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#11
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![]() wrote in message ups.com... The shorter wings would decrease slightly the moment of inertia about the vertical axis, making the airplane a bit quicker in yaw. A groundloop might be easier to start, but would also be easier to stop. Stealth (wittman tailwind) Pilot What's the Tailwind like for ground handling? I've always liked that airplane and hope to own one someday, perhaps as a restoration project. Steve Wittman designed some fantastic airplanes for his time, and they're still excellent performers for their power. Dan Never flew the Tailwind, but have flown formula 1 prototypes and the Cassutt formula racing planes among others. Never found any of them to be a ground loop problem if handled correctly. The AT6 can get a bit squirrelly on the roll out, as can the S1 Pitts and the Stearman. The Mk 16 Spitfire surprisingly enough with the narrow gear spread tracks as straight as an arrow on roll out. The P51 is even straighter if landed tail low on the mains. I can't honestly say that any single airplane I flew during my tenure in aviation was a ground loop candidate. Duane Cole flew a clipped wing Taylorcraft for many years. I've watched him put it down numerous times with no noticeable excess rudder use on the roll out. I believe the original wingspan on his airplane was 36 feet. He had clipped a full 7 feet off of it. It was fuselage loaded, but didn't seem to bother him at all on landing. Of course, nothing REALLY bothered Duane when it came to flying an airplane!! :-)) |
#12
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On Fri, 18 Feb 2005 18:41:16 -0500, "Kyle Boatright"
wrote: wrote in message oups.com... The shorter wings would decrease slightly the moment of inertia about the vertical axis, making the airplane a bit quicker in yaw. A groundloop might be easier to start, but would also be easier to stop. Stealth (wittman tailwind) Pilot What's the Tailwind like for ground handling? I've always liked that airplane and hope to own one someday, perhaps as a restoration project. Steve Wittman designed some fantastic airplanes for his time, and they're still excellent performers for their power. Dan An aquaitence who owned one said it was a "mean little airplane". He didn't use the word in a nice sense. He didn't have any complaints about the Tailwind's in-flight performance, but really didn't like the approach speeds and ground handling. I have to ask...What's wrong with approach speeds? Whether you fly final at 40, 75, or 120 should make little difference as long as you have enough runway and know the airplane? True, it does take a bit of getting used to, but usually doesn't take long. Yesterday I was coming down a steep final at 76 MPH and using very little runway. I fly an ILS at 120 in the same airplane. The transition from 120 to touch down gets a little busy with retrimming unless you are a weight lifter, or don't like to feel the controls. Still, I start slowing and going full flaps as soon as the runway is made. It takes about twice the distance of a normal VFR landing and about 4 to 6 times that of a short field landing. I've just never noticed much difference, but I don't rely much on outside visual clues for speed either. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com He kept it a few months, sold it, then bought an RV-3 which he liked (then sold), and finally bought a Sonex, which he likes. The thing I notice about the Tailwinds is the relatively poor visibility. |
#13
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On Fri, 25 Feb 2005 02:53:32 -0500, Roger
wrote: I have to ask...What's wrong with approach speeds? Whether you fly final at 40, 75, or 120 should make little difference as long as you have enough runway and know the airplane? True, it does take a bit of getting used to, but usually doesn't take long. If you landed a Cub at 120 knots, you wouldn't have it long. -- all the best, Dan Ford email (put Cubdriver in subject line) Warbird's Forum: www.warbirdforum.com Piper Cub Forum: www.pipercubforum.com the blog: www.danford.net |
#14
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In article ,
Cub Driver wrote: If you landed a Cub at 120 knots, you wouldn't have it long. I'm just wondering how you're going to get the Cub up to 120 knots. G -- Dale L. Falk There is nothing - absolutely nothing - half so much worth doing as simply messing around with airplanes. http://home.gci.net/~sncdfalk/flying.html |
#15
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On Fri, 18 Feb 2005 18:41:16 -0500, "Kyle Boatright"
