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		slyck(at)frontiernet.net Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Sun Jul 30, 2006 8:43 am    Post subject: flap takeoff | 
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				Group,  after finding little on the subject, I humbly seek advice.
 OK, I really like the flaps (only one notch so far) for landing.
 Very gentle touchdowns.  But now I'm wondering about one
 notch takeoffs?  Sure, those SUV/MKIIIs with 90 hp will leap
 off like a feather so configured, but I seek the experience of
 those who have used them while powered with a lesser
 powerplant.  This would be, of course, lightly loaded, solo.
 -BB
 do not archive
 
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		dhkey(at)msn.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Sun Jul 30, 2006 10:03 am    Post subject: flap takeoff | 
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				 	  | Quote: | 	 		  From: robert bean <slyck(at)frontiernet.net>
 Reply-To: kolb-list(at)matronics.com
 To: kolb-list(at)matronics.com
 Subject: flap takeoff
 Date: Sun, 30 Jul 2006 12:42:21 -0400
 
  
 Group,  after finding little on the subject, I humbly seek advice.
 OK, I really like the flaps (only one notch so far) for landing.
 Very gentle touchdowns.  But now I'm wondering about one
 notch takeoffs?  Sure, those SUV/MKIIIs with 90 hp will leap
 off like a feather so configured, but I seek the experience of
 those who have used them while powered with a lesser
 powerplant.  This would be, of course, lightly loaded, solo.
 -BB
 do not archive
 
 
 http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?Kolb-List
 http://wiki.matronics.com
 
 
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		dhkey(at)msn.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Sun Jul 30, 2006 10:03 am    Post subject: flap takeoff | 
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				Robert,
 I like cleaning it up before I took off with my 582 and a Mark III. Just 
 felt like it worked better, no science on the subject. Once with a passenger 
 I took off with one notch, it seemed like it took A LOT longer to get off 
 the ground. Even solo I clean it up before take off.
 Dave
 
 do not archive
  	  | Quote: | 	 		  From: robert bean <slyck(at)frontiernet.net>
 Reply-To: kolb-list(at)matronics.com
 To: kolb-list(at)matronics.com
 Subject: flap takeoff
 Date: Sun, 30 Jul 2006 12:42:21 -0400
 
  
 Group,  after finding little on the subject, I humbly seek advice.
 OK, I really like the flaps (only one notch so far) for landing.
 Very gentle touchdowns.  But now I'm wondering about one
 notch takeoffs?  Sure, those SUV/MKIIIs with 90 hp will leap
 off like a feather so configured, but I seek the experience of
 those who have used them while powered with a lesser
 powerplant.  This would be, of course, lightly loaded, solo.
 -BB
 do not archive
 
 
 http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?Kolb-List
 http://wiki.matronics.com
 
 
 | 	 
 
 
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		APilot(at)webtv.net Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Sun Jul 30, 2006 10:13 am    Post subject: flap takeoff | 
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				I have taken of with none, one notch and full.  No problem with any
 setting.  Climb seems the same with none and one notch.  Probably
 because with one notch, more air gets to the lower arc of the prop.  It
 does not seem to climb efficiently with full flaps.  With more
 horsepower, it would probably be fine.
 
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		John Hauck
 
  
  Joined: 09 Jan 2006 Posts: 4639 Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)
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				 Posted: Sun Jul 30, 2006 2:27 pm    Post subject: flap takeoff | 
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				|  But now I'm wondering about one
 | notch takeoffs?   | -BB
 
 BB/Gang:
 
 I find the MKIII takes off and climbs much better without the use of 
 flaps.
 
 However, there are times when flaps will assist in getting the MKIII 
 off the ground quicker, i.e., flying off soft, rough, wet, sandy 
 fields.  I usually start my ground roll clean.  When the AIS needle 
 swings through 30 mph, I snatch in full flaps.  The MKIII usually pops 
 right off the ground.  Soon as it breaks ground, I slowly push them 
 back up to the clean position.
 
