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wheel landings

 
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Fox5flyer
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PostPosted: Wed Oct 11, 2006 3:57 am    Post subject: wheel landings Reply with quote

Lynn, by all means learn to do wheel landings. They really aren't difficult
at all and it doesn't matter whether the Kitfox is short coupled, spring, or
bungie gear. They just take a certain technique that is best taught by
someone who is good at it. The person who teaches you doesn't really need
to be a CFI, just someone competent and who can stick with you until you get
the hang of it.
They're really useful in a lot of situations, especially when it's gusty
and/or with crosswinds. I have no idea why Ed Downs would say 3pt only.
Deke
S5 in NE Michigan

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Aerobatics(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Wed Oct 11, 2006 5:46 am    Post subject: wheel landings Reply with quote

In a message dated 10/11/2006 7:00:12 A.M. Central Daylight Time, fox5flyer(at)i-star.com writes:
Quote:

Lynn, by all means learn to do wheel landings. They really aren't difficult
at all and it doesn't matter whether the Kitfox is short coupled, spring, or
bungie gear. They just take a certain technique that is best taught by
someone who is good at it. The person who teaches you doesn't really need
to be a CFI, just someone competent and who can stick with you until you get
the hang of it.
They're really useful in a lot of situations, especially when it's gusty
and/or with crosswinds. I have no idea why Ed Downs would say 3pt only.
Deke
S5 in NE Michigan


I now have about 350 hours in my KF model 2, and since most flights are short, so I can only guess on how many landings.

I personally feel I can land in a stronger crosswind with a 3 pointer. Out here in the plains the wind can howl and we fly anyway.

I also happen to agree with Mr. Downs and frankly, didn't even know he said that. Having tried many different ways in different aircraft, at least on the KF 2, I quite strongly recommend only 3 pointers.

The problem is simple. During the transition of the tail coming down from a wheeler, the rudder effectiveness is greatly reduced. This is due to the fuse blanketing and low airspeed. In a crosswind, this become a huge concern, on pavement... well yikes. On a 3 pointer, you go from a plane to a car instantly with all 3 wheels contacting.

So on certain conditions and if you dont mind using more runway, try a wheeler. But not me.

Just another opinion....!

Dave


[quote][b]


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Bill Willyard



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 34
Location: Grandville, Michigan U.S.A.

PostPosted: Wed Oct 11, 2006 7:00 am    Post subject: wheel landings Reply with quote

Dave,
I am inclined to agree with you both from experience and through the flight instructor who gave my last biannual. He learned to fly tail draggers in South Dakota and is not much of an advocate for wheel landings in small aircraft as a solution for cross wind technique. I find that a touch of power will give me tail authority all the way to the three point touch down should I need it.

I must say that this was the best biannual I ever had. We were having so much fun taking turns flying that it lasted for over 3 hours. I learned more about tail wheel flying and my Kitfox during this time than I have since I received my tail wheel endorsement.

Bill W.
Yet another opinion....!




I personally feel I can land in a stronger crosswind with a 3 pointer. Out here in the plains the wind can howl and we fly anyway.

I also happen to agree with Mr. Downs and frankly, didn't even know he said that. Having tried many different ways in different aircraft, at least on the KF 2, I quite strongly recommend only 3 pointers.

The problem is simple. During the transition of the tail coming down from a wheeler, the rudder effectiveness is greatly reduced. This is due to the fuse blanketing and low airspeed. In a crosswind, this become a huge concern, on pavement... well yikes. On a 3 pointer, you go from a plane to a car instantly with all 3 wheels contacting.

So on certain conditions and if you dont mind using more runway, try a wheeler. But not me.

Just another opinion....!

Dave


Quote:


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PostPosted: Wed Oct 11, 2006 7:36 am    Post subject: wheel landings Reply with quote

I've had that unpleasant experience in "transition" during the high-speed taxi phase of flight testing. You can wind up pointed the other way very quickly. Since then, i've done wheel landings, some form of which aren't really unusual in my model 2 given its tendency to full-mush rather than full-stall on landing.

