Not much, I imagine. I know a couple of guys who have flown it. It’s conventional in terms of handling, performance and aerodynamics.I was wondering about how this would effect a Coanda wing like the one used on the C17 Globemaster III.
Simply put, you don’t get out of a spin through thrust.
Wolfgang Langewiesche explained the spin phenomenon nearly a century ago in his wonderful book, “Stick and Rudder”. If you want to know how airplanes work, that is a great primer.
Basically, what happens is this - as AOA increases, you get more lift, and more induced drag up to the point of stall. That Angle of Attack at which the stall occurs is known as the critical angle of attack. It is important to note, that a wing will always stall at the same angle of attack. The airspeed and the load factor at that angle of attack may vary, so we’re going to ignore those for right now.
Induced drag by the way, is the drag on the wing that is caused by the creation of lift itself. We distinguish that from parasite drag, which is the simple drag caused by moving various parts of the airplane through the air. Parasite drag is proportional to the square of the velocity through the air, and for the moment, we are not going to consider things like altitude or density.
It is beyond the critical AOA, beyond the point of stall, that things get interesting.
In that region of flight, an increase in AOA causes less lift and more drag. Keep this in mind.
In order to enter a spin, you must stall the aircraft and you must then induce a yaw. That yaw can come from a thrust asymmetry, but it typically comes from uncoordinated Flight, or the misapplication of rudder, and it can also come from aileron input during the stall.
You can stall an airplane straight ahead without yaw and it will simply stall. A spin requires both a stall and yaw.
Once the yaw starts, the spin becomes self perpetuating. The forward moving wing has a lower angle of attack, and therefore more lift, and less drag, (see the note above on how things work above the critical AOA) so it continues to move forward. The rearward moving wing, has a higher angle of attack, and therefore less lift, and more drag. So the airplane continues to yaw in the direction of the spin because of those forces.
If the aircraft were below the critical angle of attack at the moment this yaw was input, then the forces for the spin would never develop. The forward moving wing would have a slightly lower angle of attack, but it would have more drag and more lift, while the rearward moving wing would have less drag and less lift, which would tend to stabilize the airplane in yaw.
Again, both a stall AOA and yaw are required for a spin.
Depending on the design of the airplane, and various parameters like the center of gravity and others, some airplanes will spin fairly nose low, and some will spin in a fairly nose level attitude. It just varies. For description of the true flat spin, I encourage you to go back and look through my F-14 thread. That airplane spun with a flat attitude. Its decent rate during the spin was approximately 30,000 feet per minute. The pilot experienced approximately six Gs towards the nose of the aircraft, rendering him unable to move, if he had not locked his harness prior to spin entry.
Now some airplanes are easier to get into a spin and some airplanes are easier to get out. But the bottom line is that you have to break the angle of attack, as well as stop the rotation, so most airplanes recover when rudder is applied and the yoke/stick pushed forward. Depending on the aircraft design, recovery may take a couple of turns, or it may be nearly instant. It depends and I’ve spun airplanes that fall into both categories.
Part of the reason that recovery is so difficult, is that when the airplane is falling out of the sky in a spin, the pilots instinct is to pull back on the flight controls, this increases AOA and makes things worse. Further, applying aileron input above critical AOA, on an airplane with ailerons, against the spin increases the yaw and drag effects noted above, and makes things worse.
There is already air moving over the wings and the control surfaces during this entire event. Applying power may just make things worse, particularly in a propeller driven aircraft that has what is known as “P – factor” in which application of power induces a yaw.
An intentional spin is usually a prohibited maneuver in a transport category airplane. Recovering from a spin in a big airliner, requires that you never get into it in the first place. The first indication of the stall, you must control the AOA, and push forward on the yoke/stick.
Applying full power in an aircraft like a 737, where the thrust axis is below the wing, tends to push the nose up, therefore increasing the stall, and making the spin worse.
Recovering from the spin requires managing the AOA, then managing the yaw, but it does not require power, and power can, in fact, exacerbate the problem.
So, back to this particular incident. Icing or not, mechanical problem, or not, the failure to manage AOA is the reason that they entered the spin. I don’t care what you’re doing, as a pilot, the absolute first priority is to fly the aircraft, to manage the flight path of that aircraft, and that includes all of the parameters such as heading, altitude, airspeed, but especially AOA.
Management of that flight path must come first above all other priorities, including combating an engine fire or failure, talking on the radio, or anything else.
Managing the flight controls, and the path of the aircraft must have absolute primacy.
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