wrote: wrote in message oups.com... The shorter wings would decrease slightly the moment of inertia about the vertical axis, making the airplane a bit quicker in yaw. A groundloop might be easier to start, but would also be easier to stop. Stealth (wittman tailwind) Pilot What's the Tailwind like for ground handling? I've always liked that airplane and hope to own one someday, perhaps as a restoration project. Steve Wittman designed some fantastic airplanes for his time, and they're still excellent performers for their power. Dan An aquaitence who owned one said it was a "mean little airplane". He didn't use the word in a nice sense. He didn't have any complaints about the Tailwind's in-flight performance, but really didn't like the approach speeds and ground handling. He kept it a few months, sold it, then bought an RV-3 which he liked (then sold), and finally bought a Sonex, which he likes. The thing I notice about the Tailwinds is the relatively poor visibility. sorry to have missed the original question. I have no problems with visibility. my little web site is a bit of a pox at present because I've been using it to move files across the country. it has been badly hacked up to free up file space. http://members.iinet.net.au/~tailwind has a photo of the machine. there is a page with all the mods drawings as well. I had flown cessna 150's. did my taildragger in an Auster J1B which I found a quantum leap more difficult to land. The tailwind is a further quantum more difficult ...initially. It took me 30 hours to fly without an elevated heart rate. 30 more hours to relax with it and a further 30 hours to get on top of it fully. now the little bugger is like an extension of my hand. I found overcontrolling it the main difficulty. a Tailwind is easy to land IF you have it exactly aligned in the direction of flight, no sideslip or drift and you get almost zero vertical speed at touchdown. takeoff safety speed is 56 knots. approach on finals is best at 70 knots and two stages of flap. I flare over the threshold at 65 knots, check the sideslip instrument then focus out at the far end of the strip and NEVER look back in the cockpit. I have absolutely no idea what the touchdown speed actually is. it cant be much over the stall of 42knots though. two stages of flap and the aircraft three points beautifully (mind you this is with 300 hours flying it now) three stages of flap and the aircraft wants to wheel it on. wheelers btw are not really a problem. my aircraft is a pussycat for groundhandling. I have a tapered rod tailspring (it is on the original plans) and steve's tailwheel. steve made one mistake on the plans IMHO. the distance out from centre that the link arm driving the tailwheel meets the rudder bellcrank arm needs to be half what he shows on the plan. as steve has it the tailwheel is severely overgeared. half the distance and it is perfect. I have had a number of tailwheels on the aircraft and the outstanding best tailwheel is the one sold by Aircraft Spruce as the 4" homebuilders tailwheel. mine has an O-200 and cruises at 114 knots, 20 litres per hour fuel burn. I know of one built bog standard with an unmodified O-200 but with a 2 position motor glider prop that would cruise at 135knots at 2500rpm and 20 litre per hour fuel burn on a crisp cold morning in coarse pitch. It is a target that still niggles at me. :-) mine has a large 120 litre tank that gives 5hours 45mins range to dry tanks. I find it perfect for across australia flying. I can set off on a 350 nautical mile leg into a 15 knot headwind and get there with fuel to spare. the aircraft is supposed to be a pilot maker. dunno. it is all that I fly. it is neutrally stable. it has no inertia to speak of and will go exactly where your hand has commanded it to go. flying with your arm across your thigh tames out all the PIO tendencies. mine is slightly different in that it has a Y control yolk. (your hand is in exactly the same position as steves T handle and the attach to the control rods is exactly the same, it is a Y instead of a T basically) I have cessna style central engine controls. would I suggest buying one? yep but get some dual time in one first so that you have a feel of the sensitivity. one of the NASA astronaut doctors died in one and all I'd swear all she did wrong was press the wrong rudder correcting a landing. In 350 hours (I think) flying mine I have never ever found it boring. Having done the hard yards I love flying it. the design is a sensitive dead honest aeroplane. ....I only wish it wasnt broken at the moment :-) (carby airbox wore out after 19 years) oh your excellent performers comment. ... a grumman AA5B tiger is 10 - 15 knots faster but with TWICE the fuel burn. my tailwind cruises at 24.8 statute miles per imperial gallon. they're OK. Raspet's aeronautical evaluation done in 1956 is still available from the EAA photocopying service.(october 1956 Experimenter) it makes interesting reading. Wittman got the control sizes correct IMHO, especially the rudder. yeah buy one! Stealth Pilot |
#16
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![]() Dale wrote: In article , Cub Driver wrote: If you landed a Cub at 120 knots, you wouldn't have it long. I'm just wondering how you're going to get the Cub up to 120 knots. G Point the nose straight at the ground. Light the JATO bottle. John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) |
#17
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Interesting stuff on the Tailwind, Stealth. Thanks!
Dan |
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