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Old 4th Aug 2020, 06:11
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PPRuNeUser0131
 
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Vertical Eights anybody?

While rummaging through my old crash comics for the disposal thereof, I found a story on Aerobatics & structural limitations (issue 102/1978, pps 19-23).

It started “Several months ago the owner of a Cessna 177B became concerned about the structural integrity of his aircraft when he learned that it had been flown in aerobatic manoeuvres”.

Yes, I know a Cessna Cardinal and aerobatics; it just doesn’t gel. I thought a Cardinal was hard pressed to fly straight and level.

It went on, “the pilot who hired the aircraft said later the he believed that he complied with the flight manual, by limiting manoeuvres to spins and chandelles. But when he described the manoeuvres he had done, it was obvious that what he thought were chandelles were in fact, stall turns …”; later in stated “It was fortunate the pilot did not attempt a lazy eight, for when he was asked to describe this manoeuvre, he said it consisted of two consecutive loops with a half aileron roll on the down side of each loop”.

But over the page, the ASD had diagrams of certain manoeuvres, one of which was a vertical eight. I have never flown one but I doubt if I ever would in any light aircraft, it being described as “a manoeuvre in which the aircraft performs an upward loop followed by a half roll and a downward loop, with entry and exit at the same level and in the same direction”.

The diagram (if i can get it attached to this post) is much better in seeing what was involved. All I can say is, that the aircraft must have been seriously pushing Vne on the way down after the half roll.

Anyone do these regularly, successfully?

I realise it depends on the speed over the top, but going downwards twice, under gravity in a Cessna, no thanks!
Attached Files
File Type: pdf
Vertical 8.pdf (1.31 MB, 12 views)
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