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I have quietly been taking in all this stall/spin stuff. It has given me a much deeper appreciation of our aircraft, and I only fly an ES. It also explains the weird look and silence Bob Jeffrey gave me on a ES demo flight in 2007 when I told him I wanted to do a power off stall. I have always practiced stalls in the various certified aircraft I have flown. I did the stall with Bob, not much notice, right wing quickly dropped, I recovered. I think it was me…might have been Bob. Not doing anymore stalls in my ES. Not afraid, just smarter. Gordon Gordon H. Porter Managing Partner Trusted Wealth Advisors, LLP Registered Principal, Cambridge Investment Research, Inc. 800-290-2632 717-757-4908 fax 717-843-0180 GHP@TrustedWealthAdvisors.com Securities offered through Cambridge Investment Research, Inc.. Member FINRA/SIPC. Advisory Services offered through Cambridge Investment Research Advisors, Inc., a Registered Investment Advisor. Tax services are offered by Trusted Wealth Advisors LLP. Trusted Wealth Advisors and the Cambridge Investment Research companies are unaffiliated entities. Trading instructions sent via e-mail may not be honored. Please call our office, or Cambridge Investment Research trading desk at 800-756-8115 , for all buy/sell orders. Please be advised that communications regarding trades in your account are for informational purposes only. You should continue to rely on confirmations and statements received from the custodian(s) of your assets. The text of this communication is confidential, and use by any person who is not the intended recipient is prohibited. Any person who receives this communication in error is requested to immediately destroy the text of this communication without copying or further dissemination. Your cooperation is appreciated. From: Ron Galbraith [mailto:cfi@instructor.net] Sent: Tuesday, January 08, 2013 9:32 AM To: lml@lancaironline.net Subject: Re: [LML] Re: Stalls & Spins There is an ES video that shows what happens when you stall an ES at full aft CG. Spins immediately, takes 2.5 turns and 3000' to recover. Test Pilot was one turn from bailing out. Install an AOA system, install stall strips, practice flying at low speeds and learn what impending stalls feel like. The airframe gives you many indications that you are too slow. Learn them. Fly safe. On Jan 8, 2013, at 8:34 AM, George Wehrung <gw5@me.com> wrote:
I would be interested in watching some of the videos on the ES in particular if not the other airframes. Are they posted on the Internet by chance, doubtful but I thought I'd ask. From my perspective, the key phrase is spin resistance. Having researched the NASA material and having also seen the Lancair videos of actual flight testing, rightly or wrongly, I installed the wing cuffs to the Legacy on the basis that they seemed to offer the opportunity to make it harder to get into trouble, but accepting that if pushed too far into a spin, then the aircraft may or may not be recoverable. So, if one accepts the view of many which is that "as was", the aircraft was not spin recoverable, there would only appear to be upside from installing the cuffs. The flaw is, of course, that if indeed the Legacy is spin recoverable without wing cuffs, then the addition of the wing cuffs may preclude spin recovery! Unless someone goes to the trouble of spin testing the Legacy, or any other type fitted with cuffs, one will never know whether spin recoveries are possible under what flight and loading circumstances and, of course, with or without wing cuffs. Meanwhile, per my prior post on this, all I can say is that the albeit very limited flight testing (straight and level, and continuous 30deg AoB turns) in my Legacy fitted with the cuffs shows that there is plenty of warning of the impending stall – stall strips give the first "gentle" warning", followed by the more severe intermittent "shuddering" as the centre section drops in and out of the stall (whilst the outboard sections are still flying). I'm happy to talk to anyone if they are interested to talk about this more…. numbers below, but please note time is UTC + 8!! Regards,
John
John N G Smith Tel / fax: +61-8-9385-8891 Mobile: +61-409-372-975 Email: john@jjts.net.au
Posted for "Peter Field" <pfield.avn@gmail.com>:
Dear Lancair Drivers:
I've been following the discussion on stalls and spins and I want to add some additional factual information purely for your personal consumption and reflection. Attached are excerpts from 10 different 1980-90 NASA flight test final reports on a series of GA airplanes in which NASA evaluated the use of cuffs on leading edges to improve the behavior of the test airplane approaching the stall. For various reasons the cuffs improved lateral control entering the stall, but had the adverse effect of destabilizing the aircraft once a fully developed spin was achieved. Essentially, stall behavior was improved at the sacrifice of spin recovery. Cuffs on wing leading edges are an add on design fix, the more elegant solution is "washout," where the wing is twisted so the outer portions of the wing always operate at a lower angle of attack.
To my knowledge, Lancair has never subjected any of their aircraft to a fully developed spin matrix complete with appropriate instrumentation and a spin recovery chute. There is no FAA requirement for them to do so - it's an Experimental Category airplane. Early on they may have lightly touched on such testing; but I have never seen any documentation on a fully completed spin matrix, which would involve at least 160 spins at various cg's and lateral loadings. In my opinion, it would be highly risky to fool around much beyond the stall in any Lancair - there is no documentation that indicates any of these airplanes can always be recovered from a one turn incipient phase spin or any fully developed spin. Being good at spin recovery isn't so much a matter of how skillful a pilot you are, it's a matter of how many spins you've experienced in airplanes known to be recoverable. Being familiar with the stall characteristics of your own airplane should be a matter of personal preference.
Best regards,
Pete Field (LNC2)
USNTPS graduate & spin recovery instructor
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