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Dan wrote:
On May 20, 6:09 pm, Dave Doe wrote: In article om, says... I've got a question for the group. Suppose you find yourself in the following situation: You are flying a C182, landing on runway 22. The ATIS lists the winds as 240 at 10. The windsock is not visible. You approach at a normal airspeed, full flaps, coming over the numbers at 65 kts. The mains touchdown, followed by the nosegear. Slight right aileron is being maintained into the wind. Everything is aligned properly and on the centerline at touchdown. After touchdown the plane starts to drift to the right side of the runway. You try to correct by pointing the nose back to the centerline with left rudder. The nose seems to be pointed left, but the plane is still drifting right. It feels like any more left rudder could result in bad skidding and/or a ground loop. What are the proper control inputs to correct the situation? Left aileron would be in the _opposite_ direction of the indicated crosswind. Regardless, this is the right move (IMO) - as it's possibly caused by less crosswind down at RWY level - you use aileron to control the drift, rudder to keep it pointing in the right direction. -- Duncan- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Thanks. That's exactly what I was getting at. Obviously, I know this is true when still in the air, but I was not sure if this rule changed when rolling down the runway... It changes a lot. Drift is controlled in the air by slipping which requires bank. Since you can't bank while on the ground, the ailerons aren't going to do much for drift. They help keep weight on the upwind wheels to provide better traction and they help keep the wind from flipping you over, they they don't do squat for drift. That is a function of rudder and tire traction. Matt |
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