04 May 2025, 16:04 [ UTC - 5; DST ]
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Username Protected
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Post subject: Re: Homesick Angel... Vy climbs Posted: 11 Apr 2023, 21:15 |
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Joined: 12/07/17 Posts: 6976 Post Likes: +5868 Company: Malco Power Design Location: KLVJ
Aircraft: 1976 Baron 58
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Here’s one for the piston crowd. Just me and some gas on a cool morning. Attachment: AA6EBB21-3E8B-4434-A636-35E9B3A8DD37.jpeg
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Post subject: Re: Homesick Angel... Vy climbs Posted: 15 Apr 2023, 11:10 |
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Joined: 12/10/07 Posts: 34627 Post Likes: +13256 Location: Minneapolis, MN (KFCM)
Aircraft: 1970 Baron B55
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Username Protected wrote: I don’t have any pictures since I’m hand flying it solo, but with one on board and a nice cool morning, it’s fun to hold the rv in ground effect and accelerate to 130ish and then pull back for 87 at the end of the runway. It will hit 4k fpm for a few seconds and then gradually settle in to something around 2k as you come back to your Vy speed. https://youtu.be/zX5KK5RlOvQI used to do that in the acrobatic biplane I had and called it a "noise abatement departure" but quit doing it after a friend pointed out that aerobatics (e.g. a 45-60° pitch attitude) in the pattern at a towered field is a bit "inappropriate". It was fun though.
_________________ -lance
It's easier to fool people than to convince them that they have been fooled.
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Post subject: Re: Homesick Angel... Vy climbs Posted: 16 Apr 2023, 14:07 |
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Joined: 01/24/19 Posts: 396 Post Likes: +187 Location: Birmingham
Aircraft: Vans RV-6; Archer II
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Username Protected wrote: I don’t have any pictures since I’m hand flying it solo, but with one on board and a nice cool morning, it’s fun to hold the rv in ground effect and accelerate to 130ish and then pull back for 87 at the end of the runway. It will hit 4k fpm for a few seconds and then gradually settle in to something around 2k as you come back to your Vy speed. https://youtu.be/zX5KK5RlOvQI used to do that in the acrobatic biplane I had and called it a "noise abatement departure" but quit doing it after a friend point out that aerobatics (e.g. a 45-60° pitch attitude) in the pattern at a towered field is a bit "inappropriate". It was fun though.
The field we keep the rv at is untowered but the suburbs have grown up around it so it doesn’t have much in the way of good options if the fan quits near departure. As long as you are spring loaded and ready to dump the nose hard in the climb, it’s probably the safest departure procedure (although not one I care for too much honestly - most of my flights are more sedate and made for business reasons or I have one of my kids with me).
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Post subject: Re: Homesick Angel... Vy climbs Posted: 17 Apr 2023, 11:53 |
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Joined: 12/10/07 Posts: 34627 Post Likes: +13256 Location: Minneapolis, MN (KFCM)
Aircraft: 1970 Baron B55
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Username Protected wrote: I used to do that in the acrobatic biplane I had and called it a "noise abatement departure" but quit doing it after a friend point out that aerobatics (e.g. a 45-60° pitch attitude) in the pattern at a towered field is a bit "inappropriate". It was fun though. The field we keep the rv at is untowered but the suburbs have grown up around it so it doesn’t have much in the way of good options if the fan quits near departure. As long as you are spring loaded and ready to dump the nose hard in the climb, it’s probably the safest departure procedure (although not one I care for too much honestly - most of my flights are more sedate and made for business reasons or I have one of my kids with me). The only safety issue I'd have with this would be the potential for a collision with an airplane arriving on a close in crosswind. It's difficult to see airplanes on the runway at times and most pilots wouldn't be expecting one to rocket straight up from the departure end. Probably not an issue if you're careful about scanning and listening for traffic before and during the departure.
_________________ -lance
It's easier to fool people than to convince them that they have been fooled.
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Username Protected
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Post subject: Re: Homesick Angel... Vy climbs Posted: 20 Apr 2023, 09:43 |
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Joined: 10/05/11 Posts: 9991 Post Likes: +7039 Company: Hausch LLC, rep. Power/mation Location: Milwaukee, WI (KMKE)
Aircraft: 1963 Debonair B33
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Username Protected wrote: my prop plane climbs pretty well, too! :-) Nate once bragged to me about taking a group to Muncie in his Cheyenne 400 for lunch. On the trip home, they left the Class D "out the top". Epic! 
_________________ Be Nice
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