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#31
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Mike Granby wrote:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/4439341.stm Did the aircraft dive because of the turbulance or because the pilot freaked out at the open door. What's the big deal. I was flying a piper warrior once when the door popped open. Whoop de do. The slipstream held it closed until I was able to reach over and re-close it. It had no effect whatsoever on the handling characteristics of the plane. |
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#32
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Corky Scott wrote:
On Wed, 13 Apr 2005 08:52:22 -0700, "Bob Gardner" wrote: If the door of an Aztec pops open, it will only open about 4-6 inches and will kind of oscillate back and forth between those extremes. Causes some tail feather buffeting. Anyone trying to pull the door shut is fighting air pressure and wasting his or her time. Bob Gardner That's what I wondered. They probably didn't realise they couldn't close the door in flight, and kept trying. They'd likely be unhappy to be told that they could have just sat there doing nothing and the flight wouldn't have changed a bit. You can close the door in flight. I did it on a Warrior once and that was from the pilot seat reaching over. Unless a Warrior is that different from an Aztec, which I haven't flown. |
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#33
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When I was a student pilot, during the long hot summer days of
Sacramento, we always kept the doors open in the Cessna 140. Every once in a while I'd give the door a shove with my elbow and refresh the hot cabin air. On my private checkride, the examiner spent the entire ride trying to get the door to close, saying he was going to fall out. After the ride he chewed the FBO out up and down for having a door that wouldn't stay closed. I never thought to try to close the door, it was hot! A year later, with a fresh IFR ticket in my pocket I flew the family down to Monterey. At about 11pm over the Salinas mountains IFR the door on the Bonanza popped open. Charts flew everywhere, including out the window. I tried slipping, etc but couldn't get it closed. Since it was dark I didn't want to try some small airport I'd never been to before so I diverted to Modesto (a larger airport). I just remember thinking to myself that if there was ever a time I was going to forget the gear, this was it. On landing, it is important to grab and hold the door though. About 1/2 through the roll out the door sprung full open and then back again. It almost came off the hinges. I think the roundedness of the Bonanza door made it different than the flat Cessna door. The Bonanza door trailed about 4". You could pull really hard to hold it to only 3" but the last bit wasn't going to happen. My wife and kids probably have a good 600 hours sitting in the plane now and are all very execellent door closers. The Bonanza just had astrange door closing mechanism. You turned the handle past two clicks to grab both latches, something that was missed that night. I now drive a Mooney and the door is much more obvious. The door handle doesn't like up with the arm rest unless it is fully closed. -Robert, CFI |
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#34
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Hi Bob;
Don't know about the Aztec as I've never had one come open on me, but I've had the door open on me in a 140 Cherokee and closed it in flight with no "panic" issues. Also once in a Cessna 336. There is a pressure problem, but if you just grab the door without pushing it and yank it closed with a single direction pull it should close ok. Opening the canopy vents did help if I remember. Dudley "Bob Gardner" wrote in message ... If the door of an Aztec pops open, it will only open about 4-6 inches and will kind of oscillate back and forth between those extremes. Causes some tail feather buffeting. Anyone trying to pull the door shut is fighting air pressure and wasting his or her time. Bob Gardner "Mike Granby" wrote in message ups.com... http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/4439341.stm |
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#35
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I had a door pop open 3 times during my private pilot training. First
time, early on in the training, MY door opened on takeoff in a C-150. The CFI took the controls and I held the door ajar. We told the tower we needed to come back because of an open door and they cleared us ... we did a little shorter pattern than normal, and the CFI said she noticed more drag, but no big deal. Second time in a C-152, CFI's door popped open just after beginning the takeoff roll. He told me to abort, I pulled the power and started to brake as he got the door shut and told me to go ahead (we have long runways). Third time in C-152 again, CFI's door opened at about 500 feet. I didn't even see or hear it, but CFI was holding onto his door with both hands. I asked, "Am I scaring you that badly?" He laughed and said "No, door's open!" I asked if I needed to turn back, but he just shut the door and we kept going. Now, in the passenger briefing part of the checklist, I always ask passengers to double-check and assure that their seats and doors are secure. |
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#36
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That is the finest thing I have read in a while.
I want to know who gave her the bruises? Last time that happened to me, when a friend closed the door and I didn't check it, no one got bruised. I wonder how many sky divers get bruised when they go up in a plane without a door. AliR. "Mike Granby" wrote in message ups.com... http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/4439341.stm |
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#37
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AliR wrote: That is the finest thing I have read in a while. I want to know who gave her the bruises? Last time that happened to me, when a friend closed the door and I didn't check it, no one got bruised. I wonder how many sky divers get bruised when they go up in a plane without a door. Yeah :-) As I understand it she got bounced (Not the skydiving term) around and hit the side of the window. I can state now that at no time in aeroplanes without doors did I bruise an arm ! |
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#38
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I modified a 182 and 206 for jumping some years ago. After removing
the hinges I cut off a triangle at the bottom forward corner and riveted it to the frame. That was so I could hinge it at the top and the door would clear the strut. Fabricated a new latch that went fore and aft and a new door handle in the middle that you could twist. To work it, the pilot unlatches it and pushes out hard. The slipstream makes it climb until it contacts a rubber bumper under the wing. Dif pressure keeps it firmly there while the crazies leave. The pilot pushes left rudder and the door slams shut. He reaches over and twists the handle then heads back for another load of crazies. My point is, Im sure with the Piper-style door, you can close the vents, slip the aircraft and latch the door a bunch faster than heading back. Am I wrong? |
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#39
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"Bob Gardner" writes:
If the door of an Aztec pops open, it will only open about 4-6 inches and will kind of oscillate back and forth between those extremes. Causes some tail feather buffeting. Indeed it does! It's been substantial the two times it's happened to me. It was not at all enjoyable. Anyone trying to pull the door shut is fighting air pressure and wasting his or her time. I pulled a Warrior door closed (on one of my early training solo flights - oops!) but I suspect that closing the Aztec door is a lost cause also. --kyler |
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#40
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Corky Scott writes:
That's what I wondered. They probably didn't realise they couldn't close the door in flight, and kept trying. They'd likely be unhappy to be told that they could have just sat there doing nothing and the flight wouldn't have changed a bit. My experience is that holding it (close to) closed makes the ride *much* nicer. I've not had the door pop open when I've been flying alone. It'd be interesting. Anyone want to talk about the piece of piano wire that actuates the Aztec's door pins? --kyler |
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