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Utilizing your notes and past knowledge answer the following questions: 1) What are the three flight situations in which a stall may occur? 2) In a turn what must be applied to the yoke/stick to increase the aircraft AOA and if excessive AOA occurs in a turn what may happen to the aircraft? 3) To balance an aircraft aerodynamically, what is located aft of CoG and what does this make the aircraft “naturally feel?” 4) If ice is allowed to form on the airfoil what is increased and what is decreased as a result? 5) What design factor is utilized on a propeller blade to keep thrust more nearly Warm-Up – 12/3 – 10 minutes

Warm-Up – 12/3 – 10 minutes

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Warm-Up – 12/3 – 10 minutes. Utilizing your notes and past knowledge answer the following questions: What are the three flight situations in which a stall may occur? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Utilizing your notes and past knowledge answer the following questions:

1) What are the three flight situations in which a stall may occur?

2) In a turn what must be applied to the yoke/stick to increase the aircraft AOA and if excessive AOA occurs in a turn what may happen to the aircraft?

3) To balance an aircraft aerodynamically, what is located aft of CoG and what does this make the aircraft “naturally feel?”

4) If ice is allowed to form on the airfoil what is increased and what is decreased as a result?

5) What design factor is utilized on a propeller blade to keep thrust more nearly equalized along this length?

Warm-Up – 12/3 – 10 minutes

Page 2: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Questions / Comments

Page 3: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Utilizing your notes and past knowledge answer the following questions:

1) What are the three flight situations in which a stall may occur?

2) In a turn what must be applied to the yoke/stick to increase the aircraft AOA and if excessive AOA occurs in a turn what may happen to the aircraft?

3) To balance an aircraft aerodynamically, what is located aft of CoG and what does the make the aircraft “naturally feel?”

4) What happens to the airfoil shape if ice, snow or sleet is allowed to form on the airfoil and what effect does this have on the airflow?

5) If ice is allowed to form on the airfoil what is increased and what is decreased as a result?

Warm-Up – 12/3 – 10 minutes

Page 5: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Utilizing your notes and past knowledge answer the following questions:

1) What are the three flight situations in which a stall may occur?

2) In a turn what must be applied to the yoke/stick to increase the aircraft AOA and if excessive AOA occurs in a turn what may happen to the aircraft?

3) To balance an aircraft aerodynamically, what is located aft of CoG and what does the make the aircraft “naturally feel?”

4) What happens to the airfoil shape if ice, snow or sleet is allowed to form on the airfoil and what effect does this have on the airflow?

5) If ice is allowed to form on the airfoil what is increased and what is decreased as a result?

Warm-Up – 12/3 – 10 minutes

Page 8: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Utilizing your notes and past knowledge answer the following questions:

1) What are the three flight situations in which a stall may occur?

2) In a turn what must be applied to the yoke/stick to increase the aircraft AOA and if excessive AOA occurs in a turn what may happen to the aircraft?

3) To balance an aircraft aerodynamically, what is located aft of CoG and what does this make the aircraft “naturally feel?”

4) What happens to the airfoil shape if ice, snow or sleet is allowed to form on the airfoil and what effect does this have on the airflow?

5) If ice is allowed to form on the airfoil what is increased and what is decreased as a result?

Warm-Up – 12/3 – 10 minutes

Page 9: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Aerodynamic Forces in Flight Maneuvers

Stalls• To balance the

aircraft aerodynamically, the CL is normally located aft of the CG.

• This makes the aircraft inherently nose-heavy, downwash on the horizontal stabilizer counteracts this condition.

Page 10: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Utilizing your notes and past knowledge answer the following questions:

1) What are the three flight situations in which a stall may occur?

2) In a turn what must be applied to the yoke/stick to increase the aircraft AOA and if excessive AOA occurs in a turn what may happen to the aircraft?

3) To balance an aircraft aerodynamically, what is located aft of CoG and what does this make the aircraft “naturally feel?”

4) If ice is allowed to form on the airfoil what is increased and what is decreased as a result?

5) What design factor is utilized on a propeller blade to keep thrust more nearly equalized along this length?

Warm-Up – 12/3 – 10 minutes

Page 12: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Utilizing your notes and past knowledge answer the following questions:

1) What are the three flight situations in which a stall may occur?

2) In a turn what must be applied to the yoke/stick to increase the aircraft AOA and if excessive AOA occurs in a turn what may happen to the aircraft?

3) To balance an aircraft aerodynamically, what is located aft of CoG and what does this make the aircraft “naturally feel?”

4) If ice is allowed to form on the airfoil what is increased and what is decreased as a result?

5) What design factor is utilized on a propeller blade to keep thrust more nearly equalized along this length?

