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  #11  
Old 01-08-2015, 11:49 AM
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The 'bouncing ball' AOA/stall audio alert in the video seems very intuitive. Does anyone know what box is generating that?

-jon
That's the Dynon D10A making that AoA noise. Way more useful than a display (which it also has).
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  #12  
Old 01-08-2015, 12:21 PM
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Sandifer - Thankyou for your insights, appreciated.
I have aerobatic training (in a Chipmonk) and a logbook entry to prove it but this was many years ago and I am not willing to commit aerobatics in my RV-6 until I am confident with spins in general and that the '6 can recover from upright and inverted spins within my capability.
Can you comment about inverted spins in RVs - anything of note from your experience?
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  #13  
Old 01-08-2015, 12:44 PM
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Can you comment about inverted spins in RVs - anything of note from your experience?
My inverted spin experience is limited to the Pitts, but I've seen a few RV-4's do them, including WillyEyeBall (Bill) here. Seems to behave pretty normally, though Bill could provide more info. Most aerobatic airplanes have normal spin characteristics either upright or inverted - not much difference in the mechanics.
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  #14  
Old 01-08-2015, 04:44 PM
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Originally Posted by sandifer View Post
My inverted spin experience is limited to the Pitts, but I've seen a few RV-4's do them, including WillyEyeBall (Bill) here. Seems to behave pretty normally, though Bill could provide more info. Most aerobatic airplanes have normal spin characteristics either upright or inverted - not much difference in the mechanics.
The side-by-sides are slightly different than the tandems. As Van and others have noted, after the first 1.5-2 rotations, the rotation rate increases noticeably and might be unnerving if you're not looking for it. They don't recommend spins in the side by sides.

The second thing about the side-by-sides is that recovery takes longer than it would in a normal acro aircraft. Figure 1.5-2 rotations after apply corrective inputs. PARE works, but the elevator needs to be forced to neutral - it wants to float up if left to it's own devices.
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  #15  
Old 01-08-2015, 06:50 PM
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Then you did something wrong for the first 4,000' or so. It wasn't the airplane. But I'm glad you figured things out. .[/b]
I sure did do something wrong! I wasn't trying to spin the airplane or do aerobatics, I was completely caught off guard when it went into the spin. Good thing I was at 8000'
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  #16  
Old 01-08-2015, 07:03 PM
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Originally Posted by ChiefPilot View Post
The side-by-sides are slightly different than the tandems. As Van and others have noted, after the first 1.5-2 rotations, the rotation rate increases noticeably and might be unnerving if you're not looking for it. They don't recommend spins in the side by sides.

The second thing about the side-by-sides is that recovery takes longer than it would in a normal acro aircraft. Figure 1.5-2 rotations after apply corrective inputs. PARE works, but the elevator needs to be forced to neutral - it wants to float up if left to it's own devices.
It sounds like you are referring to what is commonly known about the RV-6/6A with respect to upright spins. Are you really talking about inverted spins? I've never known Vans to comment on inverted spin characteristics. I've never spun a 6 with the standard small vertical fin, but what you describe is consistent with what I've heard, and what Vans states about the 6.

But I have done the Phase I aerobatic/spin testing on a 6A with the larger RV-7 vertical fin (RV-7A for all practical purposes), and this totally changes the spin characteristics compared to what you describe. Even after 3 turns in either direction (fully developed), it stopped in about 1/4 turn, which is traditional spin behavior in aerobatic aircraft - same as my old RV-3.

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Originally Posted by n468ac View Post
I sure did do something wrong! I wasn't trying to spin the airplane or do aerobatics, I was completely caught off guard when it went into the spin. Good thing I was at 8000'
As a teachable moment, can you precisely describe how you found yourself in what you believe to be a flat spin without attempting acro? RVs don't easily enter and sustain spins without full rudder and elevator deflection held and maintained.

Last edited by sandifer : 01-08-2015 at 07:15 PM.
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  #17  
Old 01-08-2015, 07:14 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by sandifer View Post
It sounds like you are referring to what is commonly known about the RV-6/6A with respect to upright spins. Are you really talking about inverted spins? I've never known Vans to comment on inverted spin characteristics. I've never spun a 6 with the standard small vertical fin, but what you describe is consistent with what I've heard, and what Vans states about the 6.

But I have done the Phase I aerobatic/spin testing on a 6A with the larger RV-7 vertical fin (RV-7A for all practical purposes), and this totally changes the spin characteristics compared to what you describe. Even after 3 turns in either direction (fully developed), it stopped in about 1/4 turn, which is traditional spin behavior in aerobatic aircraft.
Mine has the in-between fin & rudder - same as on an RV-8 - and my recovery definitely was longer than 1/4 turn after only slightly more than two rotations. I've only done them (intentionally) on one flight; no inverted system meant lots of cleanup afterwards :-(
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  #18  
Old 01-08-2015, 07:22 PM
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Originally Posted by ChiefPilot View Post
Mine has the in-between fin & rudder - same as on an RV-8 - and my recovery definitely was longer than 1/4 turn after only slightly more than two rotations. I've only done them (intentionally) on one flight; no inverted system meant lots of cleanup afterwards :-(
I'm confused...you did an intentional inverted spin with no inverted oil system? Without inverted oil, I'd prefer to just shut the engine off and restart after the spin is done...done over a runway of course. Of course, if you have a carb, it quit anyway.

Last edited by sandifer : 01-08-2015 at 07:56 PM.
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  #19  
Old 01-08-2015, 08:09 PM
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I'm confused...you did an intentional inverted spin with no inverted oil system? Without inverted oil, I'd prefer to just shut the engine off and restart after the spin is done...done over a runway of course. Of course, if you have a carb, it quit anyway.
Pretty much. It was on the test card, and I knew from others that there'd still be 10-15 seconds of oil pressure at idle. It's FI, so no issue there but I dumped ~2 qts.
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  #20  
Old 01-09-2015, 08:25 AM
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Pretty much. It was on the test card, and I knew from others that there'd still be 10-15 seconds of oil pressure at idle. It's FI, so no issue there but I dumped ~2 qts.
Interesting. Just wanted to clarify since few would be willing to do that.
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