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bhancock(at)worldwidewarb Guest
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Posted: Wed Apr 30, 2008 9:34 am Post subject: Glide speed and carrier approaches |
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Gang,
I like practical guides when it comes to things like this, others
like mechanics and numbers. I have found Pappy's rule of thumb to be
accurate. The inboard split of the aileron seems to work well with a
windmilling prop with the M14P....I've tried it from various
altitudes and a 170 km/h speed (90 knots). I seem to remember Brian
Lloyd doing an extensive test on this some time back and posting it.
Should be able to do an archive search....
As for carrier landings, I fly them almost exclusively....CJ, Yak,
L-39, Lancair...it's my comfort level and fun - and the payoff at the
end of a boring cross country flight. That being said it is much
more to manage in a shorter amount of time. We fly pretty forgiving
airplanes, but if your too tight to the runway that will require
getting closer to the stall (due to steeper bank angle) in the
constant turn to final. As mentioned, too far away has other
problems. The critical things are airspeed and bank angle. Just
remember your stall speed increases with your bank angle. If
you're new to the overhead approach, take it slow....start your
breaks (60 degrees of bank, 2 Gs) at the departure end of the runway
and then progressively move them towards the approach end as you get
more comfortable and habit patterns develop.
My two cents.
Oh, and start practicing now for the Carrier Landing competition at
ARS. It will be on Friday evening. All Red Star VII is May
14-18. If you have not yet registered, please visit flyredstar.org
to register now.
Cheers,
Barry
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kurt(at)scitechsys.com Guest
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Posted: Wed Apr 30, 2008 9:53 am Post subject: Glide speed and carrier approaches |
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Speaking of ARS - any news on Rental Cars and maybe a schedule of events?
--
Kurt Howerton
N923YK
http://cj6.scitechsys.com
Barry Hancock wrote:
Quote: |
<bhancock(at)worldwidewarbirds.com>
Gang,
I like practical guides when it comes to things like this, others like
mechanics and numbers. I have found Pappy's rule of thumb to be
accurate. The inboard split of the aileron seems to work well with a
windmilling prop with the M14P....I've tried it from various altitudes
and a 170 km/h speed (90 knots). I seem to remember Brian Lloyd doing
an extensive test on this some time back and posting it. Should be able
to do an archive search....
As for carrier landings, I fly them almost exclusively....CJ, Yak, L-39,
Lancair...it's my comfort level and fun - and the payoff at the end of a
boring cross country flight. That being said it is much more to manage
in a shorter amount of time. We fly pretty forgiving airplanes, but if
your too tight to the runway that will require getting closer to the
stall (due to steeper bank angle) in the constant turn to final. As
mentioned, too far away has other problems. The critical things are
airspeed and bank angle. Just remember your stall speed increases with
your bank angle. If you're new to the overhead approach, take it
slow....start your breaks (60 degrees of bank, 2 Gs) at the departure
end of the runway and then progressively move them towards the approach
end as you get more comfortable and habit patterns develop.
My two cents.
Oh, and start practicing now for the Carrier Landing competition at ARS.
It will be on Friday evening. All Red Star VII is May 14-18. If
you have not yet registered, please visit flyredstar.org to register now.
Cheers,
Barry
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skidmk
Joined: 19 Nov 2007 Posts: 171 Location: Ottawa, Ontario
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MarkWDavis
Joined: 03 Jan 2007 Posts: 104 Location: Syracuse, KS
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Posted: Wed Apr 30, 2008 10:24 am Post subject: Glide speed and carrier approaches |
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The purpose of the carrier landing pattern is to recover a group of
airplanes as quickly as possible while a carrier is turned into the wind
with a consistent minimum interval. Most airwings use a 45 second interval
during the daytime. It gives enough time to get an airplane out of the
wires and across the foul line in time for a clear deck for the following
aircraft. Night time only increases to 60 seconds. Too close of
intervals result in foul deck waveoffs. Too many foul deck waveoffs and the
Captain and Admiral get pissed. Our airwing logged the landing intervals on
every daytime recovery to identify those that couldn't stay within +/- 5
seconds of the 45 second target. All aircraft must maintain a uniform
pattern to maintain a constant interval. That's the part we need to work
on. Everyone in a formation flight needs to be flying a similar pattern to
avoid dangerously close intervals for successive landing airplanes. The
landing pattern needs to be briefed AND DEBRIEFED on every formation flight.
Tight or loose doesn't matter as much as uniformity and the wingmen should
be following the lead's distance abeam out of the break.
Mark Davis
N44YK
---
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buddairbum(at)cox.net Guest
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Posted: Wed Apr 30, 2008 1:29 pm Post subject: Glide speed and carrier approaches |
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A note on 180 degree "carrier type" approaches in a civilian context.
