

Now, as for me the Rebel moniker is an accident of my plane, a Murphy Rebel, I am upgrading to a skywagon so that may change. I do think of myself as rebellious in my own way leaning toward individual rights, which for me means a bit left, which I think means the P factor in my plane is even more pronounced.1SeventyZ wrote:"Please answer this simple question to help keep spambots out:
Name one of the 4 contributing factors to left-turning tendency in an aircraft."
Maybe I need a new question.
mtv wrote:NCBearhawk,
DonC's link described ALL the forces we lump into "left turning tendency", not just P-factor. That phenomenon is a lot more complex than just P-factor.
MTV
1SeventyZ wrote:Are the 4 main factors (torque, pitch factor (p-factor), gyroscopic force, slipstream) that contribute to left turning tendency in an aircraft something that has only recently been taught in the FAA Private curriculum?
The reason I bring this up is because I ask this question in the registration form to prove the registrant is not a spam bot, and about 25% don't answer 1 of the above factors.

Skystrider wrote:1SeventyZ wrote:"Please answer this simple question to help keep spambots out:
Name one of the 4 contributing factors to left-turning tendency in an aircraft."
Maybe I need a new question.
How about "Name them there flat thingys sticking out the sides of the aeroplaney"?
Fisherman wrote:Skystrider wrote:1SeventyZ wrote:"Please answer this simple question to help keep spambots out:
Name one of the 4 contributing factors to left-turning tendency in an aircraft."
Maybe I need a new question.
How about "Name them there flat thingys sticking out the sides of the aeroplaney"?
WANGS!

mtv wrote:Bob,
Precisely the same thing, only in the opposite direction. Then, it's called....(drum roll....) RIght turning tendency.
The Wilga and any of the other airplanes running CCW rotating engines such as the M-14P will exhibit this characteristic. Everything works precisely the same, just to the right instead of to the left.
An interesting historical note that is pertinent:
Most of the Messerschmit ME (BF if you prefer) 109 aircraft operated during the war were destroyed at the end of hostilities. The Spanish, however, got some not yet completed airframes, and many of the fixtures to build the airplane. The Spanish government (at least I think it was the Spaniards) assembled a number of these airplanes AFTER the war, to use in their own air force. Unfortunately, the Spaniards didn't have access to any of the Daimler or ?? engines that the Germans had used in the ME 109, so they substituted an engine built in Spain by Hispano Suiza. Problem was that the original ME 109 engine and the Hispano engine turned opposite directions.
By all accounts, the Messerschmit was a handful on the runway in any case. I can't even imagine what those Spanish airplanes must have been like, with the prop turning the wrong way, and the tail aligned for the original engine.
MTV
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