Re: Abrupt pitch inputs
Posted: Thu Apr 25, 2024 6:08 pm
I tried the gusty wind landing, the no-wind landing and I added 5kts + as you said. What I noticed in the gusty landing is that the airplane was really more controlable but some times I had some crazy floating in the very beginning of the flare, pitching up almost nothing and the airplane reacting almost like a go-around. The fall from the sky became more rare.
In the no-wind landing I didn't feel much difference to be honest. But I noticed something different that I haven't noticed until now: the inertia is very very strong. In the flares, mostly in no-wind conditions. I flared gently, but when I stoped flaring, the airplane continued flaring. I even tried to pitch down (in the end of the vĂdeo) but the inertia was stronger than my inputs and nothing happened. In one of the landings I did, even after the touch down the nose was still going up.
This is the link for the video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Zt4WtJ4V5w
I'd say, that the solution would be dereasing a bit the inertia. (I dont know if it is simple as that, Im not a programmer, you guys know this a lot more than me and this is just my opinion as a flight simmer and PPL student).
Thanks again for the amazing support you are giving me, Ricardo.
In the no-wind landing I didn't feel much difference to be honest. But I noticed something different that I haven't noticed until now: the inertia is very very strong. In the flares, mostly in no-wind conditions. I flared gently, but when I stoped flaring, the airplane continued flaring. I even tried to pitch down (in the end of the vĂdeo) but the inertia was stronger than my inputs and nothing happened. In one of the landings I did, even after the touch down the nose was still going up.
This is the link for the video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Zt4WtJ4V5w
I'd say, that the solution would be dereasing a bit the inertia. (I dont know if it is simple as that, Im not a programmer, you guys know this a lot more than me and this is just my opinion as a flight simmer and PPL student).
Thanks again for the amazing support you are giving me, Ricardo.