Impossible Turn
Posted: Wed Jul 26, 2017 3:32 am
Everyone will tell you that it is impossible to
turn back, in a little single, after engine failure
after takeoff, and land on the same runway you
took off on, in the opposite direction.
While this is terribly egalitarian, and levels
everyone down, it isn't actually true.
See, [u]what the airframe is capable o[/u]f, and
[u]what the pilot is capable of[/u], are very different.
The [u]pilot's abilities are almost always a subset
of the aircraft's capabilties[/u]. Few pilots are
capable of flying precisely to the limit of an
aircraft's performance, defined as being the
border of the Vg diagram.
[img]https://www.metabunk.org/data/MetaMirro ... 36077e.jpg[/img]
In Canada, there's Pete MacLeod and that's about
it. Maybe Gerry Younger, but he's really old. No
one else can repeatedly and precisely fly an aircraft
around all the edges of that Vg diagram.
A turnback actually isn't very hard or dangerous,
with just a little bit of theory and training.
Most people think you're going to die in
power-off steep turn, and that's because
they are too lazy or stupid to learn about
the basics of lift.
All aerobatics pilots learn that your stall
speed is a function of G.
No one cares, but the governing equation,
which is easily derived from the lift equation is:
[b]Vs(G) = Vs(1G) x sqrt(G)[/b]
Ask any TC Inspector to derive that on
the back of any envelope at lunch. I
will happily do so, if you buy lunch.
With +4G, your stall speed is doubled.
Look at any Vg diagram to confirm that.
[b]But with 0G, your stall speed is zero.[/b]
Think about that. This is true in any
aircraft. If you don't pull any G with
the wings, no lift is developed and
there is no AOA.
In the EFATO turnback, you will have a
lot of bank - I use 60 degrees, see Prof
Dave Rogers USNA, 1991 - but you let the
nose drop and [b]don't pull any G[/b].
If you do what I say - and few do - you
won't stall. Your AOA will be quite low,
because you aren't working the wing hard
in the turn. You aren't asking it to make
any lift.
Any proficient aerobatic pilot will easily
perform the power-off descending steep
turn and point back at the runway. Easy.
But here's the hard part: [b]making the departure
end of the runway![/b]
See, [b]most airplanes glide power-off at a steeper
angle than they climb[/b]. Re-read that.
So, if you have a short runway, no headwind,
and a shallow climbout, you might not make
it back to the runway.
However, if you have a long runway, some
headwind (tailwind on the return) and a steep
climbout, you can make the runway.
Oh yeah, always turn into the crosswind. Don't
just turn left all the time, ok?
So on takeoff, you climb steeply and when the
engine burps, immediately crank the aileron all
the way over into the crosswind and [b]let the nose
drop[/b]. Trim selection can help here. If you haul
back in the turn, bad things can happen. Soft hands.
Most people like to practice it at altitude. Ok.
With some instruction, training, practice and
preparation, this really isn't so hard. I can do
this and eat a sandwich at the same time, and
I'm not too bright, so I'm sure any four bars
can do it. Ask them to show you.
turn back, in a little single, after engine failure
after takeoff, and land on the same runway you
took off on, in the opposite direction.
While this is terribly egalitarian, and levels
everyone down, it isn't actually true.
See, [u]what the airframe is capable o[/u]f, and
[u]what the pilot is capable of[/u], are very different.
The [u]pilot's abilities are almost always a subset
of the aircraft's capabilties[/u]. Few pilots are
capable of flying precisely to the limit of an
aircraft's performance, defined as being the
border of the Vg diagram.
[img]https://www.metabunk.org/data/MetaMirro ... 36077e.jpg[/img]
In Canada, there's Pete MacLeod and that's about
it. Maybe Gerry Younger, but he's really old. No
one else can repeatedly and precisely fly an aircraft
around all the edges of that Vg diagram.
A turnback actually isn't very hard or dangerous,
with just a little bit of theory and training.
Most people think you're going to die in
power-off steep turn, and that's because
they are too lazy or stupid to learn about
the basics of lift.
All aerobatics pilots learn that your stall
speed is a function of G.
No one cares, but the governing equation,
which is easily derived from the lift equation is:
[b]Vs(G) = Vs(1G) x sqrt(G)[/b]
Ask any TC Inspector to derive that on
the back of any envelope at lunch. I
will happily do so, if you buy lunch.
With +4G, your stall speed is doubled.
Look at any Vg diagram to confirm that.
[b]But with 0G, your stall speed is zero.[/b]
Think about that. This is true in any
aircraft. If you don't pull any G with
the wings, no lift is developed and
there is no AOA.
In the EFATO turnback, you will have a
lot of bank - I use 60 degrees, see Prof
Dave Rogers USNA, 1991 - but you let the
nose drop and [b]don't pull any G[/b].
If you do what I say - and few do - you
won't stall. Your AOA will be quite low,
because you aren't working the wing hard
in the turn. You aren't asking it to make
any lift.
Any proficient aerobatic pilot will easily
perform the power-off descending steep
turn and point back at the runway. Easy.
But here's the hard part: [b]making the departure
end of the runway![/b]
See, [b]most airplanes glide power-off at a steeper
angle than they climb[/b]. Re-read that.
So, if you have a short runway, no headwind,
and a shallow climbout, you might not make
it back to the runway.
However, if you have a long runway, some
headwind (tailwind on the return) and a steep
climbout, you can make the runway.
Oh yeah, always turn into the crosswind. Don't
just turn left all the time, ok?
So on takeoff, you climb steeply and when the
engine burps, immediately crank the aileron all
the way over into the crosswind and [b]let the nose
drop[/b]. Trim selection can help here. If you haul
back in the turn, bad things can happen. Soft hands.
Most people like to practice it at altitude. Ok.
With some instruction, training, practice and
preparation, this really isn't so hard. I can do
this and eat a sandwich at the same time, and
I'm not too bright, so I'm sure any four bars
can do it. Ask them to show you.