 At times I use one notch, 20 degs of flaps to get me out of my short 
 field.  That is when my max gross take off weight is pushing 1,200 
 lbs.  20 degs of flaps gives me more latitude to stay above stall, 
 although it is not climbing as quickly nor moving as fast across the 
 ground as it would when loaded much lighter.  I have to make a 90 deg 
 right or left turn on takeoff to the north from my strip if I am 
 loaded to heavily to climb straight out over the tall trees to the 
 north.
 
 I never attempt to take off and continue to climb out with full flaps. 
 Not a good idea.  Does not work.  If the mkIII is stalled with full 
 flaps at low level, it is likely not going to be able to recovered 
 before you bounce off the ground.
 
 john h
 mkIII
 
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MKIII/912ULS
 
hauck's holler
 
Titus, Alabama | 
			 
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		boyter(at)mcsi.net Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Sun Jul 30, 2006 4:52 pm    Post subject: flap takeoff | 
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				Robert
 I like cleaning it up before I took off with my 582 and a Mark III. Just
 felt like it worked better, If I had a engine out on take off I would not 
 like the flaps on.
 I have 450 hrs.
 Wayne
 ---
 
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		Eugene Zimmerman
 
  
  Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 392
 
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				 Posted: Sun Jul 30, 2006 6:25 pm    Post subject: flap takeoff | 
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				On Jul 30, 2006, at 8:50 PM, Wayne Boyter wrote:
 
  	  | Quote: | 	 		   , If I had a engine out on take off I would not like the flaps on.
  I have 450 hrs.
  Wayne
 
 | 	  
 There is one really good effect of having some flaps on take off.
 
 All the high thrust-line kolbs have one very significant  
 vulnerability that is commonly overlooked.
 
 That is ,,, should a "SUDDEN" engine out ever occur while in a very  
 steep  typical Kolb climb, the adequate  nose down rotation that is  
 required to prevent an inadvertent stall from this attitude and  
 airspeed is extremely difficult to achieve without the rotational  
 help of flaps.
 
 For this reason I  also prefer a trim setting on takeoff that  
 requires that I hold some back stick pressure until adequate altitude  
 is reached
 Experiment with it sometime at altitude.
 
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		slyck(at)frontiernet.net Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Sun Jul 30, 2006 8:12 pm    Post subject: flap takeoff | 
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				Thanks for all the input.
 -BB
 
 On 30, Jul 2006, at 8:50 PM, Wayne Boyter wrote:
 
 [quote] 
 
  Robert
  I like cleaning it up before I took off with my 582 and a Mark III. 
  Just
  felt like it worked better, If I had a engine out on take off I would 
  not like the flaps on.
  I have 450 hrs.
  Wayne
  ---
 
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		NeilsenRM(at)comcast.net Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Mon Jul 31, 2006 7:20 am    Post subject: flap takeoff | 
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				Just a further comment on flaps. Those of us that fly the MKIII with stock 
 length gear legs have a limited angle of attack when on the ground. I use 
 one notch of flap every time I take off (except in high winds). This 
 increases the effective angle of attack. Then just after lift off I retract 
 the flaps. The short gear legs limit the angle of attack. Kolb designed our 
 planes this way to keep us safer by making sure we are well over stall speed 
 before take off. The down side is it increases the take off roll and speed.
 
 Sorry if I get long winded but... I just got my biannual check ride. This is 
 my once every two years ride in a C172. Afterwards I shared my forced 
 landing experience in MKIIIc with him. I started to tell him how I used the 
 flaps to adjust my glide path to get me where I wanted to land (kind of like 
 a negative throttle) and fully retracted them for landing. He stopped me and 
 said you never never raise your flaps on approach. We then got into a heavy 
 discussion about flap usage. He finally conceded that it might work in one 
 of "those" Kolbs but not in a GA aircraft. I obviously need to take him up 
 in my Kolb and should have done it right then in the C172 but at close to 
 $100 per hour it wasn't worth it.
 
