by Zach Grant L1011jock » Wed Nov 12, 2014 9:48 pm
Tim,
The takeoff and landing distance charts are flight test charts with no safety factor added in, and if you haven't found out by experience, the chart you have attached is extremely suspect. I have yet to fly a Twin Comanche that will keep the mains on the ground to 90 mph at flaps 15 in anything other than an an extremely "max gross" situation. Most come off somewhere in the 75-80mph range and, to keep this on a maint. footing, causes much less damage, to let the plane fly off at about 7-10 degrees pitch, retract the gear at positive rate, and by the time the gear is up you are through 90 mph, which as you know is a theoretical number at this point because the gear was down, flaps were/are at 15, you are in ground effect, and you probably aren't anywhere near 3600# or the aft CG limit. Your real Vmc is most likely somewhere near 75 mph in these conditions. Try it for yourself at altitude and see what the different configurations do to Vmc based on the published "formula" number. There is a reason why the FAA does not make the charted numbers mandatory in light aircraft. Its because they are most often not repeatable by the average pilot in the average airplane. They were developed by test pilots with new airplanes under perfect conditions. As for all the other charts, figure the percentage change based on the perameters and write that into the program. After all its still aviation. Measure with a micrometer, mark it with a crayon, and cut it with a chainsaw...
-Zach
"Keep it above 5 feet and don't do nuthin dumb!"