In a previous article, john smith said:
Paul Tomblin wrote:
On the Lance (which is the only plane I have any experience with), even if
you lost hydraulic fluid, air pressure would hold the gear up against the
springs until you dropped down to max gear extension speed. I suspect
you'd get a bit more drag from the gear drooping slightly into the
airstream, though.
Okay Paul, I have to ask you to explain those two statements.
What don't you understand? In the Lance, the hydraulic system is there to
raise the gear. Besides manually lowering the gear, there is an automatic
gear extension system and a manual emergency gear extension system.
If you activate the manual emergency gear extension system, springs and
gravity bring the gear down - I'm not entirely clear if hydraulic pressure
helps bring them down if you use the normal gear extension. The
description of the emergency gear extension system in the POH says that
the speed the gear will come down is lower if the plane is developing
power because the prop slipstream holds it up.
I'm told (I haven't verified it yet) that if you activate the emergency
gear extension when you're above max gear speed, the gear won't come down,
but will come down slightly into the airstream developing drag.
--
Paul Tomblin
http://xcski.com/blogs/pt/
"The way I see it, unless we each conform, unless we obey orders, unless
we follow our leaders blindly, there is no possible way we can remain
free." - John Ashcroft^W^WFrank Burns