Hi,
I'm looking into installing larger flap skins on my Stinson 108 and I was reading some comments questioning the usefulness of reducing stall/approach speeds with STOL mods and I had to help myself justify all the added work and expense of my fun...
There are some people who don't think a few mph drop in stall speed is "worth it" and they are welcome to their opinion but I just wanted to point out that STOL modifications are not just practical but are also for safety.
A drop in stall speed could save your life in more ways than one. It gives you an added linear stall speed margin in flight but it also gives you an exponential margin on landing. I'm going to use stall speeds for convenience but the same would be true with reductions in approach speed.
Kinetic energy increases at the square of speed so, for instance on a Stinson 108, a set of VGs with a claimed 8% drop in a 61 mph stall speed and consequently, approach speed (4.5 mph) kinetic energy drops over 14%. A Cub that gets a 16% drop in stall (43mph to 37mph) would get a whopping 26% drop in kinetic energy at the lower speed.
Sure, lower stall speeds are great in the air, but ultimately, It's kinetic energy that kills you in a crash so speed reduction yields even greater dividends, exponential ones, where the plane meets the ground. STOL mods save lives. Now... where's my rivet gun?
