Subject: Tricycle gear RV4
From: rotaryeng
Date: 9/26/2013, 4:36 PM
To: AAA-rotaryeng





    What do all you guys think of converting my RV4 to tricycle gear?

    I have been told to wheel land it at 80 MPH.

    That is a field length penalty and a much worse crash if you screw
    up.

    As I understand it they are dangerous in cross wind landings. I have
    a friend with one that refuses to fly under sever cross wind
    conditions.

    Paul Lamar

    It's not the beginning of April already is it ?

    John


    No john I am serious.  I have already spent $1000 with some jerk up
    in Oregon trying to teach me to wheel land at 80 MPH.

    Actually most of the time was spent  doing 360's just  under the
    overcast and just above the trees like I needed to do that :)

    When a tail wheel airplane first touches a paved runway with any
    cross wind component at all the side force is ahead of the CG and by
    any definition that is severe instability.

    Tails wheels were designed back in the days when dirt air fields were
    2 miles square and you could always land into the wind. Also the
    coefficient of friction of  rubber tires on dirt or grass is much
    less than on pavement.

    I don't want to be put in position of either running out of gas or
    landing in a cross wind with a tail wheel.

    Paul Lamar




    I learned to fly on a C120 and loved it. That one you could wheel
    land or 3 point land. The 3 pointer landing actually happened in a
    fairly short distance as we were taught to try and touch the
    tailwheel down 1 second before the mains so you didn't touch mains
    first and set up a bounce. Worked like a charm and its the same
    technique as landing the tricycle just that you hold it off a bit
    higher and a bit longer. Touchdown speed was lower than a wheeler
    landing due to the high angle of attack at touchdown. Are you not
    supposed to 3 point land a RV4? All serious short field planes with
    tail dragged config seem to be able to land in a reasonably short
    distance so I guess they 3 point land it,

    Alex

    Touching down on a locked tail wheel should work great. Maybe I
    should

    focus on finding or making a locking tail wheel.


    Paul Lamar


    Dear Mr. Lamar:

    I would check with the Kit manufacturer and ask IF they have any
    information regarding landing a Tricycle Gear RV4 in crosswinds. As
    they offer a Tricycle Gear option, they should have a chart or
    information about how it handles in crosswind landings, etc. that
    should be in the aircraft manual.

    I would also ask the Kit manufacturer IF they could send you the name
    and addresses of several of their customers that have and fly a Tri
    Gear RV-4s. I would contact those individuals. I am sure Tri Gear
    RV-4 owners and operators could give you a lot of information based
    on experience how the Tri Gear RV-4 handles in cross winds.

    I would also check on installing Vortrice Generators on your
    airplanes wings and tail to improve handling of your ariplane at low
    speeds.

    All My Best

    Brannen Sanders


    http://www.vansairforce.com/community/showthread.php?t=29562
<http://www.vansairforce.com/community/showthread.php?t=29562>
<http://www.vansairforce.com/community/showthread.php?t=29562
<http://www.vansairforce.com/community/showthread.php?t=29562>

    "The 8 has a larger rudder and longer fuselage and stiffer gear, is
    heavier with different crosswind manners. To answer your question, in
    my RV4 I used 20 knots max direct cross using a wheels landing, wing
    low on touchdown technique. Any more and it's gets squirrley when you
    lower the tail as the fuselage blanks alot of the rudder.The Rocket
    with an RV4 rudder is even more pronounced. Most production
    taildraggers use 17 knots direct crosswind as a limit. I asked a FSDO
    guy once about that and he said that years ago all of the
    manufacturers got together and agreed on a number, the insurance
    companies liked it and there it was, 17 knots. Your mileage may
    vary..."

    "Rob Ray 1500 Hours RV4 HR2"

    So apparently the rudder is blanked and that is why they insist on
    wheel landings.

    Back to nose gear :)

    Paul Lamar

    If I remember correctly wheel landings were done only a few MPH
    faster than full stall landings. Used to get good control with rudder
    and aileron, perhaps one brake in a cross wind. People that do it, do
    it all of the time. Just to keep a keen edge on that tool. If you
    cannot stay on the centerline during approach with bank and rudder,
    you need to use a different runway, or airport.

    You are not landing at 80 MPH. You are flying across an airport with
    the wheels on the ground. That would be a low pass. Just get in some
    slow time in a Champ or Cub and an old instructor. You just cannot
    beat conventional gear for getting in and out of short fields.

    I got stuck out in a cross wind and low on fuel over a paved airport
    that had gas. I could not stay over the runway in my BC12D, so I
    landed on the turn around circle at the end right into the stiff
    wind. A couple of boys came out and clipped a rope into the tie down
    ring on the right wing and walked me to the fuel pumps.

    Lynn E. Hanover

    The airplane is finished and flying. Since the tail is blanked at 3
    point landing angles of attack perhaps vortex generators on the
    canopy and fuselage sides would help.

    A larger rudder with more area at the bottom would also help. The
    rudder is structurally weak anyway and prone to flutter at speeds
    over 200 MPH. We considered making a new balanced one out of carbon
    fiber to stop that. The stock RV4 rudder is not balanced. The
    balanced part at the top would help.

    Van should be doing this.

    A tall wheel faring that looks like a rudder would also help.

    Paul Lamar

    Paul, 80 mph seems pretty fast for an RV4.  Are the flaps down?

