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At 14:31 18 January 2005, Colin Lamb wrote:
'What is most important is 'situational awarness'. A pilot must learn to know where he is and how he got there.' The last part of that statemenht may not always be true. I have read reports from test pilots who intentionally place the aircraft in out-of-control positions in order to determine a recovery procedure. A common response is that they ride the aircraft until they are in a position they recognize and as soon as that happens they can recover. How they got there was irrelevant. Although few airplanes use yaw strings (the pilots are still behind the curve a bit), they are normally used on helicopters. Although the pedals are used to counteract the torque of the tail rotor, we operate them the same way - keep the yarn centered. Colin N12HS Wha-a-t? How can you use a yaw string in a helicopter? Doesn't the rotor wash it around? Educate me. (I had one helicopter ride in an H-13 in 1954; didn't see no stinkin' yaw string.) |
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