Tito wrote:Used to be a BP pilot here. He claims its the flaps on the Husky causing the problem. Hit your wake with the flaps down and it would blank out the tail and cause the nose to pitch down. Im sure these guys are flying more aggressive than some fish cop spotting game. Take it for what its worth. The same pilots never had that problem in thousands of hours of super cubs.
For some, even empirical evidence will not sway their positions, let alone the wisdom of blue collar bush pilot.
I have learned a ton from all of these posts above. I appreciate people sharing their beliefs for some of us not-so-experienced pilots. The Husky and Cub are both on my short list when I manage to scrape the schillings together. I won't be flying anything, circling low and slow, ever. Too much to lose.
For me, when I hear that numerous pilots, flying low and slow for a living, for many years and thousands of hours, say that the Husky has a more pronounced "tuck" in certain wake conditions, than the "other" planes they have flown for thousands of hours, I will file that in the memory bank!
I cannot consider these hightimers the enemies of logic. How could I?
Experience is the world's greatest teacher......it gives the Test first........then the lesson. It would be easier to call "bu!!sh!t" than to heed, except that the benefits are greater for me when in their position.
