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At 04:00 17 January 2005, Greg Arnold wrote:
Are you sure? Imagine a flat spin. If the loose end is pointing to the left, doesn't that mean yoiu are spinning to the right? So don't you want left rudder? You better sort that out in your head quick! Think. Start straight level and slow. Feed in full left rudder. The glider rotates (yaws) left but continues initially on the track it was going. The airflow is now coming more from the right and blows the yaw string out to the left (the slip ball, which is free to move in its tube, goes out to the right sharply because the airflow is decelerating the whole aircraft apart from it). The left wing reaches the stall, the wing drops and the angle of attack increases even further. The increase in drag on the wing causes the glider to continue rotating to the left. The glider is now sinking rapidly with the left wing more badly stalled than the right due to the rotation. This means that the glider continues to yaw and roll left. Looking from above the glider is now following a circular anti-clockwise path with the nose pointing into the circle and the tail out. The airflow is still coming more from the right (over the whole aircraft and not just forward of the centre of gravity) and the yaw string is being blown out to the left whether the nose pitches down or up into a flat attitude or not. The slip ball (and you) are trying to continue in a straight line and feel a force throwing you to the right. This is a left hand spin! The anti-spin action at this point is to reduce the yaw to the left with full right rudder; pull the string, push the ball or step on the head of the snake (sounds like a position in the Kama Sutra) as your personal mantra dictates and then move the stick forward from its central position (where I hope you placed it as the spin developed) until the wing unstalls. Now centralise the rudder before loading the wing up on the pull out or you'll be off the other way. |
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