    Helio aircraft were available in both tailwheel and trigear
    configurations.  Most operators prefer the nose wheel.  It is easier
    to control and actually takes off a little quicker because of the
    level attitude during the take off run.  However, very rough runways
    work better with a tailwheel, as the main gear are quite a bit
    stronger.  The nose wheel is prone to collapse on a rough surface.

    The Helio had the most pronounced crosswind challenges I have ever
    met.When approaching at 45 mph, a 15 knot crosswind required a 30
    degree crab angle.  With the mains well forward, to prevent nose over
    in very soft terrain, quite a lot of weight on the tailwheel, and the
    slow speeds, the plane could be very difficult to reign in, once the
    nose began to wander.  The factory solution, early on was to castor
    the main gear.  This worked quite well, but could feel a bit goofy as
    you land, still crabbed 20 degrees into the wind.  Very difficult to
    taxi until the wheels were locked again in place.  A guaranteed crash
    if one main gear castored and the other stayed locked--a lot of
    pilots had the heebie jeebies over it.  When production resumed in
    the eighties, the factory solution evolved to a locking tailwheel.
    Very simple pin, extended through a hole in the tailwheel steering
    shaft.  Like this, a three point landing is almost a non event.
    Wheel landings in a Helio are a dicey affair, mostly done when the
    pilot is showing off, just to prove he can do it.  Nothing wrong with
    three point, 100% of the time.

    A hangar partner of mine recently porpoised his RV6A (trigear) on a
    grass runway in Idaho.  The nosewheel folded back up into the cowling
    and drove his propeller into the dirt.  He is now rebuilding the
    plane with a tailwheel.

    My Pitts Model 12 must be landed three point every time, due to the
    size of the prop.  I have landed in some very powerful crosswinds
    without much issue.  Since you are concerned about it, figure out a
    tailwheel lock for the RV4.  Set it up to engage whenever the stick
    is held all the way aft (like a P51) and make three point landings.

    I would not recommend a nosewheel for the RV4.  Get some better
    training.  Yes, tailwheel configurations are old, but they have
    remained in play this long because they actually work pretty well. If
    you are worried about an engine out landing into a field, the
    tailwheel would be a better choice.

    Lewis Bjork


    Yea you drive it on.

    That jerk up in Oregon never told me about the tail blanking. If he
    had I might have tried harder. He was a friend of Van's and Van does
    not like people talking about his airplane's design short comings. If
    it were me I would come up with a retrofit fix and sell it. Maybe the
    lawyers are controlling the situation and to come up with and sell a
    fix is an admission of a design flaw.

    Beech stone walled the V tail doctor killer for years until some body
    lived through a tail coming off and proved it. Beech would just say;
    "don't exceed the VNE".

    The truth of the matter was it was all too easy to exceed the VNE in
    IMC  in a V-tail. Put the nose down a bit and bingo you are past
    VNE.

    You can put the nose straight down on a C182 and it won't go past VNE
    :) Clean airplanes designers have to design the tail with higher VNE
    margins.

    I have landed down in  Baja many times in the C182 with a 30 kt cross
    wind. Slip and crab :)

    Paul Lamar


    Have you looked at the Kasper Wing winglet controls. That would take
    the pressure of the vertical stabilizer.


    Peter Duffecy

    No :)

    Paul Lamar



    Google Witold Kasper. Check out his winglets.

    -- Peter Duffecy


    The RV4 is not a flying wing. I have no interest in flying
    wings. They tumble.

    Paul Lamar

For what ever its worth:
I'd get some old tail dragger pilot to fly with you a bit.  He can tell you if the 4 is hard or easy to land in cross winds.  Some tail draggers are harder to land than others.  If ihe 4 is hard, then change it.  If not hard, then make sure you have real good brakes and you'll be okay.
You can learn wheel landings.  But it will always be a little scarier in a tail dragger in my experience.  I'm not real experienced pilot, but had a Bonanza and later Cess 180. Flew new 182 one month (100 hrs) while Bonanza getting fixed. Probably 800 hrs in Bo and 300 hrs in 180.  The only plane I could fly to landing was the Bo.  182 you guide around and land like a box kite.  Wheel landing 180 a little better than 182 for
feeling like flying instead of guiding.   But, I didn't have any tail
dragger time when bought 180.  So I was doing 3 pt landings for a year thinking they were wheel landings:-)  Rode with another guy in his 180 and he did wheel landing.  I asked what was that and how did be for it:-). He told me.  I learned on my own in my plane and things got way less scary.  But my old brakes would get hit and peddle would go to floor soon if diddnt get slowed down before brakes failed.  Ran off runway few times but never wrecked it. Clevelands would have changed all that.

All that to say, if RV4 is not a bad tail dragger to land, you can handle it.  Just make sure you have real good brakes to keep it running straight after you lose your rudder.  You'll be fine.  Only reason yo have a tail dragger at all is to land on rough ground so don't break nose wheel off and keeps prop higher for less gravel. So if you want to land in a field on purpose or in emergency you can. If crosswind too high to land on runway at airport, you can always land into wind there with tail dragger someplace that you couldn't with nose wheel without breaking it off or damaging prop.
But get an old crusty real pilot to check RV and show you wheel landings.

Van

I got the rear rudder pedals kit so I will put that in shortly.

Paul Lamar


Paul,
You might want to have a more experienced tailwheeler put some time on it for you. Its not a good idea to make a bunch of changes until you are certain there is a problem.

Milo

I have talked to enough people about it so far. I am going to try a Raven locking tail wheel and disconnect
the rudder from the tail wheel. Steer with the brakes if need be.

Paul Lamar

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