Learning to fly the Tail Wheel aircraft. Tail draggers.

  • 4.1
16 hours on-demand video
$ 12.99

Brief Introduction

Advanced Aircraft Pilot training. Learn to fly Airplanes. Aircraft. With tail wheels. No Spam Cans here.

Description

Advanced pilot training using your PC. In early aircraft, a tailskid made of metal or wood was used to support the tail on the ground. In most modern aircraft with conventional landing gear, a small articulated wheel assembly is attached to the rearmost part of the airframe in place of the skid. This wheel may be steered by the pilot through a connection to the rudder pedals, allowing the rudder and tailwheel to move together.

Before aircraft commonly used tailwheels, many aircraft (like a number of First World War Sopwith aircraft, such as the Camel fighter) were equipped with steerable tailskids, which operate similar to a tailwheel. When the pilot pressed the right rudder pedal — or the right footrest of a "rudder bar" in World War I — the skid pivoted to the right, creating more drag on that side of the plane and causing it to turn to the right. While less effective than a steerable wheel, it gave the pilot some control of the direction the craft was moving while taxiing or beginning the takeoff run, before there was enough airflow over the rudder for it to become effective.

Another form of control, which is less common now than it once was, is to steer using "differential braking", in which the tailwheel is a simple, freely castering mechanism, and the aircraft is steered by applying brakes to one of the mainwheels in order to turn in that direction. This is also used on some tricycle gear aircraft, with the nosewheel being the freely castering wheel instead. Like the steerable tailwheel/skid, it is usually integrated with the rudder pedals on the craft to allow an easy transition between wheeled and aerodynamic control.

Requirements

  • Requirements
  • Best if you have a PC and controllers.
$ 12.99
English
Available now
16 hours on-demand video
Graham "The Baron" Hesketh
Udemy

Instructor

Share
Saved Course list
Cancel
Get Course Update
Computer Courses