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  • Dreadnought Video and Report

    YouTube Video Of Flight

    Hey Guys,

    Such an awesome opportunity to fly a legend (the Buick) with a legend (Brian Sanders)!

    Report below.

    Thank you to the Brian, Dennis, Shannon, Joel, and Stephen!

    So Freaking Awesome!!

    Elliot Seguin
    661-754-5288



    Dreadnought Daily Report 9.28.17 - Elliot Seguin

    The flight was an FCF. The airplane was coming out of maintenance, being domesticated after Reno. I rode backseat, Brian Sanders front seat, he did the take off landing and approach.

    Engine Start: 12:46
    Engine Shutdown: 1:20
    Time: 0.6 HRS
    Landings: 1 (Brian)

    Points:
    3 axis Control Harmony Check at 250 KIAS
    Pitch attitude captures at 250 KIAS
    Roll attitude captures at 250 KIAS
    Lat-Dir check at 250 KIAS
    Spiral Stability check at 250 KIAS
    Lateral Handling Check 250, 300, 350 KIAS
    Loop at 320 KIAS

    Other Observations:
    Stick and rudder pedals are high, and so is the canopy rail, makes you feel like your driving your dad's buick.
    My first time with a functional torque gauge
    Brian locked the tailwheel and did a positive check to confirm it was locked before takeoff using differential braking.
    Locking footstep for the back seater is cool
    Takeoff at 50" and 2800 RPM 330 GPH
    Airborne at 110 as we passed hangar 1 at Ione
    Climbed at 180 to 190 KIAS
    Climb power 30" and 2000 RPM, in auto lean at 120 GPH-1,000 FPM at 200 KIAS
    Cruise power at 26" and 1600 RPM, 90 GPH, 220 KIAS
    Maneuvering at 40" and 2400 RPM
    Downwind 180 KIAS
    Touchdown 110 KIAS

    Data:
    Control harmony. Estimate at 1-1-1 (expect 1-2-4, aileron, elevator, rudder)...rudder forces are light enough to be surprising, but the power is not overwhelming. Seems in all three axis control power is limited rather than having high forces required. Described by Brian, the rudder forces are light enough that despite significant torque effects through the power and speed envelope you don't need to trim except to fly hands off in cruise.
    Pitch attitude captures. I did 5° and 10° at 250 KIAS. No tendency to overshoot, captures were crisp and repeatable.
    Roll attitude captures. I did 0-30, 30-30, 45-45. No tendency to overshoot captures were crisp and repeatable. Brian demonstrated some high presicion four point rolls.
    Lat-Dir. Wings level sideslips at 250 KIAS. Any Lat-Dir coupling was masked by Pit-Dir coupling. I'd estimate with 10 pounds of rudder force 5 pounds up elevator was required to hold the airplane in trim.
    Spiral stability. 30° banks at 250 KIAS, to the right the spiral was stable with time to double amplitude greater than 20 seconds, less stable to the right.
    Lateral Eval. Full stick deflection rolls at 250, 300, and 350 KIAS were transparent to the pilot. Roll rate was the same at the three airspeeds and the roll forces seemed to be the same, this was introduced by Brian as the spring servo tab on the aileron, described as "poor man's power steering" (screenshot of POH attached).
    Loop entry at 320 KIAS 4G entry. Overshot on initial pitchup, Brian described the entry as that of an "Extra 300 driver that was worried about running out of energy on the top". Stick force per g was positive with less of a delay than is perceived in a T-6, felt like the elevator was more damped. The pitch rate excited the gyroscopics and pedaled the nose all over the sky (2 balls in each direction) for the first 120° of the loop. By this time the energy had bled down and the stall buffett started talking. Brian described the first indication of the stall being an aileron buffett. It started subtle and had a nice gradient with CL that was used to close the loop on CLmax over the top and on to the downline. Very nice stall warning.

    airplanes are cool
    Last edited by laminar; 10-24-2017, 11:20 AM. Reason: Video Link

  • #2
    Re: Dreadnought Video and Report

    You guys have way too much fun, and with the Sanders it get hilarious.

    Looks like the rear seat stick can get close to the family jewels, was that why you kept you hand low as a precaution:-)

    SO was that a check-out flight? Lets start a rumor that your buying 232

    You'd have fun rounding the pylons here in Reno young man.

    Thanks for sharing your adventures here.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Dreadnought Video and Report

      Originally posted by Desertdawg View Post
      You guys have way too much fun, and with the Sanders it get hilarious.

      Looks like the rear seat stick can get close to the family jewels, was that why you kept you hand low as a precaution:-)

      SO was that a check-out flight? Lets start a rumor that your buying 232

      You'd have fun rounding the pylons here in Reno young man.

      Thanks for sharing your adventures here.

      I like the 232 rumor

      Elliot you would look good in an unlimited, jussayin'
      Reno from '99 to '23

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Dreadnought Video and Report

        Originally posted by GRNDP51 View Post
        I like the 232 rumor

        Elliot you would look good in an unlimited, jussayin'
        While we're "jussayin"...this checkout would more closely support a "Furias Rumor"

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Dreadnought Video and Report

          Sweet! Next year at Reno?
          Random Air Blog

          Comment

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