Although I'm flying neither a Yak nor a CJ, I make 15-25 approaches a day
instructing landings in my Pitts,in which many folks also fly 180 degree
approaches. I did too until I watched a friend, a former Scooter jockey
flying his Pitts, roll off the perch and miss seeing a C-150 on a long, low
straight in. He managed to time it so that he never saw the 150 through the
entire approach and actually touched down about 200 feet directly behind
him. He roared right up behind it until the wings popped into view around
the nose and he careened off the runway to avoid it.
The Navy can fly those kinds of approaches because everyone in their context
is flying the same kind of pattern in the same place. Plus, they are all
professionals. On a civilian field, where at least half the people in the
pattern are severely wanting in commonsense and flying ability, you never
know where they are going to be. And, once you're committed to the turn, you
don't have another chance to check final for traffic. Plus, your nose is
following traffic. I personally know two people who have landed on other
airplanes flying that approach (no physical injuries in either) and, if I
know two, there must be dozens of others.
I now put a short base leg in the approach (I call it a "belly check") to
give me one more peak. It also eliminates the problem of an over-shooting
cross wind pushing a pilot into centerline and having to tighten up the turn
at the bottom, right when you really don't want that much bank.
No one asked, but that's my two cents and it's worth what you paid.
Budd Davisson
On 4/30/08 11:21 AM, "Mark Davis" <mark(at)pld.com> wrote:
[quote]
The purpose of the carrier landing pattern is to recover a group of
airplanes as quickly as possible while a carrier is turned into the wind
with a consistent minimum interval. Most airwings use a 45 second interval
during the daytime. It gives enough time to get an airplane out of the
wires and across the foul line in time for a clear deck for the following
aircraft. Night time only increases to 60 seconds. Too close of
intervals result in foul deck waveoffs. Too many foul deck waveoffs and the
Captain and Admiral get pissed. Our airwing logged the landing intervals on
every daytime recovery to identify those that couldn't stay within +/- 5
seconds of the 45 second target. All aircraft must maintain a uniform
pattern to maintain a constant interval. That's the part we need to work
on. Everyone in a formation flight needs to be flying a similar pattern to
avoid dangerously close intervals for successive landing airplanes. The
landing pattern needs to be briefed AND DEBRIEFED on every formation flight.
Tight or loose doesn't matter as much as uniformity and the wingmen should
be following the lead's distance abeam out of the break.
Mark Davis
N44YK
---
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MarkWDavis
Joined: 03 Jan 2007 Posts: 104 Location: Syracuse, KS
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Posted: Wed Apr 30, 2008 3:17 pm Post subject: Glide speed and carrier approaches |
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Budd,
I agree. I usually do a quick belly check at the 90 for one last
glimpse for anyone on short final. A short puff of smoke can be helpful if
there's any question of any other traffic around. But, as your point
illustrates, the long low straight-in is maybe a more dangerous approach
than a tight turning carrier type approach. Never the less, fault is
immaterial to the victim when someone is killed.
Mark Davis
N44YK
---
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brian-1927(at)lloyd.com Guest
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Posted: Thu May 01, 2008 9:51 am Post subject: Glide speed and carrier approaches |
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Quote: | Although I'm flying neither a Yak nor a CJ, I make 15-25 approaches
a day
instructing landings in my Pitts,in which many folks also fly 180
degree
approaches. I did too until I watched a friend, a former Scooter
jockey
flying his Pitts, roll off the perch and miss seeing a C-150 on a
long, low
straight in. He managed to time it so that he never saw the 150
through the
entire approach and actually touched down about 200 feet directly
behind
him. He roared right up behind it until the wings popped into view
around
the nose and he careened off the runway to avoid it.
|
The pattern is a dangerous place. You have to be aware no matter where
or how you fly the pattern. You can fly a normal 'civilian' approach
and find other aircraft where you don't expect them to be.
One thing I can say about the continuous turn to final, you are
exposed to so much less of the pattern so you have a smaller region to
inspect for other traffic just before you start your turn from
downwind. Bozo on a cross-country pattern is not a threat as he is not
going to impinge on your airspace until well after you are no longer
there.
And I am sure plenty of people can argue. To that I reiterate that the
pattern is a dangerous place and one must be vigilant regardless of
how one flies the pattern.
Hmm, one thing to consider: which is more likely to occur -- some bozo
flying a bogus pattern or an engine failure? If Bozo is more likely
then focusing on avoiding that scenario is likely to produce fewer
accidents than focusing on preparing for an engine-out event. That
might be a useful datum when trying to decide how to operate a Yak or
CJ in the traffic pattern (circuit).
