Take-off to clear obstacle. Whats your method?

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akclimber
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Re: Take-off to clear obstacle. Whats your method?

Post by akclimber »

gahorn wrote:The major difference (as implied previously) is found in engine/thrust losses.
While the lift/drag are equally affected (illustrated similarly with IAS vs TAS comparisons) it's the loss of engine performance that affects the configuration recommendation. (Higher density altitudes place the deployed-flaps on the back-side of the power-curve.)
And there is no POH for this airplane. :wink:
OK, the AFM then.
I am trying to apply different equations to come up with a proof of why that is and it's still not penciling out.
I do have my own theory, but can't prove it mathematically (hence my question here), and it's too cold outside to prove it experimentally.
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SteveF
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Re: Take-off to clear obstacle. Whats your method?

Post by SteveF »

I think Aryana has pretty well sumed this up.
Might as well stick to PMs because this thread is going on permanent ignore for me.

I haven't been here a long time, but IMO the tone of this debate doesn't fit with the spirit of the association.

Bottom line, the opposing beliefs have been documented in the thread and every reader in the future can decide what method they like best.
I think there are a couple of other solutions to this out of control thread:
Remove the wings and truck the plane out of there or
Get Bigrenna to come and take every last unneeded ounce of weight out of the plane then wait for a very cold dry day in the middle of winter
and take all the fuel you dare out of the plane. Especially important while waiting for winter go on a very strict diet and get down under the
standard 170 lbs then use the following Blueldr method!!
Open throttle to ffffFULL. Then, as airplane attempts to accellerate, recite, not too slowly, "Our Father Who Art---etc."
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blueldr
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Re: Take-off to clear obstacle. Whats your method?

Post by blueldr »

Wha Hoppen??? Ithought this thread was locked out.
BL
t7275tr
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Re: Take-off to clear obstacle. Whats your method?

Post by t7275tr »

Obviously many opinions on the best method. Personal experience with a 54 B with a Horton STOL kit. Start the takeoff roll with no flaps, when the tail will come up, raise it about half way and at 50 mph indicated grab 20 degrees of flap. The plane would levitate enough to clear 50 ft at which point you could let the speed increase and bleed the flaps off. A friend had a 52B without the Horton kit and it not react the same so the Horton was the key. Having owned a handful of airplanes, and flown many more, the B is my second favorite with 1st going to the early C180's I flew skydivers in back in the early 80's. I liken the early 180's to a 170 on steroids. 170's are a lot cheaper to operate though.
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GAHorn
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Re: Take-off to clear obstacle. Whats your method?

Post by GAHorn »

akclimber wrote:[...
I am trying to apply different equations to come up with a proof of why that is and it's still not penciling out.
I do have my own theory, but can't prove it mathematically (hence my question here), and it's too cold outside to prove it experimentally.
Well, it may help to consider what other documentation might exist out there for similar comparisons.
For example, Part 25 airplanes have much better performance documentation, and ...as this thread is supposed to be about clearing an obstacle.... not particularly about the drag of rolling wheels in muddy turf of undefined depth or flap-induced drag during the takeoff-run....you might consider what AFM recommendations are made with those airplanes. The same principles apply. Their take-off/climb performance is divided into segments.

Back to definitions: the takeoff run is from brake release to 35' in those types...and is called the 1st segment, and the climb to the "close-in" types obstacles they usually deal with (such as tall bldgs, hills, radio towers, etc..) are usually larger than 35'....and farther than the airport boundary...and are addressed in second-segment data.

In high density alitude conditions, the data shows that aircraft can clear those obstacles better if their flap settings are reduced from normal...sometimes to zero. (At the beginning of the takeoff roll, of course.) This is because their second segment (which is the climb to 1500' AGL) considers the loss of an engine at/near rotation, and the fact that deployed flaps hurt climb performance. The more flaps deployed...the more drag suffered....the less climb-angle experienced. I.E., the aircraft is not accelerated to a higher speed and "zoomed" to clear the obstacle because the distance used to "zoom" brings you closer to the obstacle. The obstacle (a real obstacle is not one with room-to-zoom)....is always presumed to be close enough to require maximum effort until cleared. This means one cannot waste distance to accelerate/zoom. Nor can one accept the loss of climb performance experienced due to flap-retraction. (Regardless of what some light plane pilots subjectively believe, retracting flaps damages climb performance to the point of the retraction-completion....as the airplane must be accelerated to a speed above the lesser-flap-stall-margins and one appropriate to continue the climb...which is energy being used to accelerate...instead of climb.)
The penalty of that Pt 25 operation is increased takeoff run. (Lesser flaps means higher stall speeds, etc., and therefore the airplane must be accelerated to a higher speed before flight is attempted at Vr (rotation). Flaps are never retracted until obstacles in the second segment are cleared, to avoid those performance losses.

So, the problem of "take off to clear obstacle" becomes one that involves a comparision between distance available for TakeOff, and what flap setting is necessary to reduce takeoff run to within the runway available....and can we clear that obstacle with the drag of that flap setting? The same principles apply to our airplanes because the same dynamics apply (we just don't have the data available to calculate climb performance after the loss of thrust at/near rotation).

