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ACCELERATED MANEUVER STALLDescriptionA stall resulting from a higher-than-normal airspeed in steep turns, pull-ups, or other abrupt changes in your flight attitude, often occurring faster than other stalls. ObjectiveTo demonstrate that a stall will not always occur at the same airspeed if excessive maneuvering loads are imposed by steep turns, pull-ups or other abrupt changes in flight path. Setup· Clear the area · Choose forced landing area · Configure aircraft for a maneuvering: (C172RG: 18” Hg, 2300 RPM) at ≤VA (C172RG: ≤106 KIAS at MGW, e.g. use 90 KIAS), flaps up (flaps down will lead to excessive loads), gear up, carburetor heat off, altitude so recovery is ≥1500’ AGL · Select outside references · Roll to a 45º level bank while gradually increasing back pressure to maintain altitude · Slowly increase back pressure while maintaining altitude until the airplane stalls Recovery· Immediately release back pressure on the control and increase power o If the turn is not coordinated, one wing may drop suddenly, causing the airplane to roll in that direction, if so the excessive back pressure must be released to break the stall before adding power · Return to straight-and-level, coordinated flight · Maintain ball centered · Look for traffic
It is important to recover at the first sign of the stall, as a prolonged accelerated stall can develop into a spin. This stall tends to be more rapid or sever, than the unaccelerated stall, and because they occur at higher-than-normal-speed, and/or may occur at lower than anticipated pitch attitudes, they may be unexpected by an inexperienced pilot ReferencesFAA-H-8083-3A Airplane Flying Handbook p. 4-9 JS314510-001 Jeppesen Guided Flight Discovery Private Pilot Maneuvers p. 5-11 This document is provided as is. It is intended for use by authorized instructors only. Please double-check all content before using. © 2008
Derek W Beck. Some Rights
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Licensed
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Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike. |
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