Personally, after thinking about all this and accounting for traffic,
aircraft complexity, time needed to execute the pre-landing
checklists, etc., I have adopted the continuous turn to final as what
I believe to be the safest approach, even when flying spam cans. I am
open to reasoned discussion as to why this may or may not be the
correct answer. And, no, "well, the way I was taught in the ...," is
not reasoned discussion unless you have a clear explanation of why you
were taught that way.
YMMV.
Brian Lloyd 3191 Western Drive
brianl AT lloyd DOT com Cameron Park, CA 95682
+1.916.367.2131 (voice) +1.270.912.0788 (fax)
PGP key ID: 12095C52A32A1B6C
PGP key fingerprint: 3B1D BA11 4913 3254 B6E0 CC09 1209 5C52 A32A 1B6C
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ChangDriver
Joined: 15 Sep 2007 Posts: 266
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Posted: Thu May 01, 2008 6:30 pm Post subject: Re: Glide speed and carrier approaches |
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OK, ponder these items:
1) In a prior post, it was stated "stall speed increases with angle of bank." Well, not really. We should all become students of the V-G diagram. Stall speed increases with increased load factor. It happens that load factor increases with angle of bank. However, in some banked flight regimes, such as banked descending flight, the load factor may not increase.
2) At a controlled field, controllers will typically put an overhead break approach 500 feet above the normal pattern altitude for single engine piston aircraft. This is in the operations manual for air traffic control.
3) The AIM provides info on the traffic pattern. The "recommended" pattern is rectangular with left turns. This pattern is mostly a safety of flight pattern. It allows a pilot to get wings level before reconfiguring the aircraft (flaps, gear, change power, etc). It also allows for a visual check of where the runway is (high wing planes) and allows a look at the final approach corridor (remember, if there is an instrument approach for the runway you are landing on, there may be instrument traffic flying an approach and not talking on your frequency yet). Also, you will note the names of the legs are designed for position reporting. The only items in "key traffic pattern operations" is to fly downwind at pattern altitude (unless otherwise instructed by a controller) and to complete the turn to final at least 1/4 mile before the runway. Given this, the continuous turn to final does not conflict with the AIM.
Craig
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scott.glaser(at)thedefian Guest
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Posted: Fri May 02, 2008 10:25 am Post subject: Glide speed and carrier approaches |
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I recently had some friends going for their PPL and we had a similar
discussion regarding traffic patterns. When I was learning my instructor
bordered on being physically abusive if I was not within gliding distance of
the runway anytime after being established on downwind. Several of my
friends who are currently working on or have recently received their PPL
looked at me with a blank stare when I asked about this technique.
Awareness of engine out gliding distance in the pattern wasn't even taught.
They did of course practice engine outs but that was merely practice for off
field situation. They said their instruction was focused on quality of
their pattern and setting up their approach. It was taught very much from
the airline pilot perspective. It was kind of disturbing if you ask me, but
then again it's not how I was raised.
S
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brian-1927(at)lloyd.com Guest
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Posted: Fri May 02, 2008 3:23 pm Post subject: Glide speed and carrier approaches |
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On May 2, 2008, at 11:23 AM, <scott.glaser(at)thedefiantcompany.com> wrote:
Quote: |
I recently had some friends going for their PPL and we had a similar
discussion regarding traffic patterns. When I was learning my
instructor
bordered on being physically abusive if I was not within gliding
distance of
the runway anytime after being established on downwind. Several of my
friends who are currently working on or have recently received their
PPL
looked at me with a blank stare when I asked about this technique.
Awareness of engine out gliding distance in the pattern wasn't even
taught.
|
That is *REALLY* odd because a power-off spot landing from downwind is
a REQUIRED maneuver for PPL. (+200'/-0' from designated touch-down
point.)
Quote: | They did of course practice engine outs but that was merely practice
for off
field situation. They said their instruction was focused on quality
of
their pattern and setting up their approach. It was taught very
much from
the airline pilot perspective. It was kind of disturbing if you ask
me, but
then again it's not how I was raised.
|
That was true for a long time but the FAA has brought this home with
the required demonstration of the power-off spot landing. I let my CFI
lapse two years ago and had to take a check-ride again. The DE was a
stickler on this as it had just recently been added to the list of
required maneuvers. As a CFI one must demonstrate this to CL
proficiency, i.e. +100'/-0' from the designated touchdown point.