 For those of you that haven't tried it get some altitude and find a landing 
 spot. Pull the throttle back and establish a glide. Then grab the flap 
 handle and add some flap. Be aware that as you add flap you need to push 
 forward on the stick to increase your decent rate to keep your airspeed up. 
 When you raise the flaps pull back. Don't lock the flaps in a notch just 
 play with it a bit. Watch were the touch point changes when you add or 
 decrease the flaps. You may need to change your grip but pull in full flaps 
 and be sure you nose down quickly. You will be surprised how much you can 
 adjust your glide slope. Be sure you don't get into that airspeed area where 
 you might stall if you raise the flaps. Most of us fly an approach well 
 above stall speed and decreasing flaps decreases the angle of attack but be 
 careful especially near the ground. Don't forget there are other tools you 
 can and should use like circling and S turns. My point is use every tool you 
 can to make a safe landing.
 
 My personal forced landing rule is that I will retract all the flaps once I 
 have the field made. This makes my MKIIIc land more like it does during my 
 normal landing where I use one notch of flap and maintain some power.
 
 One last point most instructors have a set of rules that they teach everyone 
 and this is very good. But like most rules they are base lines that you may 
 be able to deviate from. Don't blindly follow these rules if bending them 
 can save your life. Education and experience can help here but remember 
 there is one rule you can't break and that is that gravity will bite you if 
 you screw up.
 
 Rick Neilsen
 Redrive VW powered MKIIIc
 
  ---
 
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		Richard Pike
 
  
  Joined: 09 Jan 2006 Posts: 1671 Location: Blountville, Tennessee
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				 Posted: Mon Jul 31, 2006 8:03 am    Post subject: flap takeoff | 
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				You did good. Several years ago when I got the clog in my oil line and 
 the 582 died, I was right off the end of a paved RC model strip (Yes, 
 Amazing Grace is amazing...) and knew I had the strip made, but since it 
 was short and I figured I would only get one shot at it, I used the 
 flaps exactly as you describe to adjust the glide slope. Worked very well.
 However, since my home strip is only 750' long, I always land with full 
 flaps, and even at "real airports", I always use full flaps, that way I 
 am programmed to anticipate how it will land every time.
 What did the instructor say about power off stalls & recovery in a Kolb? 
 "At the break, add power..." Another fertile area for discussion...
 
 Richard Pike
 MKIII N420P (420ldPoops)
 
 Richard & Martha Neilsen wrote:
  	  | Quote: | 	 		   
  <NeilsenRM(at)comcast.net>
 
  Just a further comment on flaps. Those of us that fly the MKIII with 
  stock length gear legs have a limited angle of attack when on the 
  ground. I use one notch of flap every time I take off (except in high 
  winds). This increases the effective angle of attack. Then just after 
  lift off I retract the flaps. The short gear legs limit the angle of 
  attack. Kolb designed our planes this way to keep us safer by making 
  sure we are well over stall speed before take off. The down side is it 
  increases the take off roll and speed.
 
  Sorry if I get long winded but... I just got my biannual check ride. 
  This is my once every two years ride in a C172. Afterwards I shared my 
  forced landing experience in MKIIIc with him. I started to tell him 
  how I used the flaps to adjust my glide path to get me where I wanted 
  to land (kind of like a negative throttle) and fully retracted them 
  for landing. He stopped me and said you never never raise your flaps 
  on approach. We then got into a heavy discussion about flap usage. He 
  finally conceded that it might work in one of "those" Kolbs but not in 
  a GA aircraft. I obviously need to take him up in my Kolb and should 
  have done it right then in the C172 but at close to $100 per hour it 
  wasn't worth it.
 
