The following quote from the article puzzles me.
"Pilots thought nothing of flying Ercoupes very slowly. When they 
would, say during a forced landing fly from a headwind condition to a 
no wind condition,the airplane would pitch nose down to try to 
maintain airspeed."
How do you get the nose to "pitch down" in an Ercoupe?  With full aft 
elevator control input, mine (a CD) just mushes straight ahead with a 
slightly positive deck angle at about 300 fpm at about 47 mph IAS. 
Bart

--- In [email protected], [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Ed: Thanks for your comments. The author of the article made a 
similar  
> observation: " The bad Ercoupe record had more to do with pilots 
thinking it was  
> 'safe' than it did with the airplane itself" He goes on to 
say: "Pilots thought 
>  nothing of flying Ercoupes very slowly. When they would, say 
during a  
> forced landing fly from a headwind condition to a no wind 
condition,the airplane  
> would pitch nose down to try to maintain airspeed. And it would hit 
the ground  
> nose down,just as if it had stalled. It couldn't stall because of 
restricted  
> up-elevator travel but it could sure hit the ground hard and nose 
down." He  
> concludes that the high vertical loading of such an impact is the 
reason low  
> speed loss of control accidents have a much higher incidence of 
injury and  
> death. My own experience suggests that even before pitching nose 
down  in a 
> stall/mush condition the sink rate itself could be the cause of 
serious  injury or 
> death if sufficient airspeed is not maintained in a forced  landing.
>  I think the risk of being trapped upside down is inherent in  most 
all 
> tricycle gear low wing aircraft. I'm surprised that there is 
little  discussion of 
> how to mitigate that risk. My engine out emergency checklist  
includes 
> lowering the side windows but I'm not sure if I could get  out even 
with them open. I 
> have seen articles about practicing exit  from a submerged aircraft 
but never 
> about escape techniques on dry  land. 
>  
> Jim Graham
> 
> 
> 
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>


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