steingar Posted September 20, 2018 Report Posted September 20, 2018 Keep in mind that coming in too fast isn't the only way to get a really good bounce. Come in too slowly, and you won't be able to counteract the sink in the flair. Those rubber donuts will return all that downward energy and reward you with a lovely bounce. Easily recovered, but no fun nonetheless. 1 Quote
MyNameIsNobody Posted September 20, 2018 Report Posted September 20, 2018 Humans have the ability to FUBAR any task. Have you seen some of the attempts to extricate from or into a parking spot? Add in another dimension and Mooney pucks and let the fun begin. EVERYONE has bounced their Mooney, but hey if you were alone and nobody but Nobody witnessed it....Didn’t happen. No prangs, no foul. Carry on. Quote
jaylw314 Posted September 20, 2018 Report Posted September 20, 2018 12 hours ago, EricJ said: Oddly enough, slip angles on tires during racing are similar to angle of attack on an airfoil, enough so that if the car is pushing out on a corner when the front tires are on the back side of the slip angle curve (i.e., too much angle of attack), you can *increase* the rate of turn by decreasing the input angle of the steering wheel. Like dropping the nose to fly higher, it is initially counter-intuitive. I love stuff like that. www.dirtfish.com Another good way to waste a couple AMU's... Quote
jaylw314 Posted September 20, 2018 Report Posted September 20, 2018 13 hours ago, Yetti said: Same way you do when landing a sailboat at a dock. Too fast and you smack the dock. Too little and your bow man gets wet. Isn't that an excessively wordy way of saying TLAR (that looks about right)? Quote
pdxphil Posted September 20, 2018 Report Posted September 20, 2018 Very happy to see this week's why-do-Mooneys-porpoise question include sailing references! Quote
Yetti Posted September 20, 2018 Author Report Posted September 20, 2018 16 minutes ago, jaylw314 said: Isn't that an excessively wordy way of saying TLAR (that looks about right)? You can write a program for what's constant and repeatable. Winds are rarely repeatable. Learn to fly the plane to the conditions presented at the time. Quote
steingar Posted September 20, 2018 Report Posted September 20, 2018 43 minutes ago, jaylw314 said: www.dirtfish.com Another good way to waste a couple AMU's... People need to be taught how to drive a car on dirt? Really? Quote
jaylw314 Posted September 20, 2018 Report Posted September 20, 2018 12 minutes ago, steingar said: People need to be taught how to drive a car on dirt? Really? Yes, and it helps to drive someone ELSE's car Quote
Piloto Posted September 20, 2018 Report Posted September 20, 2018 Flaps down on landing induces a down pitch inducing porpoising that can only be overcome by cutting power, full aft yoke and rising the flaps. On gusty conditions I always raise the flaps just before touchdown. José Quote
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