by Bryan Cotton » Sat Oct 12, 2024 11:17 pm
One thing that I figured out was the neutral stick. A lot of other airplanes I've spun would let me go opposite rudder and the spin would stop. That did work in the Waiex, but it took a while which is sort of worrisome when you are on the spin cycle. This morning I added in the neutral stick into the recovery and it popped right out. That makes it a lot more fun.
My first inverted spin in the Pitts was on top of an immelmann. I was not doing a good job of finishing them nicely, so my instructor told me to stop in level inverted flight before I rolled out. Look left and right, make sure you were level, then roll out. All great but I did that with the nose high and did an inverted stall. Soon became a spin. Both upright and inverted spins pretty much look like you are going straight down, so when my instructor said "you are in an inverted spin" my response was "This is inverted?" Next he says "yep, and now it's a full blown one." So I'm flailing around, and nothing is working. He says "pull the power out" and I did that. Still spinning. So he says "Look for the heavy pedal." In prior ground instruction he discussed how the rudder wants to trail into the direction of the spin, and it takes more force to go counter to the spin. So I swapped which pedal I had on the floor and it popped right out. Now I'm in an inverted stall, with my positive G brain pushing forward for all I'm worth to break the stall. Tom says "I got it." Recovers, after I chewed up 4000' of altitude over the Florida alligators. Then he says "Tomorrow we will practice inverted spins."
And we did. Lot of normal ones - roll inverted, stall, kick in the rudder, spin, recover. One from 80 upright, S&L Stick full forward, pedal to the stop, went over the top into an inverted spin, and the most violent thing I've ever done in an airplane. I let it go about 3 rotations and when I wanted it to stop, it came right out. The Pitts is a sweetheart.
Bryan Cotton
Poplar Grove, IL C77
Waiex 191 N191YX
Taildragger, Aerovee, acro ailerons
dual sticks with sport trainer controls
Prebuilt spars and machined angle kit
Year 2 flying and approaching 200 hours December 23