Sonerai13 wrote:SNX1508 wrote:Gordon wrote:I completed tail dragger training last year, and I was taught that if there is a tail wind while taxiing, the stick goes all of the way forward, and all the way left/forward or right/forward for a quartering tail wind. Then the stick goes all the way back if boosting the throttle, momentary stick back if the throttle is only increased momentarily while taxiing.
With all due respect to whoever your tailwheel instructor was, that's not really correct. That procedure completely discounts the fact that there is about 15 knots of wind over the tail AT IDLE due to propeller blast. AT IDLE! Any increase in power to move the airplane increases this blast over the tail. So you need to be in enough wind to overcome the propeller blast before you go stick forward while taxiing with a tailwind. This seldom happens, but it can. And you can feel it. When you're taxiing and you can feel the wind pushing on the elevator (through feedback to the stick) you then go stick forward. MOST of the time you will be stick-back while taxiing a tailwheel airplane, even in a tailwind (until that wind gets strong enough to over come propeller blast).
Now, some airplanes have enough weight on the tail that you can get away with stick-forward taxiing in light tailwinds and not have a problem. But some aren't! Know your airplane!
Ailerons are not in the propeller blast, so the procedure you describe for ailerons is correct.
caveman370 wrote:I agree that takeoff can be challenging until you get used to the sensitivity.
One thing you need to be aware of as a new Sonex owner is those bend lines in the glareshield are not straight, they go inwards, and so especially on landing you do have a tendency to align the left bend line with the direction of the runway, which of course means you end up landing slightly sideways.
SNX1508 wrote:I am certainly no expert at tail dragger flying, in fact I consider myself a rookie at this, but I think we can agree that Harvey S. Plourde has written an excellent reference for the taildragger pilot.....
Gordon wrote:Tailwheel Taxi Controversy............?
Dale....you said it right.....and Joe Norris brought the point "home" even better. Most of the time a tail wind while taxing is overcome by the prop blast over the elevators. If the tail wind is so severe to change that scenario then I likely would be staying on the ground anyway......sitting in the airport coffee shop "talking about flying"......rather than doing it. I am a "fair weather" flyer these days with nothing to prove any more.
Yes I know when you fly long cross country's you CAN get caught at times......... been there done that.
We still haven't heard from Ken have we........As to what lead up to his nose over in his Sonex? Maybe it was something completely different.......locked brake, flat tire, taxied into a hole or rut....there are a number of things that can cause a prop strike.
Gordon........Onex.....Hummel 2400
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