Jeanie
Pattern Altitude
I've heard of cows eating fabric off a plane.... Duct tape is your friend
I've heard of cows eating fabric off a plane.... Duct tape is your friend
Supposed to go up this afternoon for a checkout in the Archer, with winds 14g22, 80 degrees off the runway. Now, that's above my personal limitations, but I really need to get some more experience with crosswinds. Is this something most instructors would/should fly in? Keep in mind the Archer has a 17kt demonstrated xwind capability.
I'd bet youd be right. I wouldn't trust them either. Have you checked with the ranches nearby if they've lost some.. Or maybe the sheriff knows where they might be from.
Did you used to fly here in alpine? I knew a guy whose family was from Hereford.
...I once had a night landing that ASOS reported 20G29 on short final and I hit a HUGE shear ... immediate go-around, and then heard "Updated weather, winds now 38G45" ... I landed Las Cruces and waited it out.
The trippy part is when the tail starts to lose lift and wants to come down.
I've run out of rudder on short final in my Maule more than once but found that wind gradient can be your friend as you go into the flare. I learned not to give up until in the flare. Gusts work that way too.If you run out of rudder then fly along the rwy till it straightens out when the gust lulls then land. If it doesn't straighten out go around!
That would be too much for me in a tailwheel. I'm much more squeamish about wind in my decathlon.
I've never flown a Citabria/Decathalon but I'm thinking the same thing. In the Maule, they recommend zero or reflex flaps in strong xwinds. What they don't say in the manual but what experience Maule folks know, you land it 3 point no matter what the wind. With zero flaps, it's still flying in the 3 point stance. I'm thinking there's some optimal techniques in the C/D planes.Jeanie, your Decathlon is one of the most capable wind airplanes ever constructed...if the crosswind is so strong you can't land on the centerline, heck, a good pilot can probably land in the width of any 150ft wide runway. Only problem is, one can land it in wind that it can't be taxied. Most of the aerobatic airplanes have such authoritative flight controls. If the wind is blowing dogs off chains, I'll take a Citabria/Decathlon over any Cessna/Piper. Practice, practice...you'll see.
I don't either but know it's not the fabric. They lick composite sailplanes the same way. I just worry about the inadvertant head raise under the T-tail.You just have to keep the steers away from the plane. They'll lick the **** out of it all over. I don't know why they do that...
wow i dont go out when its like 11-15 u guys talking big numbers. Im sure once i practice more cross wind i will like it and want to do it more. But no time and not much experience. But I though its a big no no no if its passed the planes demonstrated cross wind .
Please, don't leave us hanging -- what do you do then? Add power (for rudder authority) and apply brakes simultaneously?
Amen!I'm a drop wing / hold centerline guy. Not a crab and kick **** kicker nose dragger .. :
wow i dont go out when its like 11-15 u guys talking big numbers. Im sure once i practice more cross wind i will like it and want to do it more. But no time and not much experience. But I though its a big no no no if its passed the planes demonstrated cross wind .
Weenie!!
Seriously, Dan...I think we need to get that AWOS fixed so it'll say "Updated advisory...winds now 180 at 38 gust 45 h0ly $h!t, you're screwed!!!" Mike