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#271
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-------preceding post snipped-------
The big question is "why does the wake turbulence descend?" Is the air volume inside the vortices denser than surrounding air? Probably not. So the descent is probably not due to gravitational force. ------much snipped for brevity------ First of all, what this thread really proves is that it is not necessary for a pilot to understand this well enough to explain it to a lay person, or even to another pilot. I think that the bigger question is: Why have so many people, who should all know better, taken Mxsmanic's statement regarding the central downwash portion of an aircraft's wake, which he extrapolated as applicable to the motion of the entire wake, and simply accepted it as possibly disproving what *all* of us have consistently observed. I really don't think that Mxsmanic is an intentional troll, in the usual sense--but, however inadvertently, he surely is damned good at it! Peter |
#272
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![]() "Mxsmanic" wrote in message ... The entire air mass behind the aircraft is descending. The downwash descends, and air from above moves down to replace it. While parasitic drag is not associated with lift and thus has no vertical component of its own, any turbulence it creates will still drift downward with the downwash, although perhaps less quickly than the downwash itself, depending on where the turbulence leaves the aircraft. Blazing generalizations,,,,bull****. You can hit your wake at the same altitude, people do it everyday. The answer is simple and right in front of you. You are just too stupid to see it. |
#273
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![]() I don't fly the Cessna, and I fly only at airports with hard, smooth runways that won't bounce the aircraft around. You don't fly at all bertie |
#274
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Mxsmanic wrote in
: rq3 writes: Still fixated on the idea that the downwash is the only component of wake, huh, Anthony? I've never been fixated on such a notion. All of the wake behind an aircraft descends, including the downwash. no, it doesn't, moron Berti e |
#275
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Peter Dohm writes:
I think that the bigger question is: Why have so many people, who should all know better, taken Mxsmanic's statement regarding the central downwash portion of an aircraft's wake, which he extrapolated as applicable to the motion of the entire wake, and simply accepted it as possibly disproving what *all* of us have consistently observed. Maybe some of them read books, as I do. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#276
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I always maintained altitude and rate of turn in steep turns with the
end result being hitting my own slipstream. As have we all on nice days, and students like to brag about it. Yet Mx is correct, in theory we should not be able to do this. -------some snipped for brevity------- No, Mx is not correct. Mx has restated a *partial* explanation of wakes as complete, and many here are accepting it--even though their own actual experience proves otherwise... |
#277
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![]() "Maxwell" wrote in message ... "Mxsmanic" wrote in message ... The entire air mass behind the aircraft is descending. The downwash descends, and air from above moves down to replace it. While parasitic drag is not associated with lift and thus has no vertical component of its own, any turbulence it creates will still drift downward with the downwash, although perhaps less quickly than the downwash itself, depending on where the turbulence leaves the aircraft. Blazing generalizations,,,,bull****. You can hit your wake at the same altitude, people do it everyday. The answer is simple and right in front of you. You are just too stupid to see it. Thank God a few are still awake here! |
#278
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![]() "Mxsmanic" wrote... Tim writes: Yes, it will. Try it - if you're good enough you will see it happen. If not, you have to practice your 360s. It doesn't happen. I did try it, in perfect weather, at 2500' MSL over Southwest Oregon Regional Airport, using the autopilot to make a perfect turn with a constant altitude. No bump. Then you did something wrong because it definitely does happen. BDS |
#279
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Tim wrote:
"Mxsmanic" wrote... Tim writes: Yes, it will. Try it - if you're good enough you will see it happen. If not, you have to practice your 360s. It doesn't happen. I did try it, in perfect weather, at 2500' MSL over Southwest Oregon Regional Airport, using the autopilot to make a perfect turn with a constant altitude. No bump. Then you did something wrong because it definitely does happen. BDS Tim, get with the program, man. Mxsmanic has never flown anything other than Microsoft Flight Simulator. Seriously. Rip |
#280
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On Apr 17, 5:18 pm, Mxsmanic wrote:
Tim writes: Yes, it will. Try it - if you're good enough you will see it happen. If not, you have to practice your 360s. It doesn't happen. I did try it, in perfect weather, at 2500' MSL over Southwest Oregon Regional Airport, using the autopilot to make a perfect turn with a constant altitude. No bump. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. Can you set an autopilot to do a 60 degree bank angle turn? Mine won't do that. |
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