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#81
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In article ,
Jose wrote: but that the required proficiency requires practice and recurrent training which cannot be conducted in type--in the case that intentional spins are prohibited. Does the training have to be conducted in type for the pilot to maintain proficiency? I suspect that spin training in a Citabria would do wonders for a pilot who has just fallen into a spin in a Cirrus. Different aircraft designs may recover differently. ie... a long wing aircraft may require use of ailerons. Only the manufacturers spin testing and recommended recovery technique should be used. |
#82
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Different aircraft designs may recover differently.
ie... a long wing aircraft may require use of ailerons. Ok, fair enough. But if you practice in an aircraft whose technique is sufficiently similar to that of the target aircraft, you should be fine. Jose -- "Never trust anything that can think for itself, if you can't see where it keeps its brain." (chapter 10 of book 3 - Harry Potter). for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#83
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Recently, Jose posted:
Different aircraft designs may recover differently. ie... a long wing aircraft may require use of ailerons. Ok, fair enough. But if you practice in an aircraft whose technique is sufficiently similar to that of the target aircraft, you should be fine. But, how practical is this? Should one practice spin recovery in an SR20 so that you can feel comfortable in an SR22? ;-) I can tell you there is little similarity between how the planes I've flown stall or spin, though they are all basic SEL. Neil |
#84
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Neil Gould schrieb:
I can tell you there is little similarity between how the planes I've flown stall or spin, though they are all basic SEL. But all respond to the same technique of spin *recovery*, otherwise they would not have been certified. (Only true for newer airplanes, obviously.) Stefan |
#85
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Different aircraft designs may recover differently.
ie... a long wing aircraft may require use of ailerons. Ok, fair enough. But if you practice in an aircraft whose technique is sufficiently similar to that of the target aircraft, you should be fine. I really don't know, but believe that you are correct. Peter |
#86
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![]() Morgans wrote: "Peter Duniho" wrote A quick NTSB database search shows in the last six months 4 accidents (2 fatal) involving a Cirrus SR20, and 52 (5 fatal) involving a Cessna 172. The SR22 was involved in 7 accidents (2 fatal), while the Cessna 182 was involved in 36 (6 fatal). Clue - Look at fleet size, then adjust for that, and come back with some more meaningful statistics. How many bazillion C172's are there out there, vs. Cirrus? One thing these figures seem to say is that 50% of SR20 accidents are fatal, but only 10% of 172 accidents are. It is only a bit better if you compare both Cirrus and Cessna types. The parachute should make Cirrus accidents more survivable, not less. John Halpenny |
#87
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On 31 Oct 2006 17:28:21 -0800, "John Halpenny"
wrote in .com: One thing these figures seem to say is that 50% of SR20 accidents are fatal, but only 10% of 172 accidents are. It is only a bit better if you compare both Cirrus and Cessna types. The parachute should make Cirrus accidents more survivable, not less. What's the SR20's stall speed compared to the C-172? The kinetic energy expended in a mishap increases exponentially with the square of the velocity. |
#88
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On Tue, 31 Oct 2006 16:32:26 GMT, Jose wrote:
... the parachute system allows the pilot the option of taking ONE action that will ensure survival in a wide variety of emergencies. Well, not so fast. The ones that stick out in my mind (of course not a statistical sample by any means!) involved parachuting into a fuel tank farm (averted only because the pilot accidentally left the engine running) and parachuting into water (losing the cushioning ability of the landing gear). Once you pull the handle, you have little or no control over the outcome. All in all, I would tend to doubt the claim that it "ensures survival in a wide variety of emergencies". Yes, bad choice of words on my part. Better would be, maximizes chance of survival in a wider variety of emergencies. Certainly there are places you *don't* want to set down on, when you're lacking control under a parachute. But if it were a choice between landing on a tank farm under canopy or riding a plane down with a wing missing, I think I'd take the tank farm. I cannot think of a *single* case where I wouldn't want the OPTION of activating an airframe parachute. And that's the point....it's better to have it and not need it, than to need it and not have it. I can think of reasons I'd take other actions in particular situations. And certainly understand that carrying such a chute has performance disadvantages. I haven't opted for one, but I don't fault folks who decide otherwise. Ron Wanttaja |
#89
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"John Halpenny" wrote in message
oups.com... One thing these figures seem to say is that 50% of SR20 accidents are fatal, but only 10% of 172 accidents are. As I pointed out previously, there aren't enough SR20 accidents (or even SR20 and SR22 combined) to make any valid statistical conclusions. The statistical error on the sample size exceeds the number of samples. Pete |
#90
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Jose,
From googling this group, Ilan Reich, the accident pilot, was quoted with a detailed account here. That contained the key sentence "On the descent, I steered the plane clear of a fuel tank farm, and crash-landed into the water near Haverstraw, NY.". It goes on to describe in detail how he used throttle bursts to stear clear. The "lucky oversight" was/may have been that he left the engine running during chute activation, which is contrary to the recommended procedure. You were involved in that thread, too. -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
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