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Flaps....Plain, Slotted, or Fowler??

  • Thread starter Thread starter BradG
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ShawnC said:
Actaully it does when the DE asks what type of flaps are on the aircraft.

That's what I make out to be a running joke where I work: What to say when the DE asks what kind the Seminole has. I've heard everything except fowler: plain, slotted, semi-slotted :eek: ,
and split (hey, part of them drops from underneath the nacelle, so they must be split, right?). Whatever. As soon as Piper tells me what kind they are, I'll share it with anyone who asks. Until then, I don't really care. :D
 
The wing flap system in a cesna 172 according to the POH ,
on page 7-10 describes it as a " single slot type wing flap ''

but personally i refer to them as "slotted fowler flaps "

The Guru.
 
Typhoon is right....these inane discussions get out of hand sometimes here @ FSI. In fact, a few instructors in the heat of debate walked the two blocks down to Piper where they were told that they are.....drumroll.....slotted flaps!

Chunk
 
Stupid flight school discussions

Chunk said:
Typhoon is right....these inane discussions get out of hand sometimes here @ FSI . . . .
I'll second that, and especially a few FAR controversies. We had a Chief Pilot at FSI who was convinced that instructors could count their students' approaches as their own for currency. He was also convinced, and tried to convince us, that we could count their night landings as ours. The cheapass didn't want to provide instructors with proficiency time.

(BTW, Chunk, the gentleman in question has been gone for ten years. I know of at least two of his successors, and worked closely with one, and both were vast improvements.)

We had frequent, similar debates at ERAU, too. I'm sure that Tso will agree that ERAU is the home of stupid, and heated, aviation debates, especially those surrounding the Seminole fuel system.

Having said all that, these debates, stupid or not, stimulate learning. They cause you to go into the books and manuals and look up things with a purpose in mind other than just to memorize them for some practical. When learning is purposeful (FOI), you learn, even if just to settle some inane debate.
 
What is there to debate about a Seminole's fuel system?

If anything, the emergency gear release is debate fodder. It's not described well at all!

Chunk
 
Seminole fuel system

Chunk said:
What is there to debate about a Seminole's fuel system?

If anything, the emergency gear release is debate fodder. It's not described well at all!
There seems to be an ongoing debate as to the number of fuel pumps in a Seminole. This has been controversial because DEs seem to have differing opinions.

Some people believe that the primers and throttle pumps count as fuel pumps, along with the electric boost pumps and the regular engine-driven pumps. Somehow, the Janitrol is inserted in this debate somewhere. These debates abounded at Riddle and were also present to a lesser degree during my FSI days.

I won't take a position here on Seminole fuel pumps here because this is a flap discussion, or, shall I say, a flap over flaps! :D
 
Okay...you won't join the fray, but I will.

Old Seminole - 5 pumps (2 mechanical, 2 electrical boost, 1 janitrol)

New Seminole -6 (same as before, but 2 on the "Janitorial" heater) Why 2 on the the heater now? Haven't gotten a straight answer on that.

Chunk
 
Chunk said:
Typhoon is right....these inane discussions get out of hand sometimes here @ FSI.
My favorite FSI checkride question came from a four-striper (whose initials are K.P.) who wanted to know where the Seminole's props are manufactured.

Yeah. That's useful knowledge during an engine failure...
 
Typhoon1244 said:
My favorite FSI checkride question came from a four-striper (whose initials are K.P.) who wanted to know where the Seminole's props are manufactured.

Yeah. That's useful knowledge during an engine failure...

Well I know what I would say:
"Up your a$$, stick to the Oral Guide, and PTS a$$hole."

And no I don't care if he would have failed me for saying that.
 
I heard a lot about that guy even though he's long gone. I guess he barely fit his inflated noggin in the aircraft.

I heard he got spanked quite a few times for crap like that. I'd almost want to get busted for it just for the chance to b*tch about him....

We have a few ego's around (well, maybe leaving soon)....I still have one more checkride to go, then I'll talk! ;)

Chunk
 
Fuel to the fire

A very knowledgeable instructor once showed me that the technical aerodynamic definition of a fowler flap is one that increases the wing surface area by at least 25%. I can't recall where he got the info.

In any event, as long as they drop when I tell em to, its all good.
 
Or there was the check airman who asked how many fan blades there are on the N1 fan for the CRJ. That's real useful to know. (28 by the way) I can see it now, "Captain, we just lost the number 18 fan blade!"
 
Releases where? Not back to the resevoir, as is commonly thought. Why do the gear come down MUCH faster with more force using the emergency knob?
 
Re: Seminole fuel system

bobbysamd said:
There seems to be an ongoing debate as to the number of fuel pumps in a Seminole. This has been controversial because DEs seem to have differing opinions.

Ditto for where I work. Not to compare apples and oranges, but you'll see that in larger aircraft, too. For example, ACA claims the CRJ has three fuel tanks: two in the wings and a CFT. However, ASA counts five, as they count the collector tanks, which are arguably integral to the wing tanks, separately.

(Don't you hate it when you ask a question and the response you get is, "Depends on who you ask"?)
 

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