Brian Lloyd 3191 Western Drive
brianl AT lloyd DOT com Cameron Park, CA 95682
+1.916.367.2131 (voice) +1.270.912.0788 (fax)
PGP key ID: 12095C52A32A1B6C
PGP key fingerprint: 3B1D BA11 4913 3254 B6E0 CC09 1209 5C52 A32A 1B6C
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scott.glaser(at)thedefian Guest
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Posted: Sat May 03, 2008 3:15 am Post subject: Glide speed and carrier approaches |
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No, no. Sorry if I was confusing. They did perform the power off landings
but they were never taught to keep the airplane close enough to glide to the
runway power off at all times. Wasn't even mentioned in their training.
S
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brian-1927(at)lloyd.com Guest
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Posted: Sat May 03, 2008 8:20 am Post subject: Glide speed and carrier approaches |
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On May 3, 2008, at 4:12 AM, <scott.glaser(at)thedefiantcompany.com> <scott.glaser(at)thedefiantcompany.com
> wrote:
Quote: |
No, no. Sorry if I was confusing. They did perform the power off
landings
but they were never taught to keep the airplane close enough to
glide to the
runway power off at all times. Wasn't even mentioned in their
training.
|
Well, I think Jerry had it right. In the course of a flight you are
rarely within gliding distance of a runway. And I did make the point
about the likelihood of engine failure vs. dealing with bozos in the
pattern. The incidence of bozos is much greater than the incidence of
engine failure so if you have an either/or situation you need to
accommodate the more likely scenario.
So maybe the right answer IS "fly the published pattern."
But I still prefer a continuous turn to final.
<sigh>
--
Brian Lloyd 3191 Western Drive
brian HYPHEN 1927 AT lloyd DOT com Cameron Park, CA 95682
+1.916.367.2131 (voice) +1.270.912.0788 (fax)
I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things . . .
— Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
PGP key ID: 12095C52A32A1B6C
PGP key fingerprint: 3B1D BA11 4913 3254 B6E0 CC09 1209 5C52 A32A 1B6C
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buddairbum(at)cox.net Guest
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Posted: Sat May 03, 2008 12:46 pm Post subject: Glide speed and carrier approaches |
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Somewhere where between 2002 and 2005, the feds removed a paragraph from the
PPL PTS that said they had to set up the aircraft in such a way on approach
so as to always be within power-off gliding distance. I suspect they removed
it because it was in direct contradiction to their statements about
stabilized, power-on approaches in a later section.
On 5/3/08 9:18 AM, "Brian Lloyd" <brian-1927(at)lloyd.com> wrote:
Quote: |
On May 3, 2008, at 4:12 AM, <scott.glaser(at)thedefiantcompany.com>
<scott.glaser(at)thedefiantcompany.com
> wrote:
>
>
> No, no. Sorry if I was confusing. They did perform the power off
> landings
> but they were never taught to keep the airplane close enough to
> glide to the
> runway power off at all times. Wasn't even mentioned in their
> training.
Well, I think Jerry had it right. In the course of a flight you are
rarely within gliding distance of a runway. And I did make the point
about the likelihood of engine failure vs. dealing with bozos in the
pattern. The incidence of bozos is much greater than the incidence of
engine failure so if you have an either/or situation you need to
accommodate the more likely scenario.
So maybe the right answer IS "fly the published pattern."
But I still prefer a continuous turn to final.
<sigh>
--
Brian Lloyd 3191 Western Drive
brian HYPHEN 1927 AT lloyd DOT com Cameron Park, CA 95682
+1.916.367.2131 (voice) +1.270.912.0788 (fax)
I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things . . .
‹ Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
PGP key ID: 12095C52A32A1B6C
PGP key fingerprint: 3B1D BA11 4913 3254 B6E0 CC09 1209 5C52 A32A 1B6C
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scott.glaser(at)thedefian Guest
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Posted: Sat May 03, 2008 1:37 pm Post subject: Glide speed and carrier approaches |
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Box pattern or continuous turn question aside, back in the day they trained
you to fly a stabilized approach and still be able to make the runway. A
homebuilt pilot found out the ramifications of being too far out at
Rosamond, CA last year. First flight of his homebuilt Zenith. He went for
a handful of power on base and didn't get it. He was too far out and hence
wound up on house roof .25 mile short of the runway (across the street from
my house). Granted this a bit of unusual situation in that it was
homebuilt's first flight but still, staying within gliding distance and
maintaining the pattern seem like a doable things considering the
consequences.
--
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petervs(at)knology.net Guest
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Posted: Sun May 04, 2008 6:59 am Post subject: Glide speed and carrier approaches |
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Why does everyone assume that a stabilized approach can only be made in a
straight line? You can fly downwind, use aimpoint out the side of the
canopy, roll off the perch and make a 180 degree turn following a constant
descent path with a constant bank angle flying your aimpoint all the way to
touchdown. That is precisely a stabilized approach.
Squatch
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