For me, the key in transition with a wheeler is to plant the tailwheel before the rudder loses authority and after the airplane quits wanting to fly. Oh . . .and make sure the nose is pointed straight down the runway at that exact instant! Wink
[quote] In a message dated 10/11/2006 7:00:12 A.M. Central Daylight Time, fox5flyer(at)i-star.com writes:
Quote:

Lynn, by all means learn to do wheel landings. They really aren't difficult
at all and it doesn't matter whether the Kitfox is short coupled, spring, or
bungie gear. They just take a certain technique that is best taught by
someone who is good at it. The person who teaches you doesn't really need
to be a CFI, just someone competent and who can stick with you until you get
the hang of it.
They're really useful in a lot of situations, especially when it's gusty
and/or with crosswinds. I have no idea why Ed Downs would say 3pt only.
Deke
S5 in NE Michigan


I now have about 350 hours in my KF model 2, and since most flights are short, so I can only guess on how many landings.

I personally feel I can land in a stronger crosswind with a 3 pointer. Out here in the plains the wind can howl and we fly anyway.

I also happen to agree with Mr. Downs and frankly, didn't even know he said that. Having tried many different ways in different aircraft, at least on the KF 2, I quite strongly recommend only 3 pointers.

The problem is simple. During the transition of the tail coming down from a wheeler, the rudder effectiveness is greatly reduced. This is due to the fuse blanketing and low airspeed. In a crosswind, this become a huge concern, on pavement... well yikes. On a 3 pointer, you go from a plane to a car instantly with all 3 wheels contacting.

So on certain conditions and if you dont mind using more runway, try a wheeler. But not me.

Just another opinion....!

Dave
Get your own [url= http://us.rd.yahoo.com/evt=43290/*http://smallbusiness.yahoo.com/domains]web address for just $1.99/1st yr[/url]. We'll help.


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Lynn Matteson



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 2778
Location: Grass Lake, Michigan

PostPosted: Wed Oct 11, 2006 7:49 am    Post subject: wheel landings Reply with quote

Thanks, Deke...yup, I'm gonna get to the 'wheelers', but it'll be when
my instructor says so.

Lynn
On Wednesday, October 11, 2006, at 07:56 AM, Fox5flyer wrote:

[quote]

Lynn, by all means learn to do wheel landings. They really aren't
difficult
at all and it doesn't matter whether the Kitfox is short coupled,
spring, or
bungie gear. They just take a certain technique that is best taught by
someone who is good at it. The person who teaches you doesn't really
need
to be a CFI, just someone competent and who can stick with you until
you get
the hang of it.
They're really useful in a lot of situations, especially when it's
gusty
and/or with crosswinds. I have no idea why Ed Downs would say 3pt
only.
Deke
S5 in NE Michigan

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Lynn
Kitfox IV-Jabiru 2200
N369LM
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Lynn Matteson



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 2778
Location: Grass Lake, Michigan

PostPosted: Wed Oct 11, 2006 7:55 am    Post subject: wheel landings Reply with quote

Thanks for your comments, Dave. Sounds like you and Ed Downs are on the
same wavelength.

Lynn
On Wednesday, October 11, 2006, at 09:45 AM, Aerobatics(at)aol.com wrote:

Quote:
In a message dated 10/11/2006 7:00:12 A.M. Central Daylight Time,
fox5flyer(at)i-star.com writes:
Lynn, by all means learn to do wheel landings.  They really aren't
difficult
at all and it doesn't matter whether the Kitfox is short coupled,
spring, or
bungie gear.  They just take a certain technique that is best taught by
someone who is good at it.  The person who teaches you doesn't really
need
to be a CFI, just someone competent and who can stick with you until
you get
the hang of it.
They're really useful in a lot of situations, especially when it's
gusty
and/or with crosswinds.  I have no idea why Ed Downs would say 3pt
only.
Deke
S5 in NE Michigan
I now have about 350 hours in my KF model 2, and since most flights
are short, so I can only guess on how many landings.
 
I personally feel I can land in a stronger crosswind with a 3
pointer.  Out here in the plains the wind can howl and we fly anyway.
 
I also happen to agree with Mr. Downs and frankly, didn't even know he
said that.  Having tried many different ways in different aircraft, at
least on the KF 2, I quite strongly recommend only 3 pointers.
 
