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n282rs(at)earthlink.net Guest
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Posted: Sat May 27, 2006 5:20 pm Post subject: Flaps |
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In normal, every day flying, I would agree with you. But, the other day
when I made my emergency landing in an oat field, I would have used them.
The HD has a lot of drag, but when the prop stops, much of that drag
disappears. The approach angle you are normally used to with the engine at
idle changes drastically with the engine off. It becomes flatter instead of
steeper. I was doing S turns and flying sideways to try to bleed off the
remaining altitude. The HD floated over the ground for awhile before it
would touchdown. My plane don't normally float. Usually you have to give it
a little throttle to get it to slow it's decent or else the wheels will
slam into the runway..
Randy Stout
n282rs"at"earthlink.net
www.geocities.com/r5t0ut21
Quote: | [Original Message]
From: Bill Naumuk <naumuk(at)alltel.net>
To: <zenith-list(at)matronics.com>
Date: 5/27/2006 7:24:09 PM
Subject: Re: Welcome to the neighborhood!/HF Welders
Ed-
List contributors have reported no benefit from XL flaps. I'm not
being
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Quote: | negative, I'm simply repeating what listers other than you have posted.
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p.mulwitz(at)worldnet.att Guest
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Posted: Sat May 27, 2006 6:52 pm Post subject: Flaps |
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Quote: | I was planning on avoiding comment on the flaps issue, but I guess I
finally got sucked in.
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For me, flaps serve three purposes:
1. Soft field take-off. A little flaps goes a long way to get the
weight off the wheels and the plane airborne. About 10 degrees is
perfect in a Cessna and probably would work nicely in a Zodiac too.
2. Increase landing descent angle. This is a way to adjust for a
high approach. After on final and with power off, if the plane is
still headed for the wrong end of the runway flaps will bring it down
faster. This can also be accomplished quite nicely with a forward
slip and no flaps.
3. As a normal landing procedure, I sometimes add flaps while in
ground effect on the landing approach. I have normally done this
when at high traffic density airports (i.e. where I am trying to stay
ahead of jets on final so I am approaching at a high
airspeed). Adding full flaps at the last moment reduces the landing
speed and the resulting damage to both tires and brakes.
I certainly wouldn't consider building or buying a plane without flaps.
Paul
XL wings
do not archive
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larry(at)macsmachine.com Guest
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Posted: Sun May 28, 2006 6:00 am Post subject: Flaps |
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Paul,
I would agree with you but for the HDS and the HD. They have such a
thick wing profile that
they generate huge lift and its like flying with the flaps on all the
time. Don't need them on these
models, but it is classic to be accustomed to what you've used previously.
Larry McFarland - 601HDS
do not archive
Paul Mulwitz wrote:
Quote: |
>I was planning on avoiding comment on the flaps issue, but I guess I
>finally got sucked in.
>
>
For me, flaps serve three purposes:
1. Soft field take-off. A little flaps goes a long way to get the
weight off the wheels and the plane airborne. About 10 degrees is
perfect in a Cessna and probably would work nicely in a Zodiac too.
2. Increase landing descent angle. This is a way to adjust for a
high approach. After on final and with power off, if the plane is
still headed for the wrong end of the runway flaps will bring it down
faster. This can also be accomplished quite nicely with a forward
slip and no flaps.
3. As a normal landing procedure, I sometimes add flaps while in
ground effect on the landing approach. I have normally done this
when at high traffic density airports (i.e. where I am trying to stay
ahead of jets on final so I am approaching at a high
airspeed). Adding full flaps at the last moment reduces the landing
speed and the resulting damage to both tires and brakes.
I certainly wouldn't consider building or buying a plane without flaps.
Paul
XL wings
do not archive
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dclaytx2(at)hotmail.com Guest
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Posted: Sun May 28, 2006 8:15 am Post subject: Flaps |
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Speaking from a scratch builder's point of view I can say the flaps were
extremely easy to fabricate and assemble. Just finished mine last week.
Dave
601XL Plans builder
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