Excellent response... I shall give these a try.  Thanks Jerry

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Ed Burkhead 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Thursday, August 19, 2010 8:25 AM
  Subject: Re: [ercoupe-tech] nose gear cable


    


  On 2010-08-19 8:53 AM, Jerry Ward wrote: 

    I guess I have to respond to this one.. I am one of those people that have 
been landing "Hot".  I have listened to many of you Couper's that claim you 
land in the low 60's or at least below 70mph.  Well, I have had my Coupe for a 
little over two years now and it is a metal wing 1950 G' Model and I can tell 
you from much experience that landing this plane below 75 would result in major 
repairs.  I usually touch down at around 78 to 85mph.  The plane starts to sink 
at about 1200 ft per min. if you let it get slower than 75mph.  And that is not 
what you want when you are 20 ft off the ground.  I know all of you guys with 
the fabric wings can land slow - but when you add the weight of metal it is a 
different story.  Jerry - leaving tomorrow for Kitty Hawk from the Great 
Northwest. 

  Jerry,

  Item one, metalized wings.  Some of those who metalized the wings just 
wrapped the sheet aluminum around the wing and riveted it on.  They did NOT 
make it conform to the actual DESIGN AIRFOIL.  The design airfoil has a mild 
concavity just behind the leading edge and in front of the spar.  This greatly 
improves the low speed ability.  If your metalized wings do not have this 
concavity, they may be un-airworthy (though repairable, I'm sure).

  Item two, airspeed indicator.  MANY airspeed indicators are in error, some 
showing as much as 20 mph too high when nearing touchdown speeds.  My own 
airspeed was off by 15-18 mph in the landing speed range claiming I was going 
65 when my true airspeed was about 50.  This was a bad thing on my second 
flight when the engine stopped and I flew the approach at 70 and got no flare.  
Check your airspeed indicator!  Here's a link with discussion and, at the 
bottom, a quite easy calibration method using a GPS.
  http://edburkhead.com/Ercoupe/airspeed_indicator_errors.htm 

  Until you can do the calibration, (and don't put it off), do this:  Go up 
several thousand feet and do an idle-engine minimum flying speed test.  Find 
out what YOUR airspeed indicator says when the yoke is all the way back to the 
stop and the Coupe is burbling along with its near-stall.  Use that airspeed 
times 1.4 for your approach speed for now and refine it later.

  Item three, flare.  You should never be bottoming out your flare at 20 feet 
no matter what the conditions.  (I suspect you mean that if you started your 
flare at the published airspeeds, you'd fall out and fail to flare.  That 
brings us back to items 1 and 2.)  

  If your approach speed is proper (about 1.3 to 1.4 times minimum flying 
speed) you should have no trouble flaring to level flight at 3-6 feet altitude. 
 Holding the plane level at 3-6 feet lets excess energy bleed off as you hold 
that altitude then it will gradually and smoothly sink the last little bit 
giving you a nice touchdown at the slowest possible airspeed of which the plane 
is capable.  No excess sink and thump-down occurs because of the ground effect. 
 As an added benefit, the ground effect of air squeezed under our low wings 
gives very nice stability to this 3-6 foot horizontal flight even in very 
strong and gusty wind conditions.

  Optional extra landing technique.  On long runways, I found that increasing 
the rpm to 200-300 rpm above idle (just enough I could hear that I had changed 
it) while holding the nose up to just touch the landing lights at the far end 
of the runway slightly decreases the sink rate even in that 3-6 foot horizontal 
ground effect.  The slight increase in airflow over the tail helps push the 
straight-tail Coupes' tails a hint lower resulting in slightly lower actual 
touchdown speed.  

  There's some cost in terms of extra float time and distance.  This controlled 
sink rate touchdown was taught to me for night flying when you don't know your 
exact altitude in the flare - remember that it does require a sufficiently long 
runway (perhaps an extra 200-400 feet more than your regular minimum).  The 
advantage is that you get a squeak-squeak touchdown every time suitable to 
convince all passengers that you are an absolute master of flying!

  Ed



  

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