Mailing List lml@lancaironline.net Message #13926
From: Jim Cameron <toucan@78055.com>
Sender: Marvin Kaye <marv@lancaironline.net>
Subject: Stalls in the ES
Date: Sat, 15 Jun 2002 03:26:34 -0400
To: <lml>
    My first ES was built without stall strips, but at Charlie Kohler's suggestion, during the first flights we taped on some rapidly improvised foam strips, which I later glassed in permanently.  They didn't seem to affect the actuall stall very much, but they did provide a more noticeable pre-stall buffet, which, as Charlie pointed out, is an important stall warning in a plane that otherwise does not give much advance notice.
    The theory, of course, is that the strips help ensure that the wing root stalls before the tip, but my guess is that the washout in the wings already ensures this without the strips.
    My second ES also has stall strips, and has a moderately pronounced pre-stall buffet.  I've done lots of stalls in both planes, both in landing configuration (power off) and in simulated take-off configurations (power-on), all straight ahead.  Centering the ball is trickier with the power-on stalls -- it could probably get away from you quicker and during landing config stalls. The stall behaviour is pretty benign -- just push the nose down and fly out.  I am careful to keep the ball centered, and can't say what would happen if you kicked full rudder just at stall.    We used to have to do this in the C150 I trained in years ago in order to get it to spin.  My guess is that the ES would go in easier, and build up speed rather quickly.  It could be pretty exciting, but coordinated stalls are more or less nothing.
 
Jim Cameron
N143ES
 
P.S.  A note -- yesterday I pushed 'er up to 16,500' to give my oxygen system a workout and feel around near the service ceiling.  It didn't want to lean out very well, and seemed to be running a bit rough.  After landing, I crunched my numbers around the whiz wheel and realized I'd been at a density altitude of 19,000 feet!  Still had a climb rate of between 200 and 300 fpm.   JNC
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