pappas wrote:You should test these on the ground while simulating an air load on the flaps. While in full down flap config, have someone exert an upward pull on the flaps as if moving airflow is trying to raise them. Not enough pressure to dent the flap, obviously, but enough to keep a constant load on the flaps.
Now try to move out of full flaps using the flap handle. Pictures of your full system would aid all of us to help diagnose.
Others have had trouble if they have created a nub on the flap dedent for the purpose of keeping the flap handle from releasing on its own. Sometimes that dedent is too big or shaped in a manner that won't let it release while the flaps are under a load. Without an air load, it works fine, but with the load, it won't release cleanly or easily.
Of course, it could be anything else, but this is a good place to start.
GraemeSmith wrote:If it is NOT an actual mechanical issue and when on the ground they are not bound up and jamming in some way......Then are we actually talking about how hard it is to pull them out the Flaps 30 detent and ease them out to Flaps 20???
You do need pretty good biceps to get the last 10 degrees of flaps applied under any slow flight regimen unless you are going slow. And once it is in there - it can be a bear to get the handle back out. That "stuck in concrete" feeling you reported.
Couple of tricks:
- If the handle is just the bare aluminium bar that hurts your hand as you pull it - get a slip on plastic sleeve - or binding it with some tape will make it easier on your hand, it hurts less and let you pull harder.
- though it goes against the teachings of most stall recovery where you pitch down, go full power and then milk the flaps off. On the Sonex - I actually go flaps 30 to 20 FIRST and then pitch down and apply power. With the flaps less loaded it is a lot easier to get the handle out the Flaps 30 detent. For the overshoot/go around - well I will admit my flaps are 20 on final and I only apply 30 when I KNOW I have the runway made and I am pulling them to act as a brake and create an air cushion to soften the decaying airspeed. I usually never actually put them in the Flaps 30 detent on final and if I do need to go around I drop them into the Flaps 20 detent and then apply full power. As soon as I touch down I let the flaps go to zero to kill the lift and stick the plane. Like the bush pilots do up in Alaska....
- Eat more Wheaties or Spinach to get that bicep working better for you...... ;-)
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