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zinhwk
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Posted: Mon Jan 26, 2015 8:32 pm |
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Joined: Sat Nov 09, 2013 2:42 pm Posts: 392
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Instant flip over, no, especially on a field. LW planes were designed to land on prepared grass fields, front lines blitzkrieg and all that. Were instant flip overs in 190s? Those seem to have ridiculously sensitive reaction over the pitch axis when it either goes off runway or the smallest amount of brake pressure applied. It could be going 20mph with the stick back and still flip right over.
I'm not a certified pilot either, but extreme failure for slipping off the runway seems excessive, ground looping perhaps, or damaged gear maybe, but sudden explosion?
When in doubt, keep it tween the lines.
<S> Zinhwk
HADES Flight 475th FG (v) zinhwk@fly-jg77.com
Windows 10.1 AMD A10 6800K Black Edition (OC 4.2Ghz) 16 GB DDR3 GeForce GTX 770Ti 1TB SATA Western Digital "Blue" HDD 24" LG LED 1080p CH Controls
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Columbo
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Posted: Tue Jan 27, 2015 3:28 pm |
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Joined: Wed Nov 13, 2013 4:50 pm Posts: 2
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It can be surprising just how "sticky" real world turf can be. It doesn't have to be very soft before the drag created is very evident. My friend Bill Bunn put a P47C on it's nose when he taxied off the edge of the pavement into the soft soil along the edge. We got the B-17 stuck on dry turf in Florida when the pilot pivoted on one wheel while parking and spun the tiniest of little depressions. It took nearly cruise power to break loose.
That being said I've taken off in a 206 and left ruts 4-6 inches deep until I had some speed up. Takeoff roll was probably double the norm that time, directional control was challenging.
The sticky grass in Warbirds is pretty sticky, IIRC it was started to stop things like guys driving B25s around the field killing tanks.
Now don't get testy, but if you're having issues with nosing over landing (with or without flaps) it's more a technique problem than a FM problem. Nearly everyone lands too fast in Warbirds which means you have to fly the airplane onto the runway. Wrong in so many ways.
Slow the airplane down, on short final any increase in pitch should cause the stall horn to come on. A smooth gentle flare to a nose slightly high attitude then just let the airplane settle onto the runway. If sink rate picks up use a little bit of power to arrest the sink perhaps combined with a slight increase in pitch attitude. If you just increased pitch you will likely stall and "arrive" rather than "land".
Remember also that stick back increases brake pressure so if you're starting to nose over you can ease the stick forward and usually stop the forward pitch, if not just release brakes completely.
The slower you are at touchdown the less braking it takes to stop and the less inertia the aircraft has -- less likely to nose over.
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jabo
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Posted: Sat Jan 31, 2015 3:11 am |
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Joined: Fri Nov 08, 2013 12:38 am Posts: 1470
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You can set the sticky grass outside the artwork by putting in a bounding box. Some designers like it really tight to the field art while others give you some serious latitude. This effects all planes equally but how they behave to sticky grass is different and is set in the FM I think. This is the number one complaint and sometimes when the sticky grass is so close to the ending of the field causes more grief than it should. I am on the fence if it should be as tight as it is sometimes or more space given. I think for MA terrains much more space should probably be provided.
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jabo
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Posted: Tue Feb 03, 2015 3:49 am |
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Joined: Fri Nov 08, 2013 12:38 am Posts: 1470
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The only way I know of turning off sticky grass is to place a bounding box over an area. Road tool objects are supposed to stop sticky grass but we have seen too much of it appear where it should not. Still not sure why it happens in some areas and not others.
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