  For those of you that haven't tried it get some altitude and find a 
  landing spot. Pull the throttle back and establish a glide. Then grab 
  the flap handle and add some flap. Be aware that as you add flap you 
  need to push forward on the stick to increase your decent rate to keep 
  your airspeed up. When you raise the flaps pull back. Don't lock the 
  flaps in a notch just play with it a bit. Watch were the touch point 
  changes when you add or decrease the flaps. You may need to change 
  your grip but pull in full flaps and be sure you nose down quickly. 
  You will be surprised how much you can adjust your glide slope. Be 
  sure you don't get into that airspeed area where you might stall if 
  you raise the flaps. Most of us fly an approach well above stall speed 
  and decreasing flaps decreases the angle of attack but be careful 
  especially near the ground. Don't forget there are other tools you can 
  and should use like circling and S turns. My point is use every tool 
  you can to make a safe landing.
 
  My personal forced landing rule is that I will retract all the flaps 
  once I have the field made. This makes my MKIIIc land more like it 
  does during my normal landing where I use one notch of flap and 
  maintain some power.
 
  One last point most instructors have a set of rules that they teach 
  everyone and this is very good. But like most rules they are base 
  lines that you may be able to deviate from. Don't blindly follow these 
  rules if bending them can save your life. Education and experience can 
  help here but remember there is one rule you can't break and that is 
  that gravity will bite you if you screw up.
 
  Rick Neilsen
  Redrive VW powered MKIIIc
 
 
 | 	 
 
 
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  _________________ Richard Pike
 
Kolb MKIII N420P (420ldPoops)
 
Kingsport, TN 3TN0
 
 
Forgiving is tough, being forgiven is wonderful, and God's grace really is amazing. | 
			 
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		John Hauck
 
  
  Joined: 09 Jan 2006 Posts: 4639 Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)
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				 Posted: Mon Jul 31, 2006 8:33 am    Post subject: flap takeoff | 
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				| What did the instructor say about power off stalls & recovery in a 
 Kolb?
 | "At the break, add power..." Another fertile area for discussion...
 |
 | Richard Pike
 
 Rev/Gang:
 
 Recovery from a stall in a Kolb is a no brainer.     Usually, 
 relaxing your grip on the stick will take care of that little problem. 
 However, be surprised how many folks will pull the stick back and try 
 to make the airplane fly when they inadvertently stall near the 
 ground.  Some only get to try that once.
 
 Reference forced landings and flaps in a mkIII:  I'll do what ever it 
 takes to get me down in one piece.  Probably the best way to survive a 
 forced landing is a lot of practice forced landings, dead stick.  I 
 don't know any other way to do it better.  Kolbs are entirely 
 different animals with the prop spinning at idle and with the prop not 
 spinning at all.
 
 john h
 mkIII
 
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  _________________ John Hauck
 
MKIII/912ULS
 
hauck's holler
 
Titus, Alabama | 
			 
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		kuffel(at)cyberport.net Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Mon Jul 31, 2006 9:42 am    Post subject: flap takeoff | 
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				Rick,
 
 <<He stopped me and said you never never raise your flaps on approach.>>
 
 Have the same discussion with a CFI who is glider rated.  He/she will 
 immediately understand how you are using flaps in the same manner as 
 spoilers.  The trick, of course is to maintain your (hopefully constant) 
 airspeed well above stall when you do retract the flaps.
 
 Tom Kuffel (yeah, CFI with a glider rating, but FAI not FAA)
 Whitefish, MT
 Building Original Firestar.
 
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		Dave Pelletier
 
 
  Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 100 Location: Prescott, Arizona
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				 Posted: Mon Jul 31, 2006 10:14 am    Post subject: flap takeoff | 
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				 	  | Quote: | 	 		    Kolbs are entirely
  different animals with the prop spinning at idle and with the prop not
  spinning at all.
 
  john h
  mkIII
 
 | 	  
 I agree.  Before I ever took up a passenger, a requirement I made for myself 
 was that I'd do six "ignition off" landings.  I did and each one of them was 
 a hard landing.  Fortunately not hard enough to bend the gear legs.  I did 
 this with my Firestar and the landings were fine.  I'm not sure why the hard 
 landings with the MKIII.  Seems like I had plenty of airspeed, especially 
 with the last three.  The nose would come up but the airplane wouldn't flare 
 and would "pancake" in.
 
