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Steve Dold wrote in message ...
On 17 Sep 2003, Snowbird wrote: Since when does a C152 need to be steered with the brakes? I keep reading this and wonder how many people here actually fly these things. It's common at small airports to be faced with a turn that can't be made with nosewheel steering alone, and you need to use differential braking. It's not always poor planning, sometimes it just works out that way. I fly a plane (Grumman Tiger) which steers exclusively with differential braking. It can turn on a dime and give change. I utilize maximum rudder deflection first, then braking as needed. We need to replace brake pads every few hundred hours, in contrast to some Grumman owners who replace much more frequently (and either need to clean their brake system and de-gum the wheel cylinder or start using rudder). However, prior to 'going rivetless' I had a couple of hundred hours kicking around the country in various Cessnas and Pipers, and I certainly never found an airport which required brakes to taxi if the flight controls were in the right place for wind. OK, I take that back. There was one flight with a Crosswind from Hell where I found myself using taps on the brake to taxi straight, but I bet now that I'm more clueful about rudder I coulda done w/out brake. I do remember using brake to turn into a tight space (as when parking -- something that makes me wince now to watch as so many Cessna pilots seem to stand on the brake and gun the poor engine). But normal taxiing ops? Can't says I ever encountered an airport where brakes were necessary. So I just can't agree that it's "common at small airports to be faced with a turn that can't be made with nosewheel steering alone" in a small Cessna. Got a few examples of such turns at specific airports you'd like to share? Curious Sydney |
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On 20 Sep 2003 18:09:14 -0700, Snowbird wrote:
But normal taxiing ops? Can't says I ever encountered an airport where brakes were necessary. So I just can't agree that it's "common at small airports to be faced with a turn that can't be made with nosewheel steering alone" in a small Cessna. My experience is you do at least need to dab the brakes to get a C172 or similar around most 90-degree taxiway bends. The nosewheel steering with the spring rather than the direct connect just won't steer enough unless the brake is dabbed. The same is also true of the Cessna 140 with its steerable tailwheel - once again, the linkage is a spring and it needs a little help to make a 90 degree turn on most GA airport taxiways. We're not talking about nailing a brake and gunning an engine, merely briefly applying brake to help the nose (or tailwheel) turn enough to make the bend. Got a few examples of such turns at specific airports you'd like to share? Any airport smaller than an air carrier airport, generally - i.e with narrow taxiways and 90 degree bends instead of high-speed turnoffs. Pinckneyville Du Quoin is one that we are both familiar with which I should imagine will need at least a brake dab to swing around into the tie-down spot. Certainly needed it in the C140. Houston Gulf (sadly, now deceased) definitely needed some brake to make the 90 degree turns in the taxiway - the taxiway was only about 25 ft wide. -- Dylan Smith, Castletown, Isle of Man Flying: http://www.dylansmith.net Frontier Elite Universe: http://www.alioth.net "Maintain thine airspeed, lest the ground come up and smite thee" |
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