The problem is simple.  During the transition of the tail coming down
from a wheeler, the rudder effectiveness is greatly reduced. This is
due to the fuse blanketing and low airspeed. In a crosswind, this
become a huge concern, on pavement... well yikes.  On a 3 pointer, you
go from a plane to a car instantly with all 3 wheels contacting.
 
So on certain conditions and if you dont mind using more runway, try a
wheeler.  But not me.
 
Just another opinion....!
 
Dave
 
 




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Kitfox IV-Jabiru 2200
N369LM
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Michel



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 966
Location: Norway

PostPosted: Wed Oct 11, 2006 9:57 am    Post subject: wheel landings Reply with quote

On Oct 11, 2006, at 3:45 PM, Aerobatics(at)aol.com wrote:
Quote:
During the transition of the tail coming down from a wheeler, the
rudder effectiveness is greatly reduced. This is due to the fuse
blanketing and low airspeed. In a crosswind, this become a huge
concern, on pavement... well yikes.  On a 3 pointer, you go from a
plane to a car instantly with all 3 wheels contacting.

Yes, I have also wondered why a wheel landing was better in crosswind.
I thought that a two wheels (the weather main one, and the tail, in a
sideslip configuration) would be best. Mind you, I haven't tried it yet
and I am still a novice; keen to learn from more experienced pilots.

Cheers,
Michel


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eskflyer(at)lvcisp.com
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PostPosted: Wed Oct 11, 2006 5:32 pm    Post subject: wheel landings Reply with quote

I also have a kitfox 2 and do both I would say more wheel landings now more than 3 point since i am flying off of pavement now its no different than taking off bring tail up and then fly off . to land set mains on and bring tail down now .

Fly safe fly low fly slow
John Peerry
Kitfox 2 718PD
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janderson412(at)hotmail.c
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PostPosted: Wed Oct 11, 2006 6:28 pm    Post subject: wheel landings Reply with quote

No one has mentioned brakes to keep the a/c straight. Doesn't matter if it's
a wheeler or stalled ldg, when the a/c slows it'll try to turn into wind.
The beauty of the wheeler when correctly done is to make good wheel contact
hence good braking control.


From: Marco Menezes <msm_9949(at)yahoo.com>
Reply-To: kitfox-list(at)matronics.com
To: kitfox-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Re: wheel landings
Date: Wed, 11 Oct 2006 08:36:14 -0700 (PDT)

I've had that unpleasant experience in "transition" during the high-speed
taxi phase of flight testing. You can wind up pointed the other way very
quickly. Since then, i've done wheel landings, some form of which aren't
really unusual in my model 2 given its tendency to full-mush rather than
full-stall on landing.

For me, the key in transition with a wheeler is to plant the tailwheel
before the rudder loses authority and after the airplane quits wanting to
fly. Oh . . .and make sure the nose is pointed straight down the runway at
that exact instant! Wink

In a message dated 10/11/2006 7:00:12 A.M. Central Daylight Time,
fox5flyer(at)i-star.com writes:
Lynn, by all means learn to do wheel landings. They really aren't difficult
at all and it doesn't matter whether the Kitfox is short coupled, spring, or
bungie gear. They just take a certain technique that is best taught by
someone who is good at it. The person who teaches you doesn't really need
to be a CFI, just someone competent and who can stick with you until you get
the hang of it.
They're really useful in a lot of situations, especially when it's gusty
and/or with crosswinds. I have no idea why Ed Downs would say 3pt only.
Deke
S5 in NE Michigan
I now have about 350 hours in my KF model 2, and since most flights are
short, so I can only guess on how many landings.

I personally feel I can
land in a stronger crosswind with a 3 pointer. Out here in the plains the
wind can howl and we fly anyway.

I also happen to agree with Mr. Downs and frankly, didn't even know he said
that. Having tried many different ways in different aircraft, at least on
the KF 2, I quite strongly recommend only 3 pointers.

The problem is simple. During the transition of the tail coming down from a
wheeler, the rudder effectiveness is greatly reduced. This is due to the
fuse blanketing and low airspeed. In a crosswind, this become a huge
concern, on pavement... well yikes. On a 3 pointer, you go from a plane to
a car instantly with all 3 wheels contacting.

