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#12
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A little snag in your thinking: When you do this in a glider, the intention
is not exactly taxiing but getting the thing to a full stop. So if you want to carry an extra 10mph when touching the water, you'll get what you pay for. -- Bert Willing ASW20 "TW" "soarski" a écrit dans le message de om... snipOne would have to carry more speed! 30 mph with a cub 40 mph with a sailplane should do it. Not many pilots know how to "wheel" a plane on, since most glider landings are stall landings. However Pilots flying off busy airports more likely make wheel landings in order to have the energy to roll off the runway before stopping. So, possibly wheel landings should be practiced with gliders and taildragers! Wallace Berry wrote in message ... Wheel down is the safe way to land on water. I believe that "wheeling it on", in other words, not a minimum energy landing is the way to go. Locking the wheel brake (for gliders which have wheel brakes actuated by other than the dive brake handle) might be a good idea. Bush pilots land wheeled airplanes on water frequently. They lock the wheel brakes and hydroplane on the surface right up to sandbars. What one bush pilot told me was that in a Super Cub, as long as you were at 30 mph or above, the plane would just ride along on the surface as if you were on pavement. Even to the point that a hard touchdown would result in a bounce. I wouldn't have believed him but he showed me videos of him and his buddies landing on lakes. He also said that it was important to pick a sandbar that was long enough to get back to 30 mph before you hit the water. So, for water landings, it would be wheel down, brakes locked if possible, land just like wheeling a 2-33 on at the local field. Hope I don't ever have to try it out. |
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