Beautiful day here in the central valley California. Hot weather let up some. Nice; even in the late morning.
Have been doing a thing where I fly often in the local area and pattern lately. Short flights and landing practice several days a week.
Today I decided to do some air work and was practicing stalls and slow flight, 45 degree bank turns and such.
Tried something that I haven't done in some time and likely never exactly this way. I tried to induce a stall from a low airspeed turn by hauling back on the yoke in the turn. My 12D-85 is a bit on the heavy side so it stalls at about 44 statute, or packing a bit of power maybe down to just above 40 or so.
I got it down to 50 with the throttle back and let the nose stabilize in about a 30 degree turn and hauled back on the yoke. The ole girl did a little shutter and flopped her wings around a bit and didn't do much else as I let off on the back pressure. (I was thinking more of an accelerated stall so I didn't hold it back when it didn't happen).
I just wanted to see how badly it would behave with that kind of abuse of the controls, but I wasn't trying to do a routine accelerated stall, which I know is done differently.
Never have been able to get this one to flop out over the top like you can in an Aerobat 150. As I remember you can get the Aerobat to either roll over the top, that is an easy recovery, or out the bottom which can get pretty exciting. All the 12D does is shake. rattle and no roll. Chuckle. I would guess that is a good thing.
Anyway it was a fun flight, much better than going around the pattern and I think I learned a little something more about the plane.
DC
Have been doing a thing where I fly often in the local area and pattern lately. Short flights and landing practice several days a week.
Today I decided to do some air work and was practicing stalls and slow flight, 45 degree bank turns and such.
Tried something that I haven't done in some time and likely never exactly this way. I tried to induce a stall from a low airspeed turn by hauling back on the yoke in the turn. My 12D-85 is a bit on the heavy side so it stalls at about 44 statute, or packing a bit of power maybe down to just above 40 or so.
I got it down to 50 with the throttle back and let the nose stabilize in about a 30 degree turn and hauled back on the yoke. The ole girl did a little shutter and flopped her wings around a bit and didn't do much else as I let off on the back pressure. (I was thinking more of an accelerated stall so I didn't hold it back when it didn't happen).
I just wanted to see how badly it would behave with that kind of abuse of the controls, but I wasn't trying to do a routine accelerated stall, which I know is done differently.
Never have been able to get this one to flop out over the top like you can in an Aerobat 150. As I remember you can get the Aerobat to either roll over the top, that is an easy recovery, or out the bottom which can get pretty exciting. All the 12D does is shake. rattle and no roll. Chuckle. I would guess that is a good thing.
Anyway it was a fun flight, much better than going around the pattern and I think I learned a little something more about the plane.
DC
Comment