Hello, all, Im new here, Basically i have been spending a few Hrs flying a ICP Savannah before buying my own STOL aircraft, and im From OZ.... anyway back to Stalls..
Fistrly i believe Stalls and how they are handles is overly complicated, as said before, any aircraft can be stalled, but the stall, i feel, is greatly mis-understood.
The Stall is simply a function of AoA. nothing more. with enough time in any aircraft, the stall will come at a certain stick position every time, in the Savannah after a few hrs i came to learn instinctively where the stick position will be to induce a stall.
I am willing to bet, that everyone was taught, never stall in a turn, or at least to never practice it... now. remember that the stall is a function of AOA only, when in a turn., steep or lower rates, when the stick reaches its stall point and the wing begins to stall, the natural reaction will be to roll it straight, this will be dangerous as it will change to AOA on each wing and create a difficult and very dangerous situation, the simple way to recover is to simply push the stick forward from its stall point, this will lower the AOA and recover from the stall. with practice it becomes instinct and recovery will come with little or no altitude loss.
they way i was taught this initially was to begin to do my aerobatic rating with a well know instructor, he demonstrated this stall recovery technique,
by removing the mystery and myth about the stall, and teaching just how simple it is, AOA and stick position only, he then went on to demonstrate stall recoveries from almost every conceivable attitude, including a very steep climb (70deg up) and from the inverted..
even inverted going over the top of a loop, stall recovery is simply push the stick forward, just a small movement to get it from its stall position... returning the AOA to just 1 or 2 degress below its stall AOA..
With practice, and the right information, the Stall isnt this dreaded monster, but an easily controlled and understood event.
I strongly recommend going up with a aero instructor if not just to practice and understand the stick position and the stall from unusual attitudes.
this is the Savannah, fitted with either fixed slats or VG's
