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pj.ladd(at)btinternet.com Guest
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Posted: Sat Aug 08, 2009 1:44 am Post subject: W & B, cruising, stalling and landing |
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I still think it's magic, or wires.>>
Hi Robert,
its magic all right. With most magic knowing how it works makes it less
magical. I think flying is one of those things which is still magical even
when you know (ot think you know) the mechanics.
At least for me, when the wheels leave the ground it doesn`t matter if you
know how or why....its away with the other broomsticks.
Pat
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pj.ladd(at)btinternet.com Guest
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Posted: Sat Aug 08, 2009 1:55 am Post subject: W & B, cruising, stalling and landing |
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/or in the _direction_ of the relative wind will affect this.
Hi Lucien,
that is what I said., or thought I did.
Pat
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pj.ladd(at)btinternet.com Guest
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Posted: Sat Aug 08, 2009 4:17 am Post subject: W & B, cruising, stalling and landing |
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Nah, it's not lift or anything like that at all. It's gobs and gobs of
cash...>>
You crazy mixed kid! You have gone all twisted and bitter. Go fly
Cheers
Pat
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russ(at)rkiphoto.com Guest
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Posted: Sat Aug 08, 2009 5:34 am Post subject: W & B, cruising, stalling and landing |
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Pat, Ladd
Got to take issue with you in re sailboats going to windward.
You say when the apparent (relative) wind moves forward, as when
boat speed increases, this enables the boat to point higher. It most
certainly does NOT -- Just the opposite! You must bear off, point
lower, point further from the direction the wind comes from, to keep
sailing, keep the sails full -- or to keep lift, if in an aircraft.
Just substitute angle of relative wind on the boat for AOA on the
aircraft. You can delay the luff by trimming in the sails, but
relative wind moving forward does not allow you to point up further.
As you say, think about it. The sails will luff if you keep your
course or bear up, you must bear off.
Sorry to disagree but I've been there too often to count.
BTW earlier you mentioned a "Boot Sale in an adjacent field"? -- is
this really a sale of footwear or am I missing some English -
American translation issue? If so, please pardon my Colonial ignorance!
All best, fair winds,
Russ
On Aug 7, 2009, at 6:06 AM, pj.ladd wrote:
Quote: |
but in actual flight they reach those angles at certain
corresponding airspeeds.>>
Hi Rick,
Not true. Your wing in level flight supports a certain weight .
Increase that weight and the wing will NOT support it. In other
words it stalls. How can you do this? Easy! Alter your flight path
markedly, this will increase the `g` force and the plane will in
effect weigh more.
Its all about what a sailor would call `apparent wind` As a yacht
increases its speed the direction the wind is coming from moves
towards the bow. This enables a boat to `point higher`,i.e to
decrease the angle of attack. It is the same with a planes wing .
Go fast and the AOA moves forward, go slowly and the AOA moves
back. If you increase the weight of the a/c (pull `g`) the wing
will `mush` through the airand the AOA will move backwards
`WHATEVER THE AIRSPEED`
I am sure thats clear as mud but think about it.
Cheers
Pat
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slyck(at)frontiernet.net Guest
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Posted: Sat Aug 08, 2009 8:11 am Post subject: W & B, cruising, stalling and landing |
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Russ, that means selling from the trunk of the car. AKA "boot"
BB
don't ask about bees in the bonnet
On 8, Aug 2009, at 9:30 AM, russ kinne wrote:
Quote: |
Pat, Ladd
Got to take issue with you in re sailboats going to windward.
You say when the apparent (relative) wind moves forward, as when
boat speed increases, this enables the boat to point higher. It
most certainly does NOT -- Just the opposite! You must bear off,
point lower, point further from the direction the wind comes from,
to keep sailing, keep the sails full -- or to keep lift, if in an
aircraft. Just substitute angle of relative wind on the boat for
AOA on the aircraft. You can delay the luff by trimming in the
sails, but relative wind moving forward does not allow you to point
up further.
As you say, think about it. The sails will luff if you keep your
course or bear up, you must bear off.
Sorry to disagree but I've been there too often to count.
BTW earlier you mentioned a "Boot Sale in an adjacent field"? --
is this really a sale of footwear or am I missing some English -
American translation issue? If so, please pardon my Colonial
ignorance!
All best, fair winds,
Russ
On Aug 7, 2009, at 6:06 AM, pj.ladd wrote:
>
>
> but in actual flight they reach those angles at certain
> corresponding airspeeds.>>
>
> Hi Rick,
>
> Not true. Your wing in level flight supports a certain weight .
> Increase that weight and the wing will NOT support it. In other
> words it stalls. How can you do this? Easy! Alter your flight path
> markedly, this will increase the `g` force and the plane will in
> effect weigh more.
>
> Its all about what a sailor would call `apparent wind` As a yacht
> increases its speed the direction the wind is coming from moves
> towards the bow. This enables a boat to `point higher`,i.e to
> decrease the angle of attack. It is the same with a planes wing .
