Is there any point in staying in ground effect past Vx?
I like the use ground effect quite a bit, free performance is always good to have, short field, short gravel bar, obstacles at the end, high density take offs etc.
Warning: This post may contain blasphemy.
I always thought of ground effect sort of the same way I think about acupuncture. People use it and swear by it, but I've never personally seen it do anything and as far as I know, science is unable to prove that its use has any measurable effectiveness.
I have. Very practical things. It allows leaving the ground early and accelerating to climb speed in soft field and very high density altitude takeoffs. On landing, I've seen pilots transitioning from high drag Cessnas and Pipers to low-drag, more efficient winged Mooneys and Diamonds have trouble with the need for a much slower pullback in the flare because the airplane continues to fly much longer.Warning: This post may contain blasphemy.
I always thought of ground effect sort of the same way I think about acupuncture. People use it and swear by it, but I've never personally seen it do anything.
Warning: This post may contain blasphemy.
I always thought of ground effect sort of the same way I think about acupuncture. People use it and swear by it, but I've never personally seen it do anything and as far as I know, science is unable to prove that its use has any measurable effectiveness.
It can help a heavy plane on a hot day make it to the accident scene!Warning: This post may contain blasphemy.
I always thought of ground effect sort of the same way I think about acupuncture. People use it and swear by it, but I've never personally seen it do anything and as far as I know, science is unable to prove that its use has any measurable effectiveness.
[...] People use it and swear by it, but I've never personally seen it do anything and as far as I know, science is unable to prove that its use has any measurable effectiveness.
Warning: This post may contain blasphemy.
I always thought of ground effect sort of the same way I think about acupuncture. People use it and swear by it, but I've never personally seen it do anything and as far as I know, science is unable to prove that its use has any measurable effectiveness.
Warning: This post may contain blasphemy.
I always thought of ground effect sort of the same way I think about acupuncture. People use it and swear by it, but I've never personally seen it do anything and as far as I know, science is unable to prove that its use has any measurable effectiveness.
I'm not saying its not real, I'm saying its like acupuncture. Which is to say that it exists and you can do it, but it doesn't really do very much.Ground effect is very real.
See this right here is exactly what I'm talking about. I learned to fly in a C150 and then went on to flying 172s and 182s. And then I went on to do a ton of time in a Mooney. Then I went pro and did a ton of time in supercubs and a much smaller amount of time in a pawnee. All out of a short tight grass field with trees on three sides. So I did a lot of high wing stuff interspersed with time in low wing stuff. And I never once had to think about 'oh wait this is low wing, better allow for ground effect and all that..' Near as I could tell, once you really knew how to land, you knew how to land and it didn't matter what you flew, they all landed about the same. Even the Mooney and they're notorious for floating forever. I would think about the weight and conditions and adjust my speed accordingly, but I never once gave an ounce of thought to wing position or ground effect and I always got down and stopped in book numbers or close to it.On landing, I've seen pilots transitioning from high drag Cessnas and Pipers to low-drag, more efficient winged Mooneys and Diamonds have trouble with the need for a much slower pullback in the flare because the airplane continues to fly much longer.
Studies have shown placing needles in very specific areas of the body does have a real and measurable effect. Those studies have also shown that placing needles in completely random areas also has the same effect. They also show that leading the patient to believe needles have been placed when in fact no needles have been applied also has the same effect. Placebo is a powerful drug. Ask for it by name.Acupuncture is awesome, by the way. Not for everything but it sure helps for some things. I fall asleep every time. No stress.
Well yes, of course, but that's all based on your subjective experience, not objective science. I definitely don't have your level of experience but having flown over 30 types of singles, the reality for me is mostly the same. With some exceptions, after my third, transitions started getting easier and easier. When I am landing, I don't think about the wing and the science either. When I am teaching, however, I never found, "they are all the same; just land it" to be particularly helpful to someone who is having a landing issue when transitioning to something new.I
See this right here is exactly what I'm talking about. I learned to fly in a C150 and then went on to flying 172s and 182s. And then I went on to do a ton of time in a Mooney. Then I went pro and did a ton of time in supercubs and a much smaller amount of time in a pawnee. All out of a short tight grass field with trees on three sides. So I did a lot of high wing stuff interspersed with time in low wing stuff. And I never once had to think about 'oh wait this is low wing, better allow for ground effect and all that..' Near as I could tell, once you really knew how to land, you knew how to land and it didn't matter what you flew, they all landed about the same. Even the Mooney and they're notorious for floating forever. I would think about the weight and conditions and adjust my speed accordingly, but I never once gave an ounce of thought to wing position or ground effect and I always got down and stopped in book numbers or close to it.
Actually not 3000 years worth of history. It was indeed used about 3000 years ago but had pretty much been written off as nothing more than superstition and all but died off about 2500 years ago. And it pretty much stayed that way until the 1950's when Chinese Communist party leader Mao Zedong revived it part of an initiative to reassure the Chinese people that their Government had a plan to keep them healthy even though the country could not afford to supply most of the Western based medical practices in use at the time. Then the Americans with their pesky free enterprise system got hold of it and the rest as they say is history.2 billion Chinese and 3000 years of history are a pretty good study.
Studies have shown placing needles in very specific areas of the body does have a real and measurable effect. Those studies have also shown that placing needles in completely random areas also has the same effect. They also show that leading the patient to believe needles have been placed when in fact no needles have been applied also has the same effect. Placebo is a powerful drug. Ask for it by name.
