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#51
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"Larry Dighera" wrote in message ... On Thu, 2 Nov 2006 13:38:41 -0800, "Peter Duniho" wrote in : Most correctly (IMHO) point out that not pushing such a point is occasionally the right response, but generally is not. I don't recall anyone advising Nik to contact a FSDO inspector, and quizzing him about the FAA's point of view on this particular issue. That should settle the argument, but I wouldn't be too hopeful. What would the average FSDO insector possibly know about a FLYING issue? Karl "Curator" N185KG 40 check rides with the FAA |
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#52
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I must be reading the same crap, because that's exactly what I've seen in a
number of replies. mike "Judah" wrote in message . .. Are you reading the same thread as everyone else here? Where did you come up with this crap? |
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#53
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Judah writes:
None of the postings in this thread suggested that the student should ACCEPT the instructor's misinformation as being accurate. Saying nothing about it is accepting it. And when the instructor's misinformation is passed on to another student who doesn't have the benefit of other independent sources of correct information, it is taken as gospel, and sometimes bad things happen. My conscience would not allow me to do that, but some people don't have much of a conscience. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
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#54
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Don Byrer writes:
Go take the PPL or Glider written and maybe the FOI...then you can make comments like that. I can make that comment without any exam of any kind. It's a question of ethics, morals, and conscience, not acquired knowledge. Hurting other people isn't good in my book. But not everyone uses the same book. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
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#55
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"Andrew Gideon" wrote in message
news ![]() On Wed, 01 Nov 2006 17:14:42 -0800, Peter Duniho wrote: That advice makes some sense for someone in Schiff's position. I don't agree even there. I doubt that's true. My point isn't that one just never revists the issue. It's that in mid-flight, getting into an argument with someone about something that's not directly related to the safety of the flight isn't worthwhile. You seem to be disagreeing with something else, and not something I actually wrote. |
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#56
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On Wed, 01 Nov 2006 23:53:05 GMT, Larry Dighera
wrote: Go to the Chief Pilot at the FBO, and ask him to explain it to your CFI. Hey, I like this idea! Then go find another instructor. z |
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#57
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That's wrong, too. Flying at minimum sink will get you the longest time in
the air-like you'd want if you had a tailwind and needed the distance. Minimum sink is slower than best glide. mike ----- Original Message ----- From: "Dave Doe" Newsgroups: rec.aviation.piloting Sent: Thursday, November 02, 2006 4:02 AM Subject: How to tell my instructor to increase glidespeed with headwind? Yes, the greatest *distance* - if you *need* it. Otherwise, I think he's right - fly at 65kts, and you get the longest time in the air (something you're short of usually, when the fan dies). But yep, you're right, *if* you need to get the distance to make the field. -- Duncan |
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#58
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Mxsmanic wrote in
: Judah writes: None of the postings in this thread suggested that the student should ACCEPT the instructor's misinformation as being accurate. Saying nothing about it is accepting it. And when the instructor's From the original post: But even after telling him that he said that doesn't apply to power planes, also saying that manuals never give best glide, and there has to be a reason for that. So he had already told the instructor he was wrong, and had not accepted the instructor's misinformation. |
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#59
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On Thu, 2 Nov 2006 16:49:24 -0800, "karl gruber"
wrote in : "Larry Dighera" wrote in message .. . On Thu, 2 Nov 2006 13:38:41 -0800, "Peter Duniho" wrote in : Most correctly (IMHO) point out that not pushing such a point is occasionally the right response, but generally is not. I don't recall anyone advising Nik to contact a FSDO inspector, and quizzing him about the FAA's point of view on this particular issue. That should settle the argument, but I wouldn't be too hopeful. What would the average FSDO insector possibly know about a FLYING issue? Right. It might be more appropriate for Nic to contact the Designated Examiner he intends to use, and quiz him for what he expects to see. |
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#60
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"T o d d P a t t i s t" wrote in message
... "Gary Drescher" wrote: Best-glide speed is analogous to Vx: it gives you the best (most positive) angle of flight. Minimum-sink speed is analogous to Vy. It's Vy, not Vx, that gives you the maximum height in the shortest time; Vx instead gives you the maximum height in the shortest lateral distance. These relationships and analogies between min sink/best glide and Vx/Vy are always giving trouble. On the one hand, the comment above is right. Min sink and Vy both relate to climb/descent rates and excess power. Best glide and Vx both relate to angle of climb/descent, excess thrust and force. On the other hand, Vy is faster than Vx while Vy's correlated speed, min sink, is SLOWER than Vx's correlated speed, best glide. The difference is that min sink/best glide numbers relate only to airframe/airfoil performance while the Vx/Vy numbers add in the engine/propeller performance. John Denker's explanation of the relations among Vx, Vy, min sink, and best glide is the clearest I've encountered: http://www.av8n.com/how/htm/power.html#sec-power-curve. Sec. 7.5.4 makes it geometrically evident at a glance why Vy is greater than Vx but min sink is less than best glide. Lowering the power curve from full power to zero power shifts the point at which a line through the origin is tangent to the curve: the tangent point is prior to the maximum point when the curve is high, but after the maximum point when the curve is low. (Engine/prop performance factors mean that the curve gets deformed somewhat as it's raised and lowered [sec. 7.5.6], but that's a secondary factor.) --Gary |
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