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Pete Zeugma wrote in message ...
At 02:42 05 February 2004, Isoar wrote: I can't find anything in my books about how to make a 90 degree turn (e.g., downwind to base) while in a full slip, Funny that, but then you should take a massive pinch of salt when you read posts about making you turns with the rudder. If you need to side slip at all during your downwind, base and final, best do it on the straight parts and use proper coordinated well banked turns between. The one thing you should always avoid getting into is turning with excessive amounts of rudder. Why? It's a slip, NOT a skid. I'm not using excessive amounts of ruddre, but just the opposite - essentially too little rudder to the extreme. I most often do one of these when getting into a 2-33 after flying glass with effective spoilers for a while. When on base leg, I realize my normal pattern altitude is too high for the little bit of sink the spoilers of the 2-33 provide. So as I turn base to final, I apply rudder away from the direction of turn and lots of aileron into the turn. Viola - a huge amount of altitude lost in the turn and as I line up on final, the contols get 'normalized' again and spoilers back to 2/3 or so for a normal flare and touchdown. I usually get the angles figured out for the 2-33 after a couple flights and the slip goes away, unless of course, I want to have some fun. Like slipping down to the flare, flare aggressively, do a high AOA touchdown (almost 2 point) and get stopped within 1-200' of touchdown ![]() I've even done this in my ASW-20B with full flaps and spoilers. Set up a landing while a gust front os blowing about 50 knots down the runway. So the pattern is high with a planned turn to final at 5-600' AGL pretty much over the numbers. About half way down base leg, the wind quits. Now I'm waaaay high. So I pull out full flaps, full spoilers, and do the slipping turn. I slipped it all the way down to about 50', and touched down almost exaclty where I'd planned when the wind was still blowing. Tom ASH-26E |
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