by Scott Todd » Fri Nov 26, 2021 10:27 am
For those not familiar, stall strips are intended to energize the boundary layer to allow the wing to go to a higher angle of attack thus delaying the stall. This allows the airplane to slow down a bit more. In real life, airplanes can see a stall speed reduction of a few knots. This is important for STOL airplanes but it really serves no function on a well behaved airplane like a Sonex.
Lets take my new Onex which has about 30 hours now and about 90 landings. It starts to show stall signs at 44 IAS and really breaks around 40. FWIW, I have the white arc marked at 45. I have done approaches coming over the fence at 60-65 and its a bit nerving. Its a lot of stick pressure and the nose is above the horizon. it floats a hundred feet or so before settling in and I can usually stop in another 600-800 ft without abusing the brakes. I have the Sonex Hydraulic brakes. I really like coming in around 75. The gusts don't bother it as much and it's just more comfortable. I turn final at 100, put the flaps out and it goes down to 75 in 5 seconds or so. Its a very comfortable approach attitude and the float is maybe 100 feet longer. I can easily slow to the 60's as I cross the field boundary but usually don't. I like rolling to the 2000 foot turnoff to go easy on the brakes and its usually the mid field mark at the airports I operate at.
So what would stall strips do? Lower the stall speed 5mph? That's over 10%, which seems huge. It might change my roll out by a hundred feet, if I modified my approach speeds accordingly. For STOL people, this is the world (I've been flying/teaching in my Kitfox for almost 25 years now). For a Sonex operating on normal runways of 2000 ft+, its fluff. I would not teach or recommend anyone approach at slower than 60 in a Sonex unless they were a highly qualified pilot with tons of time in type. And if that's you, none of this matters. I don't consider the average Sonex pilot previously reported here of 500 hours as 'highly qualified' unless its all in a Sonex or similar.
Could I land in 500 feet like Sonex advertises? Probably with some practice, but why? That's what the Kitfox is for. Same weight, 50% more wing area, full span flaps, bigger wheels, bigger brakes, and a bigger prop creating more drag. But that's not the mission of the Sonex. Its well designed and refined for its mission just as it is :)