![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 20, 10:15*am, jcarlyle wrote:
Bumper, Toad - thanks. Sorry for my confusion about pitch direction - you're right, it would pitch down. The recovery with a tail stall, though, is to pull back on the stick, not push forward. That's why I'm worried about differentiating a tail stall from a wing stall. Bill, please see comments embedded in your reply. I think the others made the essential point that the video subject was a special situation where ice on the tail leading edge led to a separation bubble on the lower surface with flow re-attaching aft of the hinge line. The re-attached flow was sucking the elevator down (nose down) so the pilots were advised to pull back to counter this force to retain control of their aircraft. The violent pitch down was due to this effect. The video also talked about non-linear elevator effects which could lead to PIO's As for the tail/wing stall discussion, unless you've flown a glider with yarn tufts on the wing and tail, this is hard to visualize. Yes, of course, the wing is designed to stall at the root first. In fact, unless there is a very effective root fillet, there will be some root flow separation visible at any AOA. In every case I know of, the yarn tufts show full flow separation on both upper and lower surfaces of the tail when as nose 'breaks' suggesting a wing 'stall' to the pilot. At the same time the wing tufts show attached flow over the majority of the wing which is why the ailerons work as expected. You can say the tail just loses effectiveness or you can call it a tail stall - the distinction isn't really important. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Secondary Stall | w3n-a | Aviation Marketplace | 3 | December 10th 08 12:36 PM |
Stall Characteristics | w3n-a | Home Built | 0 | December 4th 08 02:45 PM |
Glider Stall Spin Video on YouTube | ContestID67 | Soaring | 13 | July 5th 07 08:56 AM |
Stall Recovery | Danny Deger | Piloting | 12 | January 30th 07 01:01 AM |
FS: Blanik L-13 Tail Skid & Tail Wheel Assembly | Tim Hanke | Soaring | 0 | February 8th 05 01:34 PM |