Warm-Up – 12/3 – 10 minutes

Page 13: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Basic Propeller Principles

• Propeller blades are twisted to change the blade angle in proportion to the differences in speed of rotation along the length of the propeller, keeping thrust more nearly equalized along this length.

Page 14: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Questions / Comments

Page 15: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

December 3 1928 — Pacific Air

Transport starts daily mail, passenger and express service between Oakland and San Jose, California, 38 miles.

THIS DAY IN AVIATION

Page 16: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

December 3 1945 — A DeHavilland

“Sea Vampire” fighter becomes the first purely jet-powered airplane to operate from an aircraft carrier, when Lieutenant-Commander E. M. “Winkle” Brown lands his aircraft on the HMS Ocean in England

THIS DAY IN AVIATION

Page 17: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Questions / Comments

Page 18: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY

1 2 3

Chapter 4

Torque

4 5

Chapter 4

Load Factors

6 7

           

8 9

Chapter 4

10 11

Chapter 4

12 13

Chapter 4 Test

Flightline Friday

14

             

15 16 17

Chapter 4

18 19

Chapter 4

20 21

             

22 23

NO SCHOOL

24

NO SCHOOL

25

NO SCHOOL

26

NO SCHOOL

27

NO SCHOOL

28

             

29 30

NO SCHOOL

31

NO SCHOOL             

December 2013

Page 19: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Questions / Comments

Page 20: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Chapter 4 – Aerodynamics of FlightFAA – Pilot’s Handbook of Aeronautical Knowledge

Page 21: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Mission: Identify in writing the forces acting on an aircraft in flight. Describe how the forces of flight work and how to control them

with the use of power and flight controls essential to flight. Describe in writing how design, weight, load factors, and gravity

affect an aircraft during flight maneuvers.

EQ: Describe the importance of Aeronautical Knowledge for the

student pilot learning to fly.

Today’s Mission Requirements

Page 22: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Torque and P-Factor• “Torque” (the left

turning tendency of the airplane) is made up of elements which cause or produce a twisting or rotating motion around at least one of the airplane’s three axes.

Page 23: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Torque and P-Factor• The elements are:

• 1. Torque reaction from engine and propeller,

• 2. Corkscrewing effect of the slipstream,

• 3. Asymmetric loading of the propeller (P-factor).

Page 24: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Torque Reaction

• The internal engine parts and propeller are revolving in one direction, an equal force is trying to rotate the aircraft in the opposite direction.

Page 25: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Torque Reaction

• When the aircraft is airborne, this force is acting around the longitudinal axis, tending to make the aircraft roll.

Page 26: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Torque Reaction

• NOTE: Most United States built aircraft engines rotate the propeller clockwise, as viewed from the pilot’s seat.

Page 27: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Torque Reaction• When the

aircraft’s wheels are on the ground during the takeoff roll, an additional turning moment around the vertical axis is induced by torque reaction.

• The takeoff roll is corrected by the pilot’s use of the rudder or rudder trim.

Page 28: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Corkscrew Effect

• The high-speed rotation of an aircraft propeller gives a corkscrew or spiraling rotation to the slipstream.

Page 29: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Corkscrew Effect• At high propeller

speeds and low forward speed (as in the takeoffs and approaches to power-on stalls), this spiraling rotation is very compact and exerts a strong sideward force on the aircraft’s vertical tail surface.

Page 30: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Corkscrew Effect• When this

spiraling slipstream strikes the vertical fin it causes a turning moment about the aircraft’s vertical axis.

• The more compact

the spiral, the more prominent this force is.

Page 31: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Corkscrew Effect

• As the forward speed increases, however, the spiral elongates and becomes less effective.

Page 32: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Corkscrew Effect• It is the pilot’s

responsibility to apply proper corrective action by use of the flight controls at all times.

• These forces must be counteracted regardless of which is the most prominent at the time.

Page 33: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Asymmetric Loading (P-Factor)

• When an aircraft is flying with a high AOA, the “bite” of the downward moving blade is greater than the “bite” of the upward moving blade.

Page 34: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Asymmetric Loading (P-Factor)

• This moves the center of thrust to the right of the prop disc area, causing a yawing moment toward the left around the vertical axis.

Page 35: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Asymmetric Loading (P-Factor)

• Since the propeller blade is an airfoil, increased velocity means increased lift.

• The downswinging blade has more lift and tends to pull (yaw) the aircraft’s nose to the left.

Page 36: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Summary• To maintain

positive control of the aircraft in all flight conditions, the pilot must apply the flight controls as necessary to compensate for these varying values.

Page 37: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Questions / Comments

Page 38: Warm-Up –  12/3  – 10 minutes

Lesson Closure - 3 – 2 - 1

3. List 3 things you learned today.

1. Create (1) quiz question with answer about today’s lesson.

2. List 2 things you have questions about today’s lesson.