FlySince9
En-Route
You slay me!only if you're in the northern hemisphere. if you're in the southern hemisphere it's right pattern. just like flushing a toilet. and that's a fact.
You slay me!only if you're in the northern hemisphere. if you're in the southern hemisphere it's right pattern. just like flushing a toilet. and that's a fact.
What right turning tendencies?the answer sought was that a left hand turn counteracts the right turning tendencies
Sometimes in a turn, sometimes after, sometimes before. The transmission in my car is very close ratiod so downshifting before a turn appropriately might require significant RPM and that's not pleasent for passengers who aren't used to it, so I'll shift after. During a turn if speed is variable and it's a gentle turn where two hands aren't required.
What right turning tendencies?
I figured the answer would be controversial as most pilots are not good enough to recognize what happens to their aircraft when they push forward on the elevator, though it is significantly more noticeable on something swinging a heavy prop and/or having poor directional stability. I was going to be all smart ass and say "better to remain silent and thought..." but I'll give you the benefit that you may have not ever flew something with a heavy prop and/or poor directional stability though that doesn't change the fact that even a docile Cessna will do it if you are paying close enough attention
Wouldn't a close-ratio imply that the RPMs wouldn't be drastically different between gears? So the impact would be lower on the passenger than a standard transmission with more widely-spaced gearing. Rev-matching makes it a non-issue either way, unless the sound of the engine is what discomforts your passengers.
Never said they weren't.Even on something with a "heavy prop," the gyroscopic effects are proportional to RPM.
Who said idle power, though its still true.At idle power, the effects are substantially less pronounced than at full power.
It is. Saw it with these two eyes right here - had it proven to me as part of an aerobatic course I took. As I said if you've never noticed, you weren't paying close enough attention. Until the course, I wasn't paying enough attention myself.It is not the opposite of the left turning tendency on takeoff.
Might want check the flushing OWT. Coriolis force isn't a fact in that small a volume.only if you're in the northern hemisphere. if you're in the southern hemisphere it's right pattern. just like flushing a toilet. and that's a fact.