> Go fast and the AOA moves forward, go slowly and the AOA moves
> back. If you increase the weight of the a/c (pull `g`) the wing
> will `mush` through the airand the AOA will move backwards
> `WHATEVER THE AIRSPEED`
>
> I am sure thats clear as mud but think about it.
>
> Cheers
>
> Pat
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Arksey(at)aol.com Guest
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Posted: Sat Aug 08, 2009 1:19 pm Post subject: W & B, cruising, stalling and landing |
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interesting statements on full stall landings...I learned to fly in a J-3 and was taught to have the stick clear back into your belly when the plane touched the ground and was fully stalled....I still want to try and do that with my firestar and found it difficult to get a good landing....have often had the tail wheel hit 1st...have just by experence learned that I seem to get a lot better landing when I only bring the stick back part way...so you can see why your discussions on this subject have been interesting to me.....jswan
do not archive
JIM SWAN
firestar ll, 503, N663S
Eaton Rapids, Mi. 48827
PH 517-663-8488 runway 2300' E & W (42-28.58N 084-44.69 W )
[quote][b]
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lucien
Joined: 03 Jun 2007 Posts: 721 Location: santa fe, NM
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Posted: Sat Aug 08, 2009 4:10 pm Post subject: Re: W & B, cruising, stalling and landing |
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pj.ladd(at)btinternet.com wrote: | Nah, it's not lift or anything like that at all. It's gobs and gobs of
cash...>>
You crazy mixed kid! You have gone all twisted and bitter. Go fly
Cheers
Pat |
I don't think the wind is going to allow it this eve, but I may take another shot at it in the morning. I get a lot grumpier when I don't get to fly and summer is a terrible time for it. Can't wait till fall/winter...
LS
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_________________ LS
Titan II SS |
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JetPilot

Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 1246
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Posted: Sat Aug 08, 2009 4:58 pm Post subject: Re: W & B, cruising, stalling and landing |
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Arksey(at)aol.com wrote: | interesting statements on full stall landings...I learned to fly in a J-3 and was taught to have the stick clear back into your belly when the plane touched the ground and was fully stalled....
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This would be different with different aircraft types, depending on landing gear setup and other factors. Also many times, instructors say things that are not quite true in the interest of simplifying an idea for a student.
Mike
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_________________ "NO FEAR" - If you have no fear you did not go as fast as you could have !!!
Kolb MK-III Xtra, 912-S |
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pj.ladd(at)btinternet.com Guest
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Posted: Sun Aug 09, 2009 1:43 pm Post subject: W & B, cruising, stalling and landing |
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You can delay the luff by trimming in the sails, but
relative wind moving forward does not allow you to point up further.>>
Hi Russ,
arguing with you about sailing is like arguing with the Hauck about flying
and I have more sense than to do either.
Starting from the assumption that you were right I reworked the problem....I
think my memory of what we did was accurate but the reason we did it was
not.
As I remebered it, and I haven`t sailed a dinghy for nearly 60 years, it was
always `harden up in the gusts` but having spent some time today drawing
diagrams and trying to think myself through the problem I have come to the
conclusion that hardening up in the gusts was probably to spill some wind to
avoid a knockdown. I DO remember that when I sailed catamarans we bore away
from the wind in the gusts because cats accelerated so much faster than
monohulls they could ride out a strong gust just by going faster.
Sincere apologies all the way round, my analogy was unsound. I still think I
am right about the rest of my argument.
About `boot` sales. Remember that in the UK the trunk of your car (where you
put the luggage) is our boot.
Hence a boot sale happens when a farmer makes a field available. He charges
people who wish to sell goods, from the boot of their car, to park in his
field and set up shop. Sometimes stuff is laid out on a groundsheet on the
grass, some bring folding tables. The farmer then charges prospective
customers to park in the filelds and go shopping. Most of the stuff is
rubbish, but one mans rubbish is anothers treasure. Cheap CD`s and DVD`s
sometimes pirated, some just secondhand copies . Cheap hand tools, garden
tools, fishing stuff, you name it. It is a very popular way of passing a
Sunday morning in the UK. Some affairs are gigantic, perhaps on an old
airfield, sometimes a small affair with the profits going to the local
church or Boy Scouts. The farmer whose farm I fly from runs a boot sale and
proceeds go to the local Flying Ambulance Service.
To get back to flying. Just landed from a nice flight of about an hour.
Didn`t take off until about 7.45 so the wind had dropped and the air was
smooth. The Bristol Balloon Festival has been going on all week and there
were dozens of hot air balloons drifting down towards my field, gettting in
the last flight of the competition. Spectacular flying alongside the balloon
stream . crazy designs and brilliant colours. Had to watch it a bit as they
were coming out of the setting sun and were hard to see from slightly above.
Getting dusk when I landed and everyone else had packed up. Pleasant way to
end up a weekend of glorious weather.
Cheers
Pat
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Richard Pike

Joined: 09 Jan 2006 Posts: 1671 Location: Blountville, Tennessee
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Posted: Wed Aug 12, 2009 6:58 pm Post subject: Re: W & B, cruising, stalling and landing |
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To John: something you said got my twisted little mind to working: ...
