GraemeSmith wrote:In my 80hp AeroVee Sonex I shallow power dive to 125KIAS as the entry speed. Smooth 3-4G pull at full power, smoothly lessening the pull and G on the way up and about 1G over the top to keep the oil pressure on.
Graeme is spot on here. To achieve a good loop you need to pull hard enough at the beginning. A 3-G pull is about the minimum needed to keep the speed from bleeding off too rapidly over the top, and a 4-G pull works even better. It may seem like pulling less G is easier on the airplane, but it's counter productive. The plane can handle it just fine, and the bigger danger is falling out of the loop over the top and barreling down toward the ground in the resultant recovery. That's a way to build a lot of speed, and a lot of G's, and that can definitely hurt the plane!
My recipe is simple: 130-140 mph entry speed, pull to 3-4 G's, release the back pressure to float over the top, and then bring the G's back in on the backside during the pull out. If you pull too hard on the backside you'll feel the elevator "shudder" a bit as the wing nibbles at a secondary stall.
A final thought about the inverted portions of our simple aerobatics. We all know that our planes don't have inverted fuel and oil, but so long as even a little positive G is on the airplane, things still work just fine. I do this all the time in rolls by pushing just a touch of down elevator while inverted (just enough to get to maybe 1/2 or 1/3 G, definitely not zero or negative G's). The engine never misses a beat, and the oil stays in the engine and not out the breather. I've even filmed these with my GoPro just sitting on the glareshield (not attached to anything) - it stays put just fine.
Jeff