Only when they see you raise flaps in flare. I should call FSDO on this thread.
An instructor/ AP told me it puts too much stress on the sides of the flaps and the connectors break. He said they are made to take the force from the front, not from the side.
An instructor/ AP told me it puts too much stress on the sides of the flaps and the connectors break. He said they are made to take the force from the front, not from the side.
That is simply not true. The only way to do that is to extend the flaps well past Vfe.An instructor/ AP told me it puts too much stress on the sides of the flaps and the connectors break. He said they are made to take the force from the front, not from the side.
That is simply not true. The only way to do that is to extend the flaps well past Vfe.
An instructor/ AP told me it puts too much stress on the sides of the flaps and the connectors break. He said they are made to take the force from the front, not from the side.
An instructor/ AP told me it puts too much stress on the sides of the flaps and the connectors break. He said they are made to take the force from the front, not from the side.
Nice ! Been slipping the 172 myself with full flaps, never really noticed anything except for maybe a slight flutter.A student of mine actually called Cessna and talked to them about it. According to them, it was a passenger comfort issue and not a structural issue.
if you can't slip a plane with flaps down, how do you land in a crosswind, sideways?
sure, you could do that, or you could just slip with 30deg and have half the landing rollummm no flaps?
sure, you could do that, or you could just slip with 30deg and have half the landing roll
Your ego is writing checks your body can't cash etc?You're dangerous!
Your ego is writing checks your body can't cash etc?![]()
Maybe if you slipped at Vne... A that point, the vertical stab would probably go all Airbus on you too...
I don't think the FAA would have certified the 172 were this the case
The Eclipse was certified. On a weekend to boot. (Sept. 30th 2006, a Saturday). There is a whole mess of problems with that airframe.