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rp3420(at)freescale.com Guest
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Posted: Wed Sep 06, 2006 6:00 am Post subject: Kolb-List:180 degree turn |
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Vic,
I'm interested in the 180 degree turn, how do you do it properly? Just
looking to see what tips were taught. Appreciate you sharing them.
Tim
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Thom Riddle
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 1597 Location: Buffalo, NY, USA (9G0)
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Posted: Wed Sep 06, 2006 9:38 am Post subject: Kolb-List:180 degree turn |
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Tim,
You addressed your question to Vic about how to do a 180 degree turn,
but I'm going to take the liberty of adding my $2 worth (inflation .
1) AT ALTITUDE get into take-off configuration with full power and hold
Vy (best ROC speed). SUDDENLY close the throttle. Be prepared for a BIG
nose up pitch change and very rapid loss of airspeed because the sudden
loss of power in a high thrust line pusher at full power will surprise
you if you have never done this before. You will likely have no more
than a very few seconds to get the nose down with aggressive nose down
elevator to keep from stalling. This simulating sudden power failure
during take-off configuration is essential to learning to do this well.
2) Get the speed up (throttle closed or dead engine when it is the real
thing) to at least 1.5 x power off 1 G stall speed and do a 45 degree
banked turn of 180 degrees. You will be surprised at how quickly you
can make the turn this way, but make sure you keep the nose way down
and speed up. A leisurely turn per the "authorities" will put you in
the trees way before you get around. Their concern is that you will
make a steep bank turn at near 1G stall speed. This of course will kill
you, so they say don't do steep turns. The solution is to keep the
speed up while in the steep turn. If you don't keep the speed up, you
risk sudden death. It is that simple.
3) Repeat this several times and note the amount of altitude lost
during this maneuver. Practice improves your performance up to a point.
You must get accustomed to the sudden change in pitch and airspeed and
know by sight and feel the limit of your bank, and required airspeed so
you gain a muscle memory for automatically doing the right thing at the
right time. With high thrust line pushers this is a critical skill that
must acquired with practice if you hope to successfully make a turn
back to the runway. If you don't acquire this skill and muscle memory
do not try a turn back to runway. As the FAA says, it is a recipe for
death.
4) Once you are comfortable doing this and have a conservative altitude
loss number, double that number to allow for the reaction time delay
due to shock when the engine really quits during take-off and to allow
for imprecision and imperfection in executing the turn. I double it
also because if you maintain the runway centerline during climb out,
the turn back is actually more than 180 degrees. That is why I also let
the airplane drift downwind (during crosswind take-offs) so that the
turn back will not require much more than 180 degrees. The FARs say you
are supposed to maintain runway HEADING during climb out but it says
nothing about allowing down-wind drifting, so I let it if it is safe to
do so.
5) This doubled altitude loss number (make it part of your climb out
mental check list) should become your absolute minimum for doing a turn
back with a power failure during take-off.
I keep flaps extended (take-off and landing config) until I reach this
altitude then raise flaps and go to normal climb mode. Before take-off
at any airport I mentally add this number to ground elevation and look
for the Altimeter to cross that altitude. Until I am higher than that
altitude AGL my mind is prepared ONLY for a straight ahead emergency
landing, This decision height should be made based on your own numbers
in your aircraft. Each aircraft is different and one number does not
fit all airplanes.
I expect some will disagree with this but it is something I practice
with every new airplane I fly. You never know when you will need it. It
could be on your next take-off.
Thom in Buffalo
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_________________ Thom Riddle
Buffalo, NY (9G0)
Don't worry about old age... it doesn't last very long.
- Anonymous |
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APilot(at)webtv.net Guest
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Posted: Thu Sep 07, 2006 8:48 am Post subject: Kolb-List:180 degree turn |
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The 180 degree turn back to the runway is or should be a practiced
maneuver. An earlier post described the procedure very nicely. When the
engine first quits, it is important to keep your airspeed. I prefer the
best rate of climb speed, but best angle of climb speed will work, but
you will have less margin of safety. The previous post noted the
advantage to let the airplane drift down wind on takeoff to make any
necessary turn back to the runway less that 180 degrees, On an airplane
with a high thrust line such as my Kolb Mark III Classic, the loss of
power will cause a sudden nose up situation. That is a no no. Quicker
response is necessary to maintain your preferred airspeed. On a mid or
low thrust line, the adjustment is easier. What you do after that
important step is: (as an old WW II instructor showed me years ago)
Dive, bank and yank. That is kind of cute, but is not the whole answer.
This is where the practice comes in. As you bank severely, you take the
chance of stalling a wing tip. That is a no no. But, a good bank with
the nose down will get you around quickly. As you are pulling in the
steep turn, you will notice ( I should say: you will learn to notice)
that the plane is trying to stall. As it tries, you begin the roll out.
The roll out, in itself, will prevent the stall. Some refer to that as
rolling out the stall. You, most likely, will not do this maneuver
correctly the first time. But, after 20 or 30 tries, it will get less
intimidating and you will find that any airplane will do it, but the
numbers will be different. That is why you need to know your airplane
and your skill level. It is worth learning if not just for the peace of
mind of knowing that you can do it. Vic (Sacramento)
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jsflan(at)valornet.com Guest
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Posted: Thu Sep 07, 2006 10:26 am Post subject: Kolb-List:180 degree turn |
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After I encountered wake turbulence at Stovepipe Wells in Death Valley and
dumped a perfectly good C-180, I went back to Boulder City, Nevada where I
talked it out with the late Earl Leasburg who reportedly taught God to fly.
Earl had me roll out Lake Meade Air's Super Cub next morning which I had
never flown, and for a half hour with him in back seat and both hands
touching my shoulders (an amazing confidence-builder) had me do takeoffs ,
then immediate fairly low-level 180 turns and landings on one of the dirt
less-used runways. Satisfied, he turned me loose with the admonition to
forget those "damned full flaps."
jsf
do not archive
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