brien23
Cleared for Takeoff
Piper wheel pants and snow, does snow pack up inside the wheel pants and cause problems?
I don't ever put wheelpants on a taildragger. It's so critical that the wheels roll freely that I don't want anything that impedes my inspection of my wheels, or have anything where a situation could change and seize the wheel. I'll take the knot or two hit and keep my plane pantless. Well worth it for peace of mind, and worst case, airplane replacement.Yup anywhere where something could get packed in em they should go... muddy or wet grass areas is same as wet snow... watched a guy put his RV was on it’s nose during taxi... wheelpants were so packed with mud when folks went to help him out both mains were locked... it was just a wet grass strip too, wasn’t a dirt runway...
Since seeing that and being I fly a TW I don’t want the risk unless I was flying above freezing always on pavement...
...Since seeing that and being I fly a TW I don’t want the risk unless I was flying above freezing always on pavement...
Brian has a PA-28-180I don't ever put wheelpants on a taildragger. It's so critical that the wheels roll freely that I don't want anything that impedes my inspection of my wheels, or have anything where a situation could change and seize the wheel. I'll take the knot or two hit and keep my plane pantless. Well worth it for peace of mind, and worst case, airplane replacement.
I don't ever put wheelpants on a taildragger. It's so critical that the wheels roll freely that I don't want anything that impedes my inspection of my wheels, or have anything where a situation could change and seize the wheel. I'll take the knot or two hit and keep my plane pantless. Well worth it for peace of mind, and worst case, airplane replacement.
Makes sense, I will never fit the conditions I gave where I’d wear em, who wants a taildragger and always have land on pavement? . Oh yea and I like my 800s, so pants aren’t happening... I probably should sell the ones I have that came with her and invest the funds back into my bird...
Brian has a PA-28-180
This is the best advice.Take and off and don’t put them back on
In case your wondering, my plane goes 3 knots faster without wheel pants at full throttle than with pants.
If using that method to find TAS, it is inaccurate, and the 3 kts faster without might be erroneous.This is the best advice.
In fact, the next clear day, fly up to an altitude that you can run sustained level-flight full throttle (in my PA28-140 that’s 8000+). Fly for one minute N, then S, then E, then W, writing down your ground speed for each direction then average the 4. Land, remove the wheel pants, take off immediately and run the test again. I think you’ll be surprised at the results...I know I was!
In case your wondering, my plane goes 3 knots faster without wheel pants at full throttle than with pants.
I don’t remember the speed, but an aeronautical engineer once told me that under a certain speed that most fixed gear aircraft can’t reach (I think it was 140 knots) wheel pants are just dead weight.Exactly. For a lot of planes, they are merely decorative.
Not TAS...just getting a comparison speed....and if it is immediately back-to-back, it would be close enough.If using that method to find TAS, it is inaccurate, and the 3 kts faster without might be erroneous.
Did you refuel between test runs to start each run with the same load? If not you changed a variable.Not TAS...just getting a comparison speed....and if it is immediately back-to-back, it would be close enough.
That's silly. Aerodynamics are important even for bicycles. Our Skyhawk lost four knots without 'em. Not much, but consistently noticeable. Of course, having them on stuck me at an airport, after eight inches of slushy snow fell. The runway and taxiways were cleared, but not the ramp, and I didn't want to have three ice brakes when I landed.I don’t remember the speed, but an aeronautical engineer once told me that under a certain speed that most fixed gear aircraft can’t reach (I think it was 140 knots) wheel pants are just dead weight.
Depends.I don’t remember the speed, but an aeronautical engineer once told me that under a certain speed that most fixed gear aircraft can’t reach (I think it was 140 knots) wheel pants are just dead weight.
Piper wheel pants and snow, does snow pack up inside the wheel pants and cause problems?
Yes, and I tried to climb at the same rate as well. I’ve run the test twice (last spring and again this fall / putting them on in the spring and taking them off in the fall), and I got exactly the same result both times.Did you refuel between test runs to start each run with the same load? If not you changed a variable.