Hi Bartman,you're welcome!
If you can think of any pointers as your'e figuring it out it would be appreciated if you'd post them.
I'm still learning this maneuver really great that you guys give this information. Once again thanks guys.
Hi Bartman,you're welcome!
If you can think of any pointers as your'e figuring it out it would be appreciated if you'd post them.
I didn't have anyone around to teach me how, so this is how I taught myself how to do the rolling harrier in 4 parts, the goal of doing it this way was to learn it in increments (not to overload your brain and fingers), then seamlessly blend it all together once you are comfortable with each part.
Hope this helps some of you learn the rolling harrier
Decal Dennis
Suds, you and I are probably at about the same point with this. I'll try to keep up!Thanks Dennis - appreciate you sharing your approach. I was kind of headed down the same path - currently using rudder only for a few rotations. I will start trying elevator only next and hopefully finally blend them together sometime this year. Also repeating four point and medium slow rolls to get the hang of the 'stir'.
I bet.Lol...ya, to me awhile to think and type that out!!!
. . . . . . . Part 4: This is where your brain may go into overdrive and burn out!, Decal Dennis
As Kyle Woyshnis once told me... Don't get into a rhythm, just correct the airplane as it rolls around. That was the hardest part for me is figuring out how to break my rhythm and just actively correct the airplane as it rolls around on the deck. When you figure this out, the airplane looks so much smoother rolling around. I didn't believe him until I was actually able to do it myself first hand, now everything makes so much more sense. Throttle is no longer being pulsed with rudder inputs, it's instead being managed as the nose of the airplane rises or drops in conjunction with elevator or rudder inputs.
Don't worry if this isn't something you'll pickup in 1-2 flights. It's taken me literally thousands of flights and countless hours of trying to figure out how to make the airplane roll how I want it to. Aside from certain vertical rolling maneuvers, the rolling harrier is probably one of the most complex maneuvers out there to perform, let alone make it look good, so don't get discouraged if you aren't finding yourself getting it down quickly. I started by doing slow point rolls with the nose in high alpha. That will train your thumbs to the inputs required to keep the airplane in a continuous rolling motion.
I would say the best thing to also do is practice rolling on both directions. Get some height and make yourself do a rolling circle to the right, and then go back and do it to the left. Otherwise you'll spend years re-learning how to roll left instead of right (or visa versa)
When you've figured it out, it'll look something kinda like this.