The pilots of Pt 25 airplanes do the same thing light plane pilots do to improve performance to get off runways and clear obstacles. They reduce takeoff weight. The advantage they have over light plane operators is they have the documented data to easily calculate that weight, that distance, that flap setting. LIght plane pilots are limited to the simplified (cheaper) data in their AFMs which (usually) only give one weight: Gross weight.

Flaps are not retracted until obstacles are cleared in either type because flap retraction hurts climb-to-obstacle in all types...Pt 25, Pt 23, CAR 4, CAR 3. So does zoom-to-climb, etc etc. Some things are the same for all types.

As for the takeoff run in light planes: "Popping" flaps avoids the induced drag of the flaps during acceleration. But once deployed, the same principles apply....retracting them again hurts the climb. Either you were too late deploying them (as they developed lift during acceleration they'd have gradually/constantly lifted the airplane out of the mud sooner and thereby continuously reduced drag during the takeoff run and therefore reduced that run-distance...also meaning you'd have started the obstacle-climb segment sooner) or you were too early retracting them prior to the obstacle and therefore cleared the obstacle with too much speed. (I.E. you could have carried more weight...you left the wife and kids ....or, more importantly,...the ice and beer...behind unnecessarily.)
'53 B-model N146YS SN:25713
50th Anniversary of Flight Model. Winner-Best Original 170B, 100th Anniversary of Flight Convention.
An originality nut (mostly) for the right reasons. ;)
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blueldr
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Re: Take-off to clear obstacle. Whats your method?

Post by blueldr »

What ever became of that ad for the guy selling the whips that he guaranteed would bring a dead mule back to life?
BL
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johneeb
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Re: Take-off to clear obstacle. Whats your method?

Post by johneeb »

blueldr wrote:What ever became of that ad for the guy selling the whips that he guaranteed would bring a dead mule back to life?
Dick, that is the second time I have seen the word "guaranteed" used in this thread! Your use of "guaranteed" has a better chance of being probable than the earlier reference.
John E. Barrett
aka. Johneb

Sent from my "Cray Super Computer"
akclimber
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Re: Take-off to clear obstacle. Whats your method?

Post by akclimber »

George,
Thank you for the great explanation that the limitation only applies to climb performance and not the ground run.
Essentially during the 2 phases of takeoff over 50' obstacle the 1st phase (ground run) will always be shortened with the use of 20 degree flaps, wherease the second phase (climb to 50') will always be lengthened. At 4,000 feet (for C170B) the 2nd phase increase is sufficiently greater than the 1st phase decrease to overcome the overall advantage of flaps:
Image
Interestingly in the above graph taken from 170B AFM, the two lines are a poor explanation of the phenomena as they do not accurately depict the physics involved having equal slope above the 4,000 foot altitude line.

Can you split this part of the thread into it's own thread as this topic has drifted far enough away from the original, contentious debate...
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GAHorn
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Re: Take-off to clear obstacle. Whats your method?

Post by GAHorn »

akclimber wrote:George...
Can you split this part of the thread into it's own thread as this topic has drifted far enough away from the original, contentious debate...
Actually, although the thread took a short-departure, it seems to me be relevant. Although the original topic was intended to "clear obstacle"...it actually included the "takeoff". Also, I'd have to split if almost from the very beginning...from where the Deakin article about use of flaps during takeoff was interjected.

By the way, while the graph you developed helps to illustrate, ...the Owner's Manual also states it very plainly...(and I believe is supportive of the position for which I've been castigated.)

"USE OF FLAPS FOR TAKE-OFF.
For normal flying conditions the use of 20 degree (second notch) flaps will shorten the take-off distance to clear a 50 foot obstacle. This is a result of slower forward speeds even though the use of flaps lessen the rate of climb. However, as altitudes and outside air temperatures increase, drag off-sets lift until eventually the use of flaps increase the take-off distance. It is recommended that the take-off chart on page 39 be consulted to determine whether the use of flaps is desirable for take-off. For the same reasons 30 and 40 degree flaps are not recommended at any time for take-off."
'53 B-model N146YS SN:25713
50th Anniversary of Flight Model. Winner-Best Original 170B, 100th Anniversary of Flight Convention.
An originality nut (mostly) for the right reasons. ;)
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blueldr
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Re: Take-off to clear obstacle. Whats your method?

Post by blueldr »

For a second there, I thought I saw a quiver in the mule.
BL
integritywood
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Re: Take-off to clear obstacle. Whats your method?

Post by integritywood »

I hoped to provoke some discussion with this and find out how experienced pilots looked at it/did it. Never realized this would happen. I guess I should just stick with questions that have easy answers like "what are better three point or wheel landings" :twisted:
Just because you're more proficient at it doesn't prove your method is better!
Kimball Isaac
1948 Cessna 170
C-GYHC
bagarre
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Re: Take-off to clear obstacle. Whats your method?

Post by bagarre »

integritywood wrote:"what are better three point or wheel landings" :twisted:
Ohhh, them's fightin' words 'round these parts :lol:
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GAHorn
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Re: Take-off to clear obstacle. Whats your method?

Post by GAHorn »

whenever I perform a three point landing.....I always...always..do it on the wheels.
'53 B-model N146YS SN:25713
50th Anniversary of Flight Model. Winner-Best Original 170B, 100th Anniversary of Flight Convention.
An originality nut (mostly) for the right reasons. ;)
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