The capt told me that as the old girl started to go around he snapped the other throttle up. Both screaming darts wet and 15000 rpm made short work of their lack of reverse. He then made a quick PA to apologize for the the sharp turn!!pelmet wrote:I know a couple of guys that intentionally groundlooped a 40 passenger twin turboprop on a short, contaminated runway. Having no reverse capability in the design and little braking action, their alternative was a sharp dropoff at the end of the runway. So I believe rudder was combined with adding power on one engine. It worked.photofly wrote:I was taught to use a controlled "ground-loop" to turn the aircraft (it was a Champ) around on a grass field: pick the right speed, full rudder and a burst of power to get the tail-wheel to skid, and you'll do a nice 180 more or less on the spot.
I remember reading somewhere that in some WWII aircraft (it had a wide undercarriage) a semi-controlled ground loop was the approved procedure for a late abort in a take-off run. Maybe that was just a myth.
Back to the thread. I have very little tail wheel time but someone who I have a lot of respect for told me that if it starts to get screwy on landing and you have the room, pour the coals to it and go around and try again. The power should straighten it out if it hasn't gone too far, no?
Cheers
ETTW