You are very correct, completely subjective. I'm married to a scientist who does studies for a living, but I'm not one myself so subjective all I have to go on.Well yes, of course, but that's all based on your subjective experience, not objective science.
And this is the very point I was making. I'm not saying that ground effect is something that does not exist or can't be measured. If you put your mind to it, you can identify it and measure it for sure. What I'm saying is I don't buy that it ever makes a hill of beans worth of difference.You are without a doubt dealing with differences in aircraft performance in ground effect when you are landing. You just don't have do it consciously.
I wish you could produce such a drug. If for no other reason than it would enable you to afford to own and pilot any plane you wanted up to and including a 747.I am a supplier for the wonder drug Placebex. It is 98% as effective as every other drug on the market, has 98% of the same side effects as all other drugs, yet only costs as much as sugar compressed into pill form. Although we have to add some nasty tasting stuff so you think it is the same as all those other drugs.
You are very correct, completely subjective. I'm married to a scientist who does studies for a living, but I'm not one myself so subjective all I have to go on.
And this is the very point I was making. I'm not saying that ground effect is something that does not exist or can't be measured. If you put your mind to it, you can identify it and measure it for sure. What I'm saying is I don't buy that it ever makes a hill of beans worth of difference.
I've seen the videos of planes that managed to get off the ground but not climb. No dispute there. What I haven't seen nor experienced is a situation where the plane got off the ground but would not climb unless kept in ground effect and allowed to accelerate in ground effect. If you've experienced that then I bow to your prowess but I've never been in a situation where that was the case. In my experience you can force it airborne before you have enough speed for it to really fly. But as soon as you get the wheels off the grass, airspeed goes up which gets you immediately to the point where its going to fly no matter what. So net effect is she gets in the air and starts climbing and keeps climbing.It does make a difference in soft-field takeoffs. The airplane, if the nose is held high, will lift off at a little below stall speed due to the ground effect, but the pilot must modulate the attitude to keep those wheels just above the surface while the speed builds to climb speed. If one just keeps the nose up after liftoff, the airplane will rise as far as the ground effect will let it, then it mushes along until it hits something.
In hot and high situations, it's well known to result in crashes. Again, it gets off but can't climb out of ground effect.
When the field is soft, as in long, wet grass or mud, you'll never reach takeoff speed without the soft-field technique. There's just too much friction, and it gets worse as you accelerate, so in such cases getting the thing airborne as soon as it possible can gets rid of that friction and it will accelerate to climb speed. I've experienced it numerous times, and taught it.I've seen the videos of planes that managed to get off the ground but not climb. No dispute there. What I haven't seen nor experienced is a situation where the plane got off the ground but would not climb unless kept in ground effect and allowed to accelerate in ground effect. If you've experienced that then I bow to your prowess but I've never been in a situation where that was the case. In my experience you can force it airborne before you have enough speed for it to really fly. But as soon as you get the wheels off the grass, airspeed goes up which gets you immediately to the point where its going to fly no matter what. So net effect is she gets in the air and starts climbing and keeps climbing.
So I've seen the youtube clips where it got in the air but wouldn't climb no matter what and I've seen where it gets in the air starts climbing no matter what you do. I guess in theory its possible you could find that one specific weight and altitude where it'll get off the ground but not climb untll you push it over and let it accelerate. Seems very reasonable actually. But if you're not at the critical weight and altitude, then how much of the performance you're getting from getting airborne and pushing the nose over is due to ground effect and how much is due to just the fact that throttle to the firewall plus hold the nose down equals speed and speed equals climb?
My answer is not much. I would love to be proved wrong. But until I'm proved wrong, I'm going to stick with not much.
It got this thing to fly. Proof enough it’s effective for me.I've seen the videos of planes that managed to get off the ground but not climb. No dispute there. What I haven't seen nor experienced is a situation where the plane got off the ground but would not climb unless kept in ground effect and allowed to accelerate in ground effect. If you've experienced that then I bow to your prowess but I've never been in a situation where that was the case. In my experience you can force it airborne before you have enough speed for it to really fly. But as soon as you get the wheels off the grass, airspeed goes up which gets you immediately to the point where its going to fly no matter what. So net effect is she gets in the air and starts climbing and keeps climbing.
So I've seen the youtube clips where it got in the air but wouldn't climb no matter what and I've seen where it gets in the air starts climbing no matter what you do. I guess in theory its possible you could find that one specific weight and altitude where it'll get off the ground but not climb untll you push it over and let it accelerate. Seems very reasonable actually. But if you're not at the critical weight and altitude, then how much of the performance you're getting from getting airborne and pushing the nose over is due to ground effect and how much is due to just the fact that throttle to the firewall plus hold the nose down equals speed and speed equals climb?
My answer is not much. I would love to be proved wrong. But until I'm proved wrong, I'm going to stick with not much.
2 billion Chinese and 3000 years of history are a pretty good study.
Warning: This post may contain blasphemy.
I always thought of ground effect sort of the same way I think about acupuncture. People use it and swear by it, but I've never personally seen it do anything and as far as I know, science is unable to prove that its use has any measurable effectiveness.
I'm not saying its not real, I'm saying its like acupuncture. Which is to say that it exists and you can do it, but it doesn't really do very much.
There’s more than couple NTSB accident reports, with fatalities, where ground effect was a killer.