JTFC Mooney Accident

Aircraft Accident & Crash Investigation Topics
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Slick Goodlin
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Joined: Thu Jan 16, 2020 3:24 am

Far as I know, Mooneys have a single-piece wing from tip to tip and as a result are said to be exceptionally strong. At one time I was told the only Mooney that had suffered an in-flight wing failure was being repeatedly flown through a tornado, which was probably exaggerated but none the less illustrated that it’s a very strong structure.

Having said that, how on earth do you do this to one?
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Nark
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This one?
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Slick Goodlin
Posts: 846
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Yeah, that’d be the one.
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Colonel
Posts: 2431
Joined: Wed Jan 15, 2020 10:02 pm
Location: Over The Runway

how on earth do you do this
Shot in the dark: +16 G's

sqrt(16) = 4 x 80 mph stall = 320 mph

seems doable. Slippery airplanes and low-time pilots in cloud that don't
get the auto-pilot on, are not a good combination.

People like to make instrument flying far too complicated. If you can't see
a horizon, get on the attitude indicator. And if you're low-time, see if you
can get the autopilot on.

JFK jr anyone?

-- EDIT --

Tucker said he indicated 280 mph in his highly modified Pitts during his
10 descending snap rolls airshow sequence. That's +14G or thereabouts.
With Steve Wolf wings, of course.

Steve Wolf is the most amazing person you have never heard of. He is
not only a highly skilled pilot, but also a brilliant engineer. Most people
aren't even one of those. He is both. Smell the tiny overlap of those
Venn diagrams.
As God as my witness, I thought turkeys could fly.
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Colonel
Posts: 2431
Joined: Wed Jan 15, 2020 10:02 pm
Location: Over The Runway

Note: every pilot should (at some point in their flight training) read this book. It's not very expensive.

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In it, you will read that a torsional load should be reduced to 2/3 of the
design (not ultimate G). This is important. Remember that.

This is pretty neat, when you think of Tucker's ten descending +14G
snap rolls. This implies that Steve's wings are good for a design (not
ultimate) load of +21G.

Pretty impressive!

Reminds me of Skip Stewart, whom over time broke and upgraded
pretty well everything on his Pitts. He broke the gas tank mount. He
broke the seat. Kept blowing the canopy off under high negative G.
He even managed to bend the I-strut, which is probably the strongest
part of the airplane. What a guy!



He lost his card for that, but IMHO it was worth it.



Skip flies freight for a living. I suspect passengers might complain.
As God as my witness, I thought turkeys could fly.
vanNostrum
Posts: 137
Joined: Thu Jan 16, 2020 4:08 am

" In it, you will read that a torsional load should be reduced to 2/3 of the
design (not ultimate G). This is important. Remember that."
WHITE KNIGHT.jpg

I wonder what the torsional load is in the middle of the wing
if the fuselages pitch at a different angle
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