On Jan 17, 1:23 pm, Dudley Henriques wrote:
wrote:
In a descending turn, the inside wing has a higher angle
of attack and will stall first, even if the airplane is coordinated in
the turn. Then it'll spin. Too many students are never taught that.
They think that as long as they're coordinated, they're safe. It's not
true. That's why we have stall/spin scenario training: so they see the
various conditions that can cause it. Awareness is greatly enhanced,
believe me. They get much more careful in the circuit.
Dan
We'll have to get together someday and have a quiet drink over this one
Dan :-)))
--
Dudley Henriques
Love to do that. Coffee, though. Here's a good article on
the subject:
http://www.casa.gov.au/fsa/2000/sep/FSA34-35.pdf
Second page deals with it.
Dan