tank, and making sure it is properly filled.
Generally located under the seat of Taylorcrafts.
View attachment 66145
Warning: Ground looping may continue after laying down.
After emptying it you can't take off for 8 hours!
None of this seemed to bother him too much at all. We've also done wheel landings with me following him on the controls. His Rudder work on that is almost too fast for me to comprehend. He told me that he didn't really think about it and it was just on feel anymore.
Sorry to restart a necro thread but I figured this was better than posting a new one.
Second tailwheel lesson today! I felt more comfortable in the Decathlon today and felt like I was more ahead of the airplane. We went over to a class D to use their runways. It was pretty bumpy but I'm closing in on getting the three points. I can tell my CFI is still on the controls with me but I'm flying more of the landings myself. He did let me get a POI going so I could see what that felt like. After the second hop I figured out what was going on and got power back in. We took one more bounce but it was starting to fly again so only two hard bounces. None of this seemed to bother him too much at all. We've also done wheel landings with me following him on the controls. His Rudder work on that is almost too fast for me to comprehend. He told me that he didn't really think about it and it was just on feel anymore.
Spoken like a true tailwheel pilot.I am kind of enthralled with that machine!
On takeoff he kept telling me "tail up, tail up, more forward pressure, get the tail up," and after one takeoff I said I really didn't want to strike his prop and he laughed and said the front seat view can seem a bit precarious but in that plane you had a lot of room before you got into trouble.
I'm to the point where I can tell when it wants to fly and all I need to do is check the ASI to double check that it's at rotation speed and I've found that I am starting to "feel" 65-70 mph.
That's how I feel about the Super D. It's my only tailwheel and aerobatic experience, but I fell in love with the airplane. Wheel landings were probably the most challenging aspect for me, but once it clicked after roughly three flights, it felt great. If you get into PIO, don't wait too long before applying power and going around! My CFI let me bounce it a few times (while chuckling in the back seat,lol), but fortunately I knew not to let it get too far out of hand. I powered up and went around.I made my first 3 point yesterday without the assistance of my instructor! We did a couple of them and then we started working on wheel landings. There was a light (5 kt) crosswind component and just a little bit of bumpiness around the pattern so it was a perfect instructional day IMO. Challenging enough to make it interesting without being too difficult to get things done. I am starting to develop a feel for the Decathlon as far as what it wants to do and what it is doing. Especially takeoff. I'm to the point where I can tell when it wants to fly and all I need to do is check the ASI to double check that it's at rotation speed and I've found that I am starting to "feel" 65-70 mph. I am loving the experience of sitting in the middle of the plane with the stick in my right hand and the throttle lever in the left. I'm also just loving the Decathlon. My instructor told me to be a bit more authoritative on the controls than I'd be on a Cessna and to run my pattern turns more aggressively. Once I started doing that I felt like I began to bond with the plane more. I am kind of enthralled with that machine!
That's how I feel about the Super D. It's my only tailwheel and aerobatic experience, but I fell in love with the airplane. Wheel landings were probably the most challenging aspect for me, but once it clicked after roughly three flights, it felt great. If you get into PIO, don't wait too long before applying power and going around! My CFI let me bounce it a few times (while chuckling in the back seat,lol), but fortunately I knew not to let it get too far out of hand. I powered up and went around.
It's a fun airplane once you get a handle on it. Wish I'd did my primary flight training in it rather than the Skyhawk.
What does the POH say about raising the tail on takeoff for the Decathlon? The instructor who checked me out in the Champ taught me that the best/shortest takeoff technique is to start with the stick about 1" forward of neutral. The tail will come up on its own that way and the plane will fly off as soon as it's ready.
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Mine let me do a PIO as well. On the third bounce I got full throttle back in and he laughed and said I wondered how long that'd take you! I'm glad I did my primary in a Skyhawk. It was the equivalent of taking driver's ed in a minivan versus a Miata!
There are in fact at least a couple of stories of hand propped Champs that got away and I mean actually took off and flew away with nobody in the driver's seat.