Thank you! When the weather gets better I should fly up to Nevada County
@trustyaeronautАй бұрын
@@GrimshawAviationlet me know if you come up this way. I’m usually only a few minutes from the airport 😄 my email should still be in my profile
@GrimshawAviationАй бұрын
I don’t see it in your KZbin profile. But I found you on Facebook so I added you.
@Gonzo-1421Ай бұрын
Looks neat. Cool tail wheel
@GrimshawAviationАй бұрын
The only way to go!
@AdamBoyd-f9hАй бұрын
Is this in Russellville Arkansas
@GrimshawAviationАй бұрын
Nope. It may have been in the past but now it’s in California
@alexross1505Ай бұрын
Hell yeah
@Iflyagrasshopper2 ай бұрын
Nice video good explanations of how to control a tail wheel AC
@GrimshawAviationАй бұрын
I have to do more of this kind of explanation but I have to get back in the air.
@Iflyagrasshopper2 ай бұрын
This is a very nice tribute to your mom.
@GrimshawAviationАй бұрын
Thank you 🙏
@Iflyagrasshopper2 ай бұрын
Nice!
@freddyfreeloader12002 ай бұрын
AWESOME thank you.
@GrimshawAviation2 ай бұрын
Thanks! I’m glad you enjoyed it!
@simpletonsunshine3 ай бұрын
I did a moonlight ride through the Black Rock Desert! ❤
@GrimshawAviation3 ай бұрын
Absolutely possible too! Moon may as well be the sun! lol
@simpletonsunshine3 ай бұрын
@@GrimshawAviation It had been VERY windy, during the day, so when the sun was setting all the dust made the sun red! Really a neat experience!!
@GrimshawAviation2 ай бұрын
@@simpletonsunshinevery cool place for sure
@elosogonzalez87393 ай бұрын
Glad you made the video. It's important to talk about it even though you weren't the pilot. The Champ is an easy rebuild. All the parts are easily available and reasonably priced. It can be back in the air in a few months. Get'r done!😊
@GrimshawAviation3 ай бұрын
That is the goal! 😊
@tungstenair3754 ай бұрын
How may hours did it take y’all to get it flying again?
@GrimshawAviation4 ай бұрын
I’d say it took between 500-700 hours. Approx.
@Carseatttt4 ай бұрын
Great flight. What do you use to record audio and video?
@GrimshawAviation4 ай бұрын
Used an audio cable from GoPro that intercepts the audio and the headset plugs into that. Also used a GoPro Max for the recording but I now have an insta360 I am going to use next.
@MrPedrobrazКүн бұрын
@@GrimshawAviation yes 👍 thank you 🙏
@MrPedrobrazКүн бұрын
@@GrimshawAviation This is very good material I congratulate you
@SwedishCowgirl75 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing your flight!❤
@pika11115 ай бұрын
Thanks for the great content
@GrimshawAviation5 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@kenprice19615 ай бұрын
I was waiting for the "ground loop" on the P-51..........then I stopped watching this video.
@GrimshawAviation5 ай бұрын
That’s okay. I didn’t have video of a p51 ground loop 🤷♂️
@sharkdog26096 ай бұрын
Land too fast, best way to groundloop. Ive heard from initial training and onward that its best to land with less flaps in a strong crosswind. After 7000+ hours in tailwheel, my observation is that is a terrible idea. Do not land fast, unless your downwind, but that’s seat of pants and you should know your aircraft well if your doing that, more to it etc. No reason to groundloop, fly the plane and do what needs to be done in the moment, stay fluid! P.S. Keep your brakes in good working order, will save you in a pinch. Get good at dumping flaps and make sure your idle is set correctly.
@hotprop925 ай бұрын
Best solid advice I've heard in a long while. Landing with no or partial flaps just prolongs the agony to the whims of the wind. The best lesson I got in landing a taildragger was from a retired AA driver who was teaching me aerobatics. Really gusty knarly day, what I now call "sporting conditions" and he wanted to go and fly. During the lesson all I thought about was the landing to come. I never, whew, what an effort. This was in a Super Decathlon, btw. He had the nose so low and tail up high we probably looked like a bloodhound sniffing for a scent. Inside the view was startling. At first I felt I wanted to run to the back of the plane. The harder the gust the more he pushed nose over to keep the mains planted. RIP, JIM
@johndurant6226 ай бұрын
The Stearman corrected for a right crosswind, but ground looped left. His mistake was he kept the rudder left after removing the aileron. When your friend turned around, he then had a tailwind, so opposite aileron is appropriate, as the aileron is reversed in a tailwind.
