From Lynn's Legacy to my LIV, also a VERY fine flying
airplane--the most efficient cross country cruiser I have
piloted.
Flying slow is not for the uninformed, and maybe not for most.
However it helps to understand what show is relative to your favorite plane and
what surprises it might bring. I built a LIV because I wanted a high wing
loaded flyer (I had a LongEZ which is also a great cruiser) to save my aging
kidneys as I travel across the great American deserts of the west. I
wanted a LIV because I think it has a great wing and flap system that offers a
remarkable flight envelop with an amazing spread between stall and top
speed. I wanted an LIV rather than a "P" or Turbine because it could be
built light enough to not over tax that 100sqft wing area and retain some
agility to keep non cruise flight fun. I got what I wanted, in
spades.
I also wanted to understand the low speed end so I conducted some stall
investigations which I will share. I calibrated my pitot static system
with ground and flight test so am reasonably confident the following numbers, in
KIAS, are accurate.
1 G stalls, 10k msl, ball centered, level flight, very slow A/S bleed
rate:
with stall strips, light weight, clean: 78; gear and full flaps: 70
without stall strips, light weight, clean: 73; gear and full flaps:
68
without stall strips, heavier weight, clean: 77; gear and full flaps:
72
Note: light weight is me plus 30 gal of fuel
heavier weight is me plus 75 gal of fuel
empty weight is 2200 lbs, I am 200 lbs
CG is towards the fwd limit
stall strips were two triangle shaped strips 10
inches long mounted 15 inches outboard of the wing root
stalls were abrupt but straight ahead IF the ball
was centered
stalls with the ball out of the race resulted in
abrupt rolls up to 90 degrees of bank
higher energy stalls (accelerated) resulted in more
abrupt departures with rolls exceeding 90 degrees
no high power stalls were attempted
warning buffet generally began 1 or maybe two knots
above stalls without strips
warning buffet generally began about 5 knots above
stalls with strips
data were plus or minus about 3 KIAS due to
variations in bleed rate and G
So I set my stall warning on the Chelton at 78 KIAS to keep the aural
warning silent while touching down. I fly the pattern about like Lynn and
his Legacy--110 around the corner and 100 over the overrun. Remember your
stall margin is increased base to final to touchdown because you are descending
and are therefore at less than 1 G. I am very happy if I can touch down
light weight at 80 KIAS--it is easier to get a better landing with a faster
touchdown but slower is better pilotage.
I hope that gives everyone an idea of the flight characteristics of a LIV
around stall so you can begin to understand what the boogie man looks
like.
paul, N94PT
In a message dated 8/21/2008 4:53:32 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time,
farnsworth@charter.net writes:
If you
want to fly slowly, install vortex generators or buy a Piper Cub.