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In article ,
"Peter R." wrote: Ron Garret wrote: I was at nearly 1000 AGL wondering why my climb performance sucked so badly before I figured out what was going on. The slightly ajar door affected the climb performance that much? Yes, I was really surprised. I actually first noticed it just after rotating. Usually there's about a three second lag between rotating and liftoff, and then the plane always climbs very smartly. This time it was 4-5 seconds, and the plane lifted off a few inches and then actually settled back onto the runway for an instant before finally taking off. I thought it was the high altitude (despite the fact that I've flown out of high altitude airports before and never had that happen). I even remarked on it at the time, saying, "Hm, that was interesting." My wife noticed it too because she knew exactly what I was talking about. I've had single latches pop open on me before, but this was the first time that I forgot to close the door entirely. I think it happened because this was the coldest weather I've ever flown in. Invariably, at my homebase VNY if you let the door swing all the way closed it gets uncomfortably hot in the cabin, and so I'm always holding the door ajar until the last possible moment (and no, I don't mean just before rotation!) But at Truckee it was 40 degrees or so and the sun was behind the mountains, so it was comfortable without holding the door open. There were a bunch of other things that were different from my usual routine (first time operating out of an untowered airport with intersecting runways in use, most flight hours logged in the Cirrus in one day). And finally, I really think the new Bose headsets contributed too. I've had door latches pop before, and with my old Peltors I could hear a whistling sound begin even before rotating. With the Bose we were doing 120 knots with the door completely open and I couldn't hear it at all. (This is not to say that the Bose blocks out all noise -- it doesn't, it just seems to do a particularly good job in that frequency band.) rg |
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