gmcjetpilot
 
 
  Joined: 04 Nov 2006 Posts: 170
 
  | 
		
			
				 Posted: Tue Jan 16, 2007 11:44 am    Post subject: Learning Basic Aileron in RV (HOW TO DO ROLLS) | 
				     | 
			 
			
				
  | 
			 
			
				Dear Acro Want-to-be's:
    
   *Aerobatics is not a black art and we can talk about it.
 *The plane flys the same upside down as right side-up.
 *As a CFI, I recommend you get dual instruction.
 *With that said there are many books on the subject.
    
   *HERE IS MY RV ACRO "for dummies" explanation:
 
   (note: I assume you are current and can fly all 
 private pilot maneuvers, steep turns, stalls (accel, 
 power on/off) and slow flight, unusual attitude recover. 
 Go practice all PVT maneuvers till you are comfortable.
 
   QUICK: What is nose low unusual attitude recovery?
 (power back, wings lever, pitch up to recover, 1,2,3)
 This should be done smoothly with rushing or panic.
    
    
   **ACRO FOR RV's**
    
   First consider a G meter? I don't do acro without 
 one and also a parachute. 
  
 You can do  acro all day at 3 g's. Any more you 
 are doing it wrong. 
  
 A split-S started at cruise could kill you, 
 meaning speed will go over Vne easy if entered 
 at a speed that is too high, about 100-110 mph.  
  
 Get some dual with an experienced pilot. Fly 
 under acro gross weight. If you can't do that in 
 your RV use another RV for dual instruction. To 
 be legal with two people, both need a parachute. 
 Strangely solo you don't need a parachute. 
 (Anyone want to bet me? I could use the $20.)  
  
 The old joke: "Anyone who teaches them self to 
 do acro has a fool for an instructor." Many 
 famous acro pilots had fools for instructors. We 
 don't hear from those who where not successful 
 who taught there self. 
  
 General rules: 
 You should plan on starting (and finishing) all 
 maneuvers at Va or less, about 135-140 mph, at 
 altitudes at or above 3,000 agl. Also before 
 undertaking  Acro, you should practice and be 
 proficient on all your private pilot maneuvers, 
 like: slow flight, steep turns, stall (power 
 on/off/accelerated from different attitudes), 
 unusual attitude recovery and explore initial stall 
 entry / recovery. 
  
 ROLLS 
 I break it down into two lessons. Lesson one 
 practice leading up to doing rolls starts with first 
 practicing pitching up smoothly to 30-45 degrees 
 and than neutralize the stick (release back 
 pressure). A quick (small) push forward so you 
 unload the plane, but no pitch down or zero g's, 
 just natural. That is the end of the first 
 maneuver. Just lower the nose, accelerate and 
 recover level. Repeat until you smoothly pitch up 
 to 45 and neutralize the elevator quickly and 
 naturally (remember speed 140 max, 3,000' agl 
 and look for traffic).  
  
 The second lesson: Series of rapid left and right 
 banks while staying on a heading or point  - Start 
 with 20 degrees and increase the bank angle 
 until you can smoothly roll rapidly back and forth 
 w/ out the heading going all over. This teaches 
 you to use larger stick deflections than usual and 
 not to put pitch inputs into it. We all tend to 
 bank, than yank. You don't do that when you 
 roll. In fact you may add fwd stick with full stick 
 aileron deflection as you get more advance.  
  
 "THE ROLL" combines the two lessons. Start at 
 Va (about 135-140 mph) with the pitch up, than 
 stick relaxed. One is your natural 45 pitch 
 attitude, smoothly apply a large (near full) 
 aileron deflection in the desired direction and 
 HOLD IT THERE until the world looks right again. 
 Left is easier due to engine torque. You can keep 
 your feet flat on the floor for beginners. Wrong 
 rudder inputs are worse than none. Quickly 
 neutralize the stick when you come around 360 
 degrees of roll level. You should be  in a slight 
 nose low attitude, close to your original heading. 
 Recover straight and level. DONE 
  
 Cautions: 
 DONT RELAX THE ROLL INPUT. HOLD IT ALL THE 
 WAY. It's common to not to put enough aileron in 
 or neutralize it during the roll as it progresses to 
 the inverted. Now you're inverted, diving. 
 Lesson is keep the roll going by keeping the 
 aileron into it. Get in trouble keep rolling. 
  
 DO release the back pressure before you roll or 
 you'll do a Barrel Roll or worse. That's not what 
 you are after. Too much back pressure can 
 result in a dive or a Split-S. Speed can build 
 quickly in a dive. Remember your unusual 
 attitude recovery and pull the power back to idle 
 if you get pointed down and going too fast, roll 
 to nearest wings level and recover.  
  
 I described a basic beginner RV aileron roll, not 
 a perfect one. That's the beauty of the RV's, 
 they roll very  nicely with no rudder due to the 
 Frise type ailerons. There's more to it, but this 
 should keep you out of trouble. You can enter 
 these maneuvers faster, but it requires more 
 skill and control. You can pull the wings of the 
 plane if you pull/push to hard at higher speeds.
   
 Fly Safe, George
 
    [url=http://us.rd.yahoo.com/evt=49935/*http://games.yahoo.com]Bored stiff?[/url] Loosen up...
 [url=http://us.rd.yahoo.com/evt=49935/*http://games.yahoo.com]Download and play hundreds of games for free[/url] on Yahoo! Games. [quote][b]
 
  |  | - The Matronics RV-List Email Forum - |  |   |  Use the List Feature Navigator to browse the many List utilities available such as the Email Subscriptions page, Archive Search & Download, 7-Day Browse, Chat, FAQ, Photoshare, and much more:
 
  http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?RV-List |  
  |  
 
 
 
 
  | 
			 
		  |