 I think it was because of two things.  . My fear of ballooning and not 
 having power available to "goose" it probably meant that I was reluctant to 
 pull back hard enough on the stick.  2. Not having propeller air flow over 
 the elevator probably made for a less effective elevator.  Figured I'd 
 better quit before I did serious damage.
 
 AzDave
 
 
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		John Hauck
 
  
  Joined: 09 Jan 2006 Posts: 4639 Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)
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				 Posted: Mon Jul 31, 2006 10:27 am    Post subject: flap takeoff | 
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				I'm not sure why the hard
 | landings with the MKIII.  Seems like I had plenty of airspeed, 
 especially
 | with the last three.  The nose would come up but the airplane 
 wouldn't flare
 | and would "pancake" in.
  |
 | AzDave
 
 Dave:
 
 Got to keep above the stall or it will quit flying.
 
 For best results the mains should be close to the ground, like inches.
 
 john h
 mkIII
 
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  _________________ John Hauck
 
MKIII/912ULS
 
hauck's holler
 
Titus, Alabama | 
			 
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		Richard Pike
 
  
  Joined: 09 Jan 2006 Posts: 1671 Location: Blountville, Tennessee
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				 Posted: Mon Jul 31, 2006 11:20 am    Post subject: flap takeoff | 
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				Actually, what I was hoping to instigate was a dialogue comparing the a 
 Kolb stall to the typical mantra that most instructors will give you 
 when you do a power off stall in a C172 or such. Something like, "As the 
 nose drops, you ease the stick forward while adding power to arrest the 
 descent."
 
 I have a good friend who is a CFI, and several years ago we went for the 
 first of several biannuals in the MKIII. He is of the school that a 
 nibble and a buffet is not a stall. To him, a power off stall is a 
 "whee, there-goes-the-nose" stall, and that is what he wanted to see a 
 recovery from - a genuine stall. Works for me, those are the ones that 
 bite you. When he noticed that I waited until I had substantially 
 recovered from the stall before putting the throttle in, he remarked 
 that "I would lose less altitude if I put the throttle in immediately at 
 the break."
 I suggested to him that with the MKIII's high thrust line, if it got a 
 big dose of throttle while seriously stalled, the recovery could be a 
 lot more exciting. I said that in a low altitude stall especially, 
 getting the nose down and getting it solidly flying again was more 
 important than getting the power in ASAP. So his modified instructions 
 were - as soon as it feels like it is flying is a good time to add power.
 
 This got me wondering about SOP for power off stall recovery on a Lake 
 Amphibian, and apparently they have very large stabilizer trim tabs 
 located in the prop blast to preclude such questions.
 http://www.seaplanes.org/gateway/seaplane_smpl.htm
 http://aircraftinnovation.com/training/instr-techniques.html
 
 Anyway, that was the "fertile area for discussion." Or not.
 
 Richard Pike
 MKIII N420P (420ldPoops)
 
 do not archive
 
 John Hauck wrote:
  	  | Quote: | 	 		   
   | What did the instructor say about power off stalls & recovery in a 
  Kolb?
  | "At the break, add power..." Another fertile area for discussion...
  |
  | Richard Pike
 
  Rev/Gang:
 
  Recovery from a stall in a Kolb is a no brainer.     Usually, 
  relaxing your grip on the stick will take care of that little problem. 
  However, be surprised how many folks will pull the stick back and try 
  to make the airplane fly when they inadvertently stall near the 
  ground.  Some only get to try that once.
 
