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grantr
Joined: 12 Sep 2007 Posts: 217
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grantr
Joined: 12 Sep 2007 Posts: 217
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lucien
Joined: 03 Jun 2007 Posts: 721 Location: santa fe, NM
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Posted: Tue Mar 18, 2008 8:34 pm Post subject: Re: Takeoff & landing & stall help |
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grantr wrote: | I have had a few good comments and tips. Does anyone else want to chime in? Come on guys i know you all have some sort of technique. |
Well I can relate my FS II time, hopefully some of which will be pertinent to the mark III.
It definitely is a tailwheel airplane, tho it's quite docile, so it certainly can get wild on you if ithe tail goes ape in one direction or the other. I had one or two of the back/forth takeoffs in the FS II when I was very early on with it, tho fortunately didn't get off the runway or anything. Differential braking saved the bacon on one of the takeoffs. Slowly applying throttle helps a great deal and was the technique used since then.
As for the landing, the FS II in particular is a low-inertia design, so it lands a lot more like an ultralight than the big iron. You run out of energy pretty quick in the roundout and flare, but you don't necessarily have to drive it onto the runway either (unless you're wheel landing it in some wind).
I'd try a slower roundout to get a good idea of what things should look like at first. Assist that with a little bit of power to simulate a higher-inertia plane to slow the roundout down. Do this for a while to get used to it. Then start practicing without power for the real deal...
As for the stall, I don't recall there being anything strange about it, it's very conventional with no surprises. The FS II does give you all the warning signs, mushy controls, lightness in the butt, suddenly lots quieter, just like any other plane, but only for a very short time. Don't blink or you'll miss em! Again, typical of low-inertia planes.
LS
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_________________ LS
Titan II SS |
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grantr
Joined: 12 Sep 2007 Posts: 217
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Posted: Wed Mar 19, 2008 5:29 pm Post subject: Re: Takeoff & landing & stall help |
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Thanks a lot everyone for the helpful tips.
On the paved runway we have been forcing the tail off the ground around 40 to 45mph. It takes some forward pressure on the stick to unstick the tail. This is usually where it gets squirrelly as the plane wants to dart to the left from the engine torque and p factor.. We lift off at 55 as the tires begin to shake from being worn and out of balance.
From all of the post this is the wrong approach. We should be taking off with full back or neutral stick and let the tail lift on its own.
My plane does not have differential brakes on it either so its all rudder for the steering. The grass landings are easier to handle than the paved landings.
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