elgoatropo wrote:I advocate not messing with the flaps on rollout. Occasionally it makes sense in extreme crosswind gusts which make it difficult to keep the wheels down...
Barnstormer wrote:Bottom line is do what is right for your skill level, the particular aircraft, and the particular situation - as required.
Max Torque wrote:Barnstormer wrote:Bottom line is do what is right for your skill level, the particular aircraft, and the particular situation - as required.
Exactly!
Tom
elgoatropo wrote:http://joshoverturf.blogspot.com/2013_09_01_archive.html
Note flap position

Zzz wrote:elgoatropo wrote:http://joshoverturf.blogspot.com/2013_09_01_archive.html
Note flap position
Also, the baggage door is open. Coincidence? Or another failed "bush pilot" technique????
elgoatropo wrote:Zzz wrote:elgoatropo wrote:http://joshoverturf.blogspot.com/2013_09_01_archive.html
Note flap position
Also, the baggage door is open. Coincidence? Or another failed "bush pilot" technique????
No, a good rule for flap-dumpers to remember is exit through the baggage door to avoid wrinkling the undersides of your wings.
elgoatropo wrote:"you just pissed cause sleds cant dump the electric flaps? There are lots of good reasons to dump flaps if you trying to come in short short.. but there are a lot of reasons you shouldn't if your not up to snuff in the cockpit too."
Its not a bad technique if you know you have traction. In my experience, if the surface has traction, I probably could have gotten there in a car. I fly a 180 with manual flaps. Is this Lenny?
elgoatropo wrote:Ha! You found me out. Keep dumping those flaps. It means more 180 salvage parts for me. You should start a thread about how not to tie your plane down! Zing!
elgoatropo wrote:Zzz wrote:elgoatropo wrote:http://joshoverturf.blogspot.com/2013_09_01_archive.html
Note flap position
Also, the baggage door is open. Coincidence? Or another failed "bush pilot" technique????
No, a good rule for flap-dumpers to remember is exit through the baggage door to avoid wrinkling the undersides of your wings.

Zzz wrote:For the record, my comment was tongue-in-cheek.

Barnstormer wrote:elgoatropo wrote:I advocate not messing with the flaps on rollout. Occasionally it makes sense in extreme crosswind gusts which make it difficult to keep the wheels down...
I'm not a CFI, nor am I a commercial pilot.
What I have learned from flying a number of different aircraft (from C150's to Warbirds), and from friends who've flown far more varied aircraft than I, is that you can't make definitive statements about aircraft or flying techniques. I'm not meaning any disrespect here, but there are a lot of student/new/low skill pilots that frequent this forum and I don't think its a good idea to encourage them to see things only one way, in any aspect of aircraft or flying.
One of my planes is a Mackey SQ-2, an experimental Super Cub. It's very light in the tail. It has 9' Doug Keller Double Slotted Fowler Flaps that are 62.5 degrees when fully lowered. Once the tailwheel is on, or is on its way to the ground, and the main gear is on, (so I'm no longer flying the wing) I am raising the flaps - EVERY TIME. Reason being with the tail down, and the wing at a very high angle of attack (because of the 6" extended gear, and the 35's), lowered flaps very effectively blank out much of the horizontal stabilizer/elevator's effectiveness as the aircraft comes to a stop and receiving essentially no wind from the prop.
Another is a Cessna 185. Even empty the tail has some heft to it. In addition it has extended baggage where I store the tool kit, wing covers, windshield cover, survival kit, laptop, etc. One normal person cannot lift the tail. The only time I'm likely to raise the flaps early upon landing is in a strong crosswind, otherwise it's later in the rollout - with no rush.
Bottom line is do what is right for your skill level, the particular aircraft, and the particular situation - as required.
elgoatropo wrote:Phil, thanks for the thoughtful post. In a stock cub with big tires, would you be more likely to do it like your Mackey, or the Cessna?...

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