Chris_Ford said:Yeah but the 50 foot distances seem inappropriate too, since it seems like it would take less distance to go down 50 feet than come up 50 feet (in an airplane, at least)... But I will grab a POH on Thursday if I remember![]()
Did ya?
Chris_Ford said:Yeah but the 50 foot distances seem inappropriate too, since it seems like it would take less distance to go down 50 feet than come up 50 feet (in an airplane, at least)... But I will grab a POH on Thursday if I remember![]()
Doug Taylor said:This might be my imagination again, but I think the FAA frowns on runway configuration changes.
Mavmb said:I always teach to clean the flaps up after touch down. I agree the braking action from flaps up or down is probably negligible. However, at least in little planes, it a very important habit to clean the flaps up right after touchdown. If this habit does not become a reflex for students doing touch and goes, than one of those times they forget to take the flaps up, and before they know it, they are crashing after attempting a full flap take off!
The other reason I always teach cleaning the flaps up is the much better control you get with flaps up while rolling on the ground, especially if it is windy. I think it is the control factor that makes pilots feel like they are decelerating so much more with the flaps up. It's the same reason we don't land with full flaps when it is windy. And as far as the argument goes about how using the flap lever breaks concentration, well if you can't lift one lever for a split second without breaking your concentration, than maybe piloting isn't the best career or hobby for you!
tonyw said:I went up with a DPE as my safety pilot, and out of habit, when I stopped on the runway, I pushed in the carb heat and retracted the flaps. He said that it was a good thing I wasn't doing that on a checkride, because while he wouldn't bust me for it, he'd sure say something about it.
And I thought about it, and he's right. I should get my ass off the runway, and get out of people's way, and then clean up the airplane.
Oh no you don't. Not getting off that easy.Chris_Ford said:I think we can agree to compromise and say "it requires essentially the same amount" seeing as varying situations could lean towards one or the other, agreed?
SteveC said:(Actually you (sorta) won one bet already. I figured you'd take one look at the charts and hope this thread went quietly away and I wouldn't hear back from you here. Good man for coming back to it.)
ROFCIBC said:Yeah, and on top of that you have to put your cup of coffee down to move the flap lever!
Mavmb said:You guys are cracking me up! You all, y'all are talking so much about getting off the runway, that you stop flying the airplane on the runway to avoid breaking your concentration!!! We are talking about a flap lever after touching down guys! You don't even have to look away from the runway! Hand goes from throttle to flap lever in a Cessna, fraction of a second. Or a Piper, drop flap lever, even easier. Not like we are tuning radios after landing! Lol, maybe we shouldn't use brakes after landing either, might be too distracting!
Champcar said:what ever happened to just having fun and flying to your own style.
Champcar said:When i move to the airlines then ill fly how im told.
What distraction.. most of us can raise the flaps without ever thinking of how to do it. In that case i might as well not make a wind correctiong or rudder correction casue it might distract me from rolling down the runway. Some people take things way too seriously.Nick said:I don't consider raising the flaps after touchdown having fun in the airplane...other things are fun to me than that moment. But the point everyone is making is that it doesn't DO anything. You are giving yourself a distraction for no reason!
Unless you are renting an airplane, in which case you should fly it how the owner/FBO wants you to fly it.
Champcar said:My thoughts exactly, what ever happened to just having fun and flying to your own style. When i move to the airlines then ill fly how im told.