I think that would be a fair enough assumption and I would go so far as to say that directional and lateral stability will suffer with the lower airsp...
Hi Cetinski, No, you're not missing anything. They do indeed use PH for the landing climb weight limit. You are right in thinking the DH would be a...
Yes, there are at least two types. If the mixture is rich, yes there will be more fuel flowing and this will show up as a higher fuel flow in an i...
Here's something you might enjoy reading rubber. It explains the situation very eloquently and brings a lot to the discussion 🙂 [url
Things to remember: CofG position doesn't change with angle of attack (unless you have things rolling around in the cabin 😛 ). The position of the c...
In a level turn the outward wing is travelling faster than the inside wing and as such will be producing more lift which will tend to encourage the ai...
1.) The CSU will attempt to keep the RPM of the engine set to whatever RPM you set with the prop lever in the cockpit. During runups, you first set th...
1.) In a carburetted aircraft, fuel pressure is measured just before it enters the carburettor. 2.) Vaporisation can cause fuel pressure fluctuatio...
A fuel flow meter with an impeller transducer uses fuel flowing over the impeller(s) to generate the signal sent to the instrument displaying the fuel...
Hi Shawkins, Here's a link to the forum post on tagging. It also includes the links to the CASA pages outlining what can or cannot be done with you...
...and just as an addendum: [b]know your CAAP 5.59[/b]! Experience has shown that many questions use examples taken word for word out of the CAAP. ...
The E-Text viewer has been updated and now supports full-text search on iPads, Androids and other portable devices. It is one update I have personally...
[size=5][b][color=#000088][center]Portable Devices now support Full-Text Search![/center][/color][/b][/size] The long awaited feature has arrived: ...
Hi Tomcat, The rule for any performance chart is you may [i][b]interpolate [/b][/i]but never [b][i]extrapolate[/i][/b], or in other words, you can ...