So on certain conditions and if you dont mind using more runway, try a
wheeler. But not me.

Just another opinion....!

Dave
Get your own web address for just $1.99/1st yr. We'll help.

_________________________________________________________________
Find the coolest online games (at) http://xtramsn.co.nz/gaming


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ThomasTomlin(at)comcast.n
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PostPosted: Wed Oct 11, 2006 8:47 pm    Post subject: wheel landings Reply with quote

Excellent discussion from all sorts of angles.
My instructer stressed wheelies especially when gusts are down the runway.
His point was that in a three point stall attitude into a gusty wind and right before touchdown, you could balloon up too high over the runway, at a high angle of attack and then if the gust stops there you are without enough time to add power to arrest the sink rate. Pushing forward on the stick would be a poor gamble also.
If the wind is that strong, your landing roll shouldn't be that long either. Just what I was taught.
Good input, all

Tom


ps
I landed in Salina Kansas this past summer in 28 gusting to 32 right down the runway.
Did a wheel landing and it just kinda stopped and I lowered the tail. The the short crosswind taxi to the ramp was done as much into the wind as possible. I didn't follow the painted taxi centerlines but angled across the short taxiway onto a huge apron where I immediately pointed her back into the wind.. The linemen had to come out to grab the struts so I could let go of the brakes to get out. Funny how I didn't havta p no mo when I finally got tied down.


[quote] ---


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dave



Joined: 22 Sep 2006
Posts: 1382

PostPosted: Thu Oct 12, 2006 3:12 am    Post subject: wheel landings Reply with quote

A valid topic here on Wheel landing opinions.

I will hold firm in that everyone should be able to land in 2 point wheel or 3 point landings.

I would like to challenge everyone to make some vidoes on how to land a Kitfox each way and them for all to see. I can host a video if that is necessary or put it on Goggle video Like Gary Walsh did (And a very good job at that Gary !! THANKS)

It is quite clear that we have mixed opinions on this topic as there are on grove gear versus the tube gear on which one is easier to fly. Alot of this stems back to the pilot experience and abilities it seems. So I find every time I fly that I like to be able to hone my piloting skills. learn and improve my skills. And certainly we all have a wealth of knowledge that can be shared and each one of us can learn from each other.

Does every one find that they can take off like this video showed ? http://cfisher.com/kitfox/coffeebreak.wmv It has been downloaded about 400 times now and cetainly a few have been shown that Kitfoxes can actually leave the ground in a few hundred feet but yet not much discusion really. And the reason I did that was for Guy as he was using up 700 to 1000 feet of runway to take off in a 582 powered Kitfox which I thought was was out of line and now you can see that 200 to 300 foot take offs are the norm for a Kitfox.

I will try to do some more videos of wheel landings if you guys think it would be an attribute.


Dave

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dave



Joined: 22 Sep 2006
Posts: 1382

PostPosted: Thu Oct 12, 2006 3:33 am    Post subject: wheel landings Reply with quote

I only have a right brake for last month or so. I have a kit from Matco for
my left master but have not put it in yet.
I find brakes more helpful with amphibs on to turn sharper but on wheels
rarely use them.
It fun now landing and trying to use brakes ( right only ) almost full
left rudder and right brake as it the only one that works < ggg>
On skis I never use them < chuckle >

The rudder is what controls my steering at a faster speed than taxing. But
I will say that on Amphibs with a strong X wind that differential braking is
required while taxing to keep it straight at times with strong winds. I
would not want to have to depend on brakes for steering though.
Dave

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Don Cravener



Joined: 11 Jan 2006
Posts: 10

PostPosted: Thu Oct 12, 2006 4:42 am    Post subject: wheel landings Reply with quote

Dave:
Not meaning to change the subject , but what kind of amphibs are you flying?
Thanks
Don C.
KF IV
3300 Jab
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dave



Joined: 22 Sep 2006
Posts: 1382

PostPosted: Thu Oct 12, 2006 5:30 am    Post subject: wheel landings Reply with quote

Aerocets 1100s
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