"3-Required the wings be rigged with more angle of attack so we could take off and land in a nearly level attitude, and to prevent the tail from sagging to the extreme when doing slow flight. It also slows the cruise speed because of additional drag of pulling the tailboom through the air sideways. The Sling Shot will really sag in the tail when slowed down because is has a lot less incidence than the MKIII and FS.
john h
mkIII"
Hmmm - so I went out to the hangar and looked at how the bottom of the root rib aligns with the frame that you attach the center section lower fabric to, which is (more or less) aligned with the underside of the wing. Mine has always been misaligned, the rear lines up, the front, not so much. The wing has too great an angle of attack to line up with the front part of the framework, it is about 5/8" too high. And it is built exactly to plans. (At least in this area...)
So I gets to thinking - "What if I were to drill a new hole in each root rib tang about 5/8" lower and drop the angle of incidence of each wing until it lines up with the lower center section? That would take about 2.5-3 degrees of incidence out of the wings, and maybe pick up a bit of cruise speed? Would need to retrim the elevators, reshim the angle of the motor mounts, etc, but might be worth the hassle. Takeoff runs might be a bit different, landings too, but overall... Hmmm..."
Now look what you've done...
Richard Pike
MKIII N420P (420ldPoops)
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John Hauck

Joined: 09 Jan 2006 Posts: 4639 Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)
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Posted: Thu Aug 13, 2009 4:18 am Post subject: W & B, cruising, stalling and landing |
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> So I gets to thinking - "What if I were to drill a new hole in each root
rib tang about 5/8" lower and drop the angle of incidence of each wing until
it lines up with the lower center section? That would take about 2.5-3
degrees of incidence out of the wings, and maybe pick up a bit of cruise
speed? Would need to retrim the elevators, reshim the angle of the motor
mounts, etc, but might be worth the hassle. Takeoff runs might be a bit
different, landings too, but overall... Hmmm..."
Quote: |
Now look what you've done...
Richard Pike
MKIII N420P (420ldPoops)
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Rev:
I would have taken some incidence out of my wings a long time ago, but it
would have required too many other changes. I wasn't willing to make all
the other changes required for a couple mph.
Gary Haley took some incidence out of his MKIII wings when he rebuilt it a
couple years ago. Speed increase was not significant.
Decreasing incidence will also increase dihedral, unless lift struts are
shortened accordingly.
Will also require changing the 3 point stance of the MKIII, raising the nose
to increase angle of attack and allow the aircraft to rotate on take off.
Raising the nose will also improve 3 point landing capability.
john h
mkIII
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_________________ John Hauck
MKIII/912ULS
hauck's holler
Titus, Alabama |
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slyck(at)frontiernet.net Guest
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Posted: Thu Aug 13, 2009 4:27 am Post subject: W & B, cruising, stalling and landing |
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Richard, if you still have the aluminum legs you may be in for a
somewhat longer ground roll during takeoff.
I got as far as installing the longer legs but got sidetracked by
fuel flow/pressure problems and life in general.
A stock MkIII windshield and cabin configuration might not see much
change. Mostly because the curvature
of the window allows most of the air to slip around and provide more
lift at the wing root bottoms.
There would be a slight increase in lift under the nose which would
reduce down force requirement at the tail.
Your cabin configuration is another matter. Not much down force on
your window.
Mine has a wide flat window that slips a lot of air up and over,
around the engine to the prop. Very little
is diverted to underside wing lift. The down force on the nose is
considerable. I should benefit from
an incidence more like the Xtra.
One of these days.
BB
On 12, Aug 2009, at 10:58 PM, Richard Pike wrote:
Quote: |
To John: something you said got my twisted little mind to working: ...
"3-Required the wings be rigged with more angle of attack so we
could take off and land in a nearly level attitude, and to prevent
the tail from sagging to the extreme when doing slow flight. It
also slows the cruise speed because of additional drag of pulling
the tailboom through the air sideways. The Sling Shot will really
sag in the tail when slowed down because is has a lot less
incidence than the MKIII and FS.
john h
mkIII"
Hmmm - so I went out to the hangar and looked at how the bottom of
the root rib aligns with the frame that you attach the center
section lower fabric to, which is (more or less) aligned with the
underside of the wing. Mine has always been misaligned, the rear
lines up, the front, not so much. The wing has too great an angle
of attack to line up with the front part of the framework, it is
about 5/8" too high. And it is built exactly to plans. (At least in
this area...)
So I gets to thinking - "What if I were to drill a new hole in each
root rib tang about 5/8" lower and drop the angle of incidence of
each wing until it lines up with the lower center section? That
would take about 2.5-3 degrees of incidence out of the wings, and
maybe pick up a bit of cruise speed? Would need to retrim the
elevators, reshim the angle of the motor mounts, etc, but might be
worth the hassle. Takeoff runs might be a bit different, landings
too, but overall... Hmmm..."
Now look what you've done...
Richard Pike
MKIII N420P (420ldPoops)
Read this topic online here:
http://forums.matronics.com/viewtopic.php?p 57418#257418
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