One thing that I learned during my flight training was NEVER pick up a wing in the approach to a stall with the aileron. It INCEREASES THE ANGLE OF Attack on the low wing and precipitates the stall on that wing and it stalls first, Virg
On 12/3/2010 11:55 AM, Jeff Scott wrote: > Before we start beating drum about the KR being a dangerous craft to stall, > you need to look a little farther. I practice both power off and power on > stalls in my KR. It's more docile and controllable in a power on stall than > my Tomahawk was (the Tommy always wanted to roll over and spin). I would > compare the handling in that regime to a Cessna 150, only quicker. Very > docile and easy to recover. I have also spun it, but did not allow the spin > to fully develop. Spin entry and recovery were also very docile. The spin > entry was from an accelerated power on stall and was actually captured on > video from another plane for use in an art video. Unfortunately, I only saw > the video once and was never able to obtain a copy. For the average KR, your > mileage may differ significantly, mostly due to CG considerations. Mark's > plane is a different story with a completely different plan form from most. > The one thing to remember about stalls, which really shows up during a power > on stall, is that your ailerons are useless until you recover. You are > handling the plane with rudder and elevator. -Jeff ScottN1213W ---------- > Original Message ---------- >