  Reference forced landings and flaps in a mkIII:  I'll do what ever it 
  takes to get me down in one piece.  Probably the best way to survive a 
  forced landing is a lot of practice forced landings, dead stick.  I 
  don't know any other way to do it better.  Kolbs are entirely 
  different animals with the prop spinning at idle and with the prop not 
  spinning at all.
 
  john h
  mkIII 
   
   
   
 
 
    
 
 | 	 
 
 
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  _________________ Richard Pike
 
Kolb MKIII N420P (420ldPoops)
 
Kingsport, TN 3TN0
 
 
Forgiving is tough, being forgiven is wonderful, and God's grace really is amazing. | 
			 
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		NeilsenRM(at)comcast.net Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Mon Jul 31, 2006 1:32 pm    Post subject: flap takeoff | 
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				Richard
 
 I saw your comment about the stall recovery but I never talked about it with 
 my CFI. Personally I don't like stalls. I don't do them and don't practice 
 them. I know I should but... What I do is practice not doing them. There are 
 a number of things that they have us do in the check ride that doesn't make 
 sense to me. Yes my CFI also wants to see much more than a nibble or a 
 buffet. In normal flight I'm never going to feel a nibble or a buffet and 
 blunder on into a full blown stall. The only time this might happen is when 
 I'm close to the ground like takeoff or landing. How stupid? No I do 
 practice slow flight down to the point where my airplane is telling me 
 WARNING you push me any further and I will stall.Then I recover as quickly 
 as possible. Another big test all CFIs seem to want is fly a 45 degree bank 
 turn without gaining or loosing altitude. What does that do for us? Again in 
 normal flight we never do this. On occasion I do high bank turns like they 
 want you to do landing to the north/west at Oshkosh but I'm flying a 
 approach profile not holding altitude.
 
 Granted there are some reasonable things they have us do during the biannual 
 but most of it is just a pain in the.....
 
 Maybe John W. could enlighten us. He is a CFI and I'm sure he has had to 
 jump thru many more hoops as a airline captain than we have to.
 
 Sorry I will stop my rant.
 
 Do not archive
 
 Rick Neilsen
 Redrive VW powered MKIIIc
 
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		APilot(at)webtv.net Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Wed Aug 02, 2006 10:41 am    Post subject: flap takeoff | 
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				My landings are hard too.  Everything looks fine and I expect it to
 settle in on three points.  But, it doesn't settle....just
 drops.......bam.  It is worse with no flaps.  Carrying a little power
 makes things much easier, but I prefer power off landings.  At 2000 rpms
 (smooth idle), the thrust is 20 lbs. and I imagine that it simulates the
 dynamics of a stopped prop landing. Will find out more when I start my
 ignition off landing practice.
 
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		John Hauck
 
  
  Joined: 09 Jan 2006 Posts: 4639 Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)
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				 Posted: Wed Aug 02, 2006 11:03 am    Post subject: flap takeoff | 
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 | My landings are hard too.  Everything looks fine and I expect it to
 | settle in on three points.  But, it doesn't settle....just
 | drops.......bam.
 APilot:
 
 The airplane is landing exactly like any airplane lands.  If you are 
 too high when it stalls, it will quit flying, and hit hard.  If you 
 place the airplane a few inches off the ground, hold it until it 
 stalls, it will land nice and gentle.
 
  At 2000 rpms
 | (smooth idle), the thrust is 20 lbs. and I imagine that it simulates 
 the
 | dynamics of a stopped prop landing.
 
 Not quite.  The slowly rotating prop acts just as though it were a 
 large disc, creating a lot of drag.  When the prop is stopped, the 
 only drag experienced is the actual area of each blade.  There is a 
 lot of difference between dead stick and engine idling landings.
 
