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#291
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Mxsmanic wrote:
Gary writes: What part of "maintaining our altitude" sounds like "descending" to you? The part that is combined with rising air. I'm new here and junk. I've read a boatload of these posts and I've started to empathize with you. Why are these people calling you names? Jeesh, they're just mean. Except that I run into posts like this and go, "ah, I see." Rising air and maintaining altitude does not decsending make. Bringing your altitude closer to the ground makes a decsent. You can't maintain altitude and decsend at the same time. I think that's one of the questions in the written. Or it's in some FAR. They'll suspend your cert for 5 years if you decsend whilst maintaining altitude. Do yourself a big favor. Get out there and spend the $50-60 and get an intro flight. Take some damn lessons. Hell, even get a CFI just to get out there and do some of this. You'll see how vastly different it is from MS's Flight sim. |
#292
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Mxsmanic wrote:
JB writes: You are such an idiot! Probably every GA pilot-in-training with a C152/172 or something similar has experienced hitting their own wake when performing their first steep turn with an instructor. Steep turns tend to be descending turns. See, this is one of those posts. That's why you practice. A steep turn is not supposed to be a descending turn. I don't know why. It seems that the argument that you're not supposed to hit your own wake seems to be pretty valid. You can also bring evidence that supports the theory that the sky is not blue, but there it is, blue as hell. |
#293
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mike regish writes:
It is not acceleration. It is speed. GPS travels much faster than we do. No. There are nearly half a dozen relativistic effects that must be compensated for in the GPS. The nominal clock frequencies, for example, must be adjusted by slightly less than one part in two billion in order to adjust for the cumulative relativistic effects. I doubt we have clocks accurate enough to measure the relativistic effects at our speeds. Sure you do ... in your GPS receivers. The adjustments for relativistic effects are necessary to make the receivers reasonably accurate. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#294
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swag writes:
so didyou when you did your "test flight?" In the sim? No, there was no bump. You won't encounter a bump from wake turbulence unless you are doing a steep turn ( like 45 degree bank angle which should take 19 seconds to go 360) Why would the steepness of a turn matter? A 2-G turn is rather close to the load limits for many types of aircraft. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#295
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![]() "Mxsmanic" wrote in message ... mike regish writes: It is not acceleration. It is speed. GPS travels much faster than we do. No. There are nearly half a dozen relativistic effects that must be compensated for in the GPS. The nominal clock frequencies, for example, must be adjusted by slightly less than one part in two billion in order to adjust for the cumulative relativistic effects. I doubt we have clocks accurate enough to measure the relativistic effects at our speeds. Sure you do ... in your GPS receivers. The adjustments for relativistic effects are necessary to make the receivers reasonably accurate. Wow! That's useful information! |
#296
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![]() "Mxsmanic" wrote in message ... swag writes: so didyou when you did your "test flight?" In the sim? No, there was no bump. You won't encounter a bump from wake turbulence unless you are doing a steep turn ( like 45 degree bank angle which should take 19 seconds to go 360) Why would the steepness of a turn matter? A 2-G turn is rather close to the load limits for many types of aircraft. What a dumb ****! Are you kidding??? If someone rolled your brain up in to a ball, and rolled it down a razor blade - it would look like a B-B rolling down a four lane highway. |
#297
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![]() "Nomen Nescio" wrote in message ... -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- From: Mxsmanic A 2-G turn is rather close to the load limits for many types of aircraft. Yea, that puts you about 35% of the way to airframe damage. Pretty damned reckless to only leave yourself a 180% margin. With that level of fear, I'm surprised that you ever leave your room. Er......Um................................Nevermin d. I wonder if he has ever analyzed how much stress his fat butt is putting on the floor joices in his bedroom. If he fell out of his computer chair from 18" or so, he might not have a 180% margin. |
#298
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Maxwell wrote:
I wonder if he has ever analyzed how much stress his fat butt is putting on the floor joices in his bedroom. If he fell out of his computer chair from 18" or so, he might not have a 180% margin. He'd just land on his ass and suffer a concussion........ ![]() |
#299
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On Apr 19, 9:00 am, Nomen Nescio wrote:
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- From: Mxsmanic The clock on your aircraft runs slower as you accelerate, due to relativistic effects. But then it also runs faster as you climb, again due to relativistic effects. Do you take these effects into account in your on-board calculations? Only if I'm approaching light speed. I also have to do a new weight & balance. When you slow down you get heavy speed so the W&B shouldn't change ROTFL |
#300
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Nomen Nescio writes:
Only if I'm approaching light speed. And I only worry about compressibility if I'm approaching Mach 1, which doesn't happen often in a Baron. QED. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
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