browsed through the new sub-forum last night. was struck that about 90 % of the incidents all seemed to be the same event----- "after touchdown---
xxxxxx happened and I tried to correct with rudder to no effect and then with brake to no effect and the aircraft exited the runway and xxxxxxxxx........"
I would think this indicates that we have lots of pilots who are taking too much for granted and not staying on top of and ahead of the plane on roll-out.
Perhaps we are lulled into a false sense of comfort because the thing flies so good and lands slow. ( I wonder if everybody is checking toe-in and out on their gear legs ?)
I notice many of these incidents also include--- gear leg collapsed during ground loop. (substantial damage to airframe and wings) But this brings up a question----- are the gear legs strong enough ? I THINK I remember seeing where bob had published something to strengthen the legs. I remember where Univair also added an extra tube to their gear legs.
I assume it would be stupid (impossible) to try to make the gear strong enough to withstand any and all insults of side loading--- but at the same time we dont see pipers and cessnas haveing gears folding frequently. Bent on occasion ---
I would think -- as you make it stronger--- there comes a point where you end up moving the damage from the gear to the tubes where the gear attaches----
which at that point maybe the gear is a tiny bit too rigid. But I get the idea we are not at that point yet. ( like the cessnas that have the flat spring gear---
sometimes that gear remains intact but takes out the sheet metal where it attaches---- )
Where are we currently at- in terms of gear strength ? it should be able to tolerate boo-boos that would not otherwise damage other parts. (yes-no ?)
Tim
PS-- one point the reports seem to drive home ---- if after touchdown--- if its anything other than behaved--- jamb the throttle and get airborne again. No reason to feel committed to a landing---- just go around..... once those mains are
off or even "light" ---- less risk of tire traction forcing you off the runway.
PPS----- and another follow on question would be---- is the rudder large enough ? im not qualified to answer that question---- (or maybe even ask it--) but maybe is there a consensus of what "enough" is in terms of rudder authority at low roll out speeds ?
xxxxxx happened and I tried to correct with rudder to no effect and then with brake to no effect and the aircraft exited the runway and xxxxxxxxx........"
I would think this indicates that we have lots of pilots who are taking too much for granted and not staying on top of and ahead of the plane on roll-out.
Perhaps we are lulled into a false sense of comfort because the thing flies so good and lands slow. ( I wonder if everybody is checking toe-in and out on their gear legs ?)
I notice many of these incidents also include--- gear leg collapsed during ground loop. (substantial damage to airframe and wings) But this brings up a question----- are the gear legs strong enough ? I THINK I remember seeing where bob had published something to strengthen the legs. I remember where Univair also added an extra tube to their gear legs.
I assume it would be stupid (impossible) to try to make the gear strong enough to withstand any and all insults of side loading--- but at the same time we dont see pipers and cessnas haveing gears folding frequently. Bent on occasion ---
I would think -- as you make it stronger--- there comes a point where you end up moving the damage from the gear to the tubes where the gear attaches----
which at that point maybe the gear is a tiny bit too rigid. But I get the idea we are not at that point yet. ( like the cessnas that have the flat spring gear---
sometimes that gear remains intact but takes out the sheet metal where it attaches---- )
Where are we currently at- in terms of gear strength ? it should be able to tolerate boo-boos that would not otherwise damage other parts. (yes-no ?)
Tim
PS-- one point the reports seem to drive home ---- if after touchdown--- if its anything other than behaved--- jamb the throttle and get airborne again. No reason to feel committed to a landing---- just go around..... once those mains are
off or even "light" ---- less risk of tire traction forcing you off the runway.
PPS----- and another follow on question would be---- is the rudder large enough ? im not qualified to answer that question---- (or maybe even ask it--) but maybe is there a consensus of what "enough" is in terms of rudder authority at low roll out speeds ?
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