 My own personal experience only.  However, most Kolbs fly very much 
 alike.
 
 john h
 mkIII
 
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  _________________ John Hauck
 
MKIII/912ULS
 
hauck's holler
 
Titus, Alabama | 
			 
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		NeilsenRM(at)comcast.net Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Wed Aug 02, 2006 1:14 pm    Post subject: flap takeoff | 
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				APilot
 
 John is right, stabilize your approach and fly it down to just a few inches 
 off the ground and it will settle in nice and smooth. The problem is holding 
 that approach down just till just that right point a few inches above the 
 ground before you flair. If you are used to big general aviation airplanes 
 you will have more problems doing this than any one else because you are 
 used to airplanes that have allot more inertia than a MKIII. Getting a good 
 landing with no power isn't easy. The more flaps you use with no power the 
 more difficult it will be. I can't say this enough till you are used to your 
 airplane "you need to carry power all the way in till you are inches above 
 the ground". Hold the stick steady and cut the power and it will raise the 
 nose all by its self just a bit and settle in nice as can be. Do this till 
 have it down cold. THEN start using less and less power but don't rush this 
 part.
 
 I like to land with some power all the time with one notch of flaps. But do 
 what makes you happy and safe. One notch of flap cuts the stall speed a bit 
 and the float in ground effect. Also a Kolb MKIIIc will land with no power 
 (off, stopped, dead) with no flaps just about like it does with some power 
 and one notch of flap.
 
 Rick Neilsen
 Redrive VW powered MKIIIc
 
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		jindoguy(at)gmail.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Wed Aug 02, 2006 2:18 pm    Post subject: flap takeoff | 
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				When I startred flying my Kolb MkIII, my landings were inconsistent. For the purposes of this missive, inconsistent is defined as, do five landings or less, remove gear legs, straighten same, and reinstall. I'm reeeaaaaal good at straightening gear legs. 
 This went on through the winter and into the spring. I was pretty bummed and one day while I was on the phone with Travis, I told him I was having problems, I just couldn't seem to get my flair right. I would land perfectly once or twice, then WHAM, time to go see Mr. Press again. 
 "You've got to learn to wheel land this airplane and stop trying to three point it. You learn to wheel land this airplane and you'll like it just fine."
 Travis, I am convinced, is a genius. I dug out my copy of "The Compleat Taildragger Pilot" by Harvey S. Plourde. Whatta ya know, "learn to wheel land the taildragger first, then advance to three point landings".  Mr.Plourde's reason? Basically, with the wheel landing, you're more likely to get a landing rather than an arrival. Okay, that's a little terse, but it's the essence.
 I started working on wheel landings, I bounced a little, but not too bad or too high and I never slammed in again. My landings got smoother. Quite a bit of the improvement was due to my hands and feet slowly evolving from large hams to instruments capable of a bit of delicacy. Now I can truly say that Yesterday, I couldn't spell taildragger pilot, today I are one. 
 Mr. Press is very, very lonely.
 
 Rick
 
 On 8/2/06, Richard & Martha Neilsen <NeilsenRM(at)comcast.net  (NeilsenRM(at)comcast.net)> wrote:[quote]--> Kolb-List message posted by: "Richard & Martha Neilsen" < NeilsenRM(at)comcast.net (NeilsenRM(at)comcast.net)>
 
 APilot
 
 John is right, stabilize your approach and fly it down to just a few inches
 off the ground and it will settle in nice and smooth. The problem is holding 
 that approach down just till just that right point a few inches above the
 ground before you flair. If you are used to big general aviation airplanes
 you will have more problems doing this than any one else because you are 
 used to airplanes that have allot more inertia than a MKIII. Getting a good
 landing with no power isn't easy. The more flaps you use with no power the
 more difficult it will be. I can't say this enough till you are used to your 
 airplane "you need to carry power all the way in till you are inches above
 the ground". Hold the stick steady and cut the power and it will raise the
 nose all by its self just a bit and settle in nice as can be. Do this till 
 have it down cold. THEN start using less and less power but don't rush this
 part.
 
 I like to land with some power all the time with one notch of flaps. But do
 what makes you happy and safe. One notch of flap cuts the stall speed a bit 
 and the float in ground effect. Also a Kolb MKIIIc will land with no power
 (off, stopped, dead) with no flaps just about like it does with some power
 and one notch of flap.
 
 Rick Neilsen
 Redrive VW powered MKIIIc 
 
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