Troy Hamon wrote:One of my first soft field takeoffs shocked me. I was holding the nose off but I could not get the plane to accelerate. Luckily it wasn't too short of a field. Talked to a pilot afterward who does lots of this stuff and he had me drop the nose gear to just skim during the takeoff roll. At least in a PA-22 the full aft elevator leads to so much aerodynamic drag that in real world soft field with the addition of rolling drag it can hardly achieve needed takeoff acceleration.
ExperimentalAviator wrote:It was probability his first real soft field op
contactflying wrote:We have covered two 182 accidents recently where no attempt was made to achieve a pressure airspeed sufficient to control the aircraft safely in low ground effect. I expect every instructor here has experienced similar pitched up too soon events in less powerful airplanes. What Patrick is covering in his approach series is not just important for backcountry work. The basic low ground effect takeoff technique will not be there when needed if it is not used except in tight situations.

contactflying wrote:We have covered two 182 accidents recently where no attempt was made to achieve a pressure airspeed sufficient to control the aircraft safely in low ground effect. I expect every instructor here has experienced similar pitched up too soon events in less powerful airplanes. What Patrick is covering in his approach series is not just important for backcountry work. The basic low ground effect takeoff technique will not be there when needed if it is not used except in tight situations.
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