@FireBosspilot6 ай бұрын
Who’s teaching these guys to fly a take-off and landing with their hand off the throttle???
@GrimshawAviation6 ай бұрын
That’s a great question!
@davidwheatcroft27976 ай бұрын
You have to be VERY quick. I would twitch my feet, left, right, then full power, and no THINKING, just let your body do it. BELIEVE in yourself. Same on finals; relax, do your best. If things going sideways, FULL POWER! and go back up. CAVU slies, all.
@philipbgood6 ай бұрын
A left crosswind on landing becomes a right crosswind when you back-taxi. You want to hold the left wing down on landing and the right wing down on back-taxi.
@togacruiser6 ай бұрын
The Stearman groundloop was not caused by the wind but the pilot. Notice he is landing in a crosswind from the right. But groundloops to the left. The right crosswind would have caused him tomgo right or weathervane intomthe wind.
@oldglory19447 ай бұрын
Two of the 3 responsibilities of ailerons: 1) providing the BANK to control drift, & 2) on roll out providing YAW for directional control as rudder stalls out. RULE; very simply on the runway, keep ailerons PROPORTIONALLY opposite the needed rudder. Totally opposite to recovering a skidding car. Knowing the rule of thumb and practice on the runway will help break car habit in the plane. Cheers 60 year CFI. PM if you are interested.
@GrimshawAviation7 ай бұрын
Yes! Love it! Not exactly sure how you PM on KZbin haha
@rvrrunner7 ай бұрын
I owned and flew a 1946 Cessna 120 for many years. Loved that airplane but I learned very quickly that you fly a taildragger to the parking spot but drive a tricycle airplane. Real pilots fly tail draggers! BTW I flew a 1938 Piper J 3 from western Okla to Oshkosh Air Show with no radios or electrical system. I took a buddy with me whose job it was after landing to jump out of the airplane and help hold the up wind wing down while taxiing in high winds which happened a number of times on that trip.
@FLHTdriver7 ай бұрын
You funny nose wheel pilots! The 170 had no aileron input in the video....but the biggest part of ending a ground loop is full power and opposite rudder. That will slam the gear back on the ground. The rudder is the first and last thing to gain and lose authority on any aircraft. Wiggle those peddles when you are entering a stall and see if they are the last to lose authority all thru a stall.
@jimmydulin9282 ай бұрын
Good point. Starting in Cubs, I have never understood how rudder became the little brother of aileron. It is the primary control on longitudinal alignment because it is mounted on the longitudinal axis. I is the master of correct yaw for longitudinal alignment and aileron with its adverse yaw sending the nose the undesired way is not welcome at the party of directing our course toward a target once turned to that target.
@cuttersgoose7 ай бұрын
And it’s funny that back before the war, in fact since the write bros, tailwheel was the only type of aircraft everyone learned on, today we have become so soft, we aren’t in control of anything, we are dumber now than ever..
@GrimshawAviation7 ай бұрын
Lmao such a true statement! So easy to learn in a Cessna 172….jumping to tailwheel was the best thing I’d ever done because it taught me I didn’t know how to fly before then….
@cuttersgoose7 ай бұрын
@@GrimshawAviation i think the best thing to do is for all students to start out on tailwheel, it will make them better pilots..unfortunately, the liability is the problem..hence the reason for no tail wheels planes, hence the problem for no good tail wheel pilots...blah blah blah
@MarkSmith-js2pu7 ай бұрын
When I learned to fly in a Cherokee, my instructor really emphasized ailerons during ground operations. I see why now. I thought ground loops were rookie mistakes.
@GrimshawAviation7 ай бұрын
Well rookies still groundloop but as it stands the guys who are seasoned in tailwheel are the ones who ground loop the most only because they will relax and not correct properly and it sneaks up on them. You always have to keep yourself aware of your situation.
@scotabot78267 ай бұрын
I sure would want a new set of metal wings from American Champion. Just for my own piece of mind! Sorry about the crash. She looked like a nice clean Champ!!
@GrimshawAviation7 ай бұрын
It was a beautiful champ! It will be again!
