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#81
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No brakes, huh? What kind of plane are you talking about? Have you done
any on short fields? (As most turf strips are.) If it's swampy enough to create enough drag to quickly slow you down well, that's the same as braking, right? *Think.* First you said "soft field" (go back and reread your own post) **no brakes** Now you're saying "short field". Of course you'd use brakes on a short field. I'm a CFI, this is nothing new to me, I've taught short/soft field techniques till I puked. And spare me your smartass comments like "try again" and "think" when you're contradicting yourself *Genius* |
#82
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I was simply being sarcastic about the A320 s.
There have been several vertical tail separation incidents. At the recent runway overrun in Canada only half the slides worked. There have been over sixty nosewheel incidents. There was a recent flap incident. My flying car is coming slower than I would like. Zoltan |
#83
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Happy Dog wrote:
Keeping it light is good. Keeping it in the air (as it will be after TD with full up elevator) is pointless and increases the landing roll. Use the brakes after TD until the speed gets to the point where elevator authority is insufficient to hold the nose up or keep it light enough for the conditions. How much you use then depends on the length of the strip. Have you ever actually put one down in a plowed or muddy field? You'd better pray that you actually *can* keep the nose wheel in the air or, at least, keep it from digging in. Seen the ad in AOPA Pilot for renter's insurance? That's a guy who didn't do that. NO BRAKES. The ground will do a perfectly good job of that. George Patterson Give a person a fish and you feed him for a day; teach a person to use the Internet and he won't bother you for weeks. |
#84
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Peter Duniho wrote:
I use two spaces when typing a plain text or fixed-width font document. I use one space for text that's formatted with a proportional-width font. (If someone winds up displaying my two-space, plain text typing in a proportional-width font, that's their problem ![]() That's because things that can deal with proportional fonts know how much whitespace to insert. You don't ever want to add your own whitespace (either horizontal or vertical). |
#85
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wrote in message
No brakes, huh? What kind of plane are you talking about? Have you done any on short fields? (As most turf strips are.) If it's swampy enough to create enough drag to quickly slow you down well, that's the same as braking, right? *Think.* First you said "soft field" (go back and reread your own post) **no brakes** Now you're saying "short field". Of course you'd use brakes on a short field. I'm a CFI, this is nothing new to me, I've taught short/soft field techniques till I puked. "Have you done any (soft field landings, the topic of conversation, in case you forgot or are too dense) on short fields? (As most turf strips are.)" Is that better now? You, of course, know that most soft fields are short. And, you don't use short field technique because you want to TD as lightly as possible and that often requires dragging it in with a bit of power. You really don't touch the brakes doing this on a 1500' grass strip? Sure. And spare me your smartass comments like "try again" and "think" when you're contradicting yourself *Genius* It's Usenet. And you've misread my post. Try to get over it. moo |
#86
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"George Patterson"
Keeping it light is good. Keeping it in the air (as it will be after TD with full up elevator) is pointless and increases the landing roll. Use the brakes after TD until the speed gets to the point where elevator authority is insufficient to hold the nose up or keep it light enough for the conditions. How much you use then depends on the length of the strip. Have you ever actually put one down in a plowed or muddy field? You'd better pray that you actually *can* keep the nose wheel in the air or, at least, keep it from digging in. Seen the ad in AOPA Pilot for renter's insurance? That's a guy who didn't do that. NO BRAKES. The ground will do a perfectly good job of that. The vast majority of soft fields are short turf strips. You need brakes to stop before the end in most GA planes, right? I say use the brakes until you have full up elevator and the nose starts to get heavy. There is no reason to avoid using brakes when doing a soft field landing on firm ground (as most of them are). And that's what it looks like the A320 pilot was doing. You will know, within a second of TD, whether the ground is soft enough to cause braking-like friction on the mains and you will brake accordingly. 2000' of firm turf says you do. moo |
#87
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Happy Dog wrote:
Brakes are used during a soft field landing where the point is to put as little weight as possible on the nose gear. Try again. Dude - your original assertion (above) was ridiculous. ANY braking will put more weight on the nose wheel. That's what I was responding to. Hell, even George P. is backing me up here : ) you don't use short field technique because you want to TD as lightly as possible Short field technique doesn't necessarily mean a carrier landing-type touchdown IMHO You really don't touch the brakes doing this on a 1500' grass strip? Now you're being more specific. On a familiar grass field, of course. (I'd never fly into one that short (personal minimums) I fly a T-tail Lance, definitely not a short/soft field plane. Maybe in a taildragger, but then I'd never use the brakes (or even need them for that matter) in case you forgot or are too dense Are you this obnoxious in person? |
#88
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I was simply being sarcastic about the A320 s.
There have been several vertical tail separation incidents. At the recent runway overrun in Canada only half the slides worked. There have been over sixty nosewheel incidents. There was a recent flap incident. I see. My sarcasm detector musta been off : ) |
#89
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Happy Dog wrote:
wrote in Happy Dog wrote: Brakes are used during a soft field landing where the point is to put as little weight as possible on the nose gear. Try again. You have that completely backwards my friend. In a soft field landing you don't touch the brakes No brakes, huh? What kind of plane are you talking about? Have you done any on short fields? (As most turf strips are.) If it's swampy enough to create enough drag to quickly slow you down well, that's the same as braking, right? *Think.* Have you had this reading comprehension problem long? He said soft field, not short field. And he didn't touch the brakes, he didn't say the plane wouldn't slow down due to drag from the soft field. Matt |
#90
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George Patterson wrote:
Happy Dog wrote: Brakes are used during a soft field landing where the point is to put as little weight as possible on the nose gear. Not the way I was taught. You stay off the brakes to keep the nose light. Yep and I was taught to begin to feed the power in as you slow towards a fast taxi speed. I've never landed on a really soft field before to try the technique for real, but it makes sense. Matt |
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