aviator1978
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 3, 2005
- Posts
- 93
There's an older 172 at my flight school with a heavy left wing. In cruise flight, in order to fly hands off, rudder input has to be such that the ball is deflected to the left, fully outside the "window". As such, the rudder trim tab has been bent to accomplish this wings-level cruise flight.
It's all fine and dandy, till I start teaching students stalls. Keeping the plane coordinated (i.e. ball centered) and wings-level during power-on stalls requires nearly full right aileron deflection at the stall and a quite sudden wing drop. This never seems to make my students very happy.
What I've been showing the students, is to keep the ailerons neutral through out the approach to the stall, and use the rudder to keep the wings level. The plane will then stall straight forward, with the ball deflected.
Is this the right method?
A student asked me why this "uncoordinated" stall results in a better recovery. Quite honestly, I don't know the answer. Why is this? As far as I can tell there isn't any installation error in the inclinometer.
I'm sure some responses will be to tell the maintaince to fix this. Believe me, I have.
It's all fine and dandy, till I start teaching students stalls. Keeping the plane coordinated (i.e. ball centered) and wings-level during power-on stalls requires nearly full right aileron deflection at the stall and a quite sudden wing drop. This never seems to make my students very happy.
What I've been showing the students, is to keep the ailerons neutral through out the approach to the stall, and use the rudder to keep the wings level. The plane will then stall straight forward, with the ball deflected.
Is this the right method?
A student asked me why this "uncoordinated" stall results in a better recovery. Quite honestly, I don't know the answer. Why is this? As far as I can tell there isn't any installation error in the inclinometer.
I'm sure some responses will be to tell the maintaince to fix this. Believe me, I have.