What are the four aerodynamic forces acting on an airplane? What is the relationship between them in straight and level flight?
Lift, weight, thrust, drag.
Lift = weight. Thrust = drag.
When are the four aerodynamic forces said to be in equilibrium?
When the airplane is in unaccelerated flight.
What is the angle of attack?
The angle between the wing chord line and the relative wind.
Describe Bernoulli’s principle as it applies to aviation.
An increase in the speed of a fluid occurs simultaneously with a decrease in pressure.
The air traveling faster over the curved upper surface of an airfoil causes lower pressure on the top surface.
Does the angle of attack change with gross weight?
No. It remains the same regardless of gross weight.
Does stall speed alter with altitude?
No. The altitude at which a plane stalls in a particular configuration remains the same regardless of altitude.
What is necessary for an airplane to spin?
A stall.
During a spin to the right, which wing is stalled?
Both.
How does frost affect the wing of an airplane?
It disrupts the smooth flow of air over the wing, adversely affecting its lifting quality.
What can happen if frost is not removed from an airplane’s wings before flight?
It may prevent the airplane from becoming airborne at normal takeoff speed.
What are three other terms for left-turning tendency?
P-factor, torque effect, and asymmetric propeller loading.
What causes left-turning tendency?
The descending propeller blade on the right produces more thrust than the ascending blade on the left.
When is torque effect greatest?
In a single-engine airplane at low airspeed, high power, and high angle of attack.
What determines the longitudinal stability of an airplane?
The location of the center of gravity with respect to the center of lift.
What happens when the airplane is loaded to the most aft CG limit?
It makes the airplane less stable at all speeds.
What happens if an airplane is loaded aft of the most aft CG limit?
The pilot might experience difficulty in recovering from a stalled condition.
What causes the nosedown pitch tendency of an airplane when the power is reduced?
The downwash on the elevators from the propeller slipstream is reduced, and elevator effectiveness is reduced.
What do changes in the center of pressure of a wing do?
They affect the aircraft’s aerodynamic balance and controllability.
What makes the airplane turn?
The horizontal component of lift.
What is the purpose of the rudder?
To control yaw.
Which basic flight maneuver increases the load factor on an airplane, when compared with straight-and-level flight?
Turns.
During an approach to a stall, increased load factor will cause…
…the airplane to stall at a higher speed.
What can increased load factor do?
Stress the airplane beyond its design limits.
The amount of excess load that can be imposed on the wing of an airplane depends on…
…the speed of the airplane.