@GrimshawAviation7 ай бұрын
I thought about metal spars! But seeing how well the wood spars held up…hell I dunno if metal would be any better. For the price…the wood withstood the impact amazingly and I couldn’t see them breaking mid flight for any reason.
@Kevin_7474 ай бұрын
Adds about 30 pounds to the empty weight and you get the Citabria wingtip whether you like it or not. 30 pounds on a Champ makes a difference, especially if it still has an A65.
@cameronmolt56497 ай бұрын
Our Sedan got trashed a few years ago. It wasn't that bad but still took 1.5 years before it could fly. Now she's back, better than ever.
@GrimshawAviation7 ай бұрын
I hope we get this back up and flying sooner than later! We also are thinking some changes and a slight change in paint scheme!
@jimstrieby49987 ай бұрын
Gee whiz, a lot of hollywood drama for a "could be informative" aviation vid
@GrimshawAviation7 ай бұрын
It's okay, this was for those who've been following me through this journey...we've only had this champ going since 2016...and now its destroyed. If someone else crashed your plane how'd you feel?
@outwiththem7 ай бұрын
@@GrimshawAviation How did it crash there with engine running ?
@grannyblinda7 ай бұрын
Only tears…no blood…that’s the main thing…
@aviatortrucker62857 ай бұрын
I found wheel landings a challenge since the perception to keep the aircraft with the tail wheel raised often seems to counter the sink rate. I tend to pull back on the stick and that puts me more toward a 3 pt landing. Adding power to an already “flared too high” attitude just increases airspeed. Never had a ground loop or near ground loop but I can “feel” the airplane tell me what control input it wants to keep the tail within the width of the mains.
@GrimshawAviation7 ай бұрын
Absolutely, it’s all about feel with flying. If you cannot read the airplane after some time of flying it, you should stop flying because it will one day kill you when you’re not paying attention.
@aviatortrucker62857 ай бұрын
@@GrimshawAviation I haven’t flown a tail wheel airplane in over 10 years. I finally got the chance and went with the CFI. I did fairly well except on the wheel landings. It was pretty gusty that day but generally within 10 to 20° off runway heading. There was one time that I bounced pretty good and he was surprised that I immediately said we’re going around. I just smoothly kept aircraft straight and did not even try to tame it back on the surface. I hold the stick with just three fingers.
@wackaircaftmechanic23127 ай бұрын
Happens to the best of us man. At least you’re okay.
@deerranch65607 ай бұрын
Good information 👍 thanks for sharing.
@chucklemasters64337 ай бұрын
rather than just saying use aileron on the upwind side you need to let pilots know that you need just enough aileron to help hold the aircraft on the centerline. you are rarely in a static situation so you need to adjust the aileron in relation to the changing wind velocity/direction as you are rolling down the runway after touchdown. try steering the plane with the aileron as the primary input sometime and the rudder as secondary. i do this on every landing in a taildragger and nosewheel as well. as the nose goes left you need left aileron to make it come back to the right and as it comes back to the right as a result of the left aileron input you need right aileron to make it go back to the left again. you will become proficient with aileron steering instead of rudder steering if you do this every time. you will also learn how much more powerful and effective the aileron is at steering on the ground than the rudder is. if you do it enough you will also learn why almost every single ground loop happens. that is to say that most pilots do no know the importance of aileron input and they don't even have a clue what aileron input they are making just after touchdown when the sidewind hits the side of that vertical stabilizer and turns the nose into the wind and the plane heads to the upwind side of the runway. most pilots who are not correctly trained will steer the opposite direction just like their car and there is not nearly enough rudder to overcome that backwards aileron input and the grounloop results.
@AndrewHardy-df7uv6 ай бұрын
Ha Ha, nice piss-take Dude. It would be funny except there are probably people who believe believe that sort of rubbish.
@nrakma7 ай бұрын
Making a Tesla useful and easy to drive while doing major things like changing radio stations or a/c settings. Can’t wait for Elon to invent knobs and switches that a person can use without looking. Maybe way in the future or back to the future it will happen. Probably around the same time we actually become a paperless society.
@GrimshawAviation7 ай бұрын
I am not entirely sure what you're talking about in reference to my video....are you sure you commented on the correct video?? LMAO
@aviatortrucker62857 ай бұрын
Wait a minute, he turned around 180 on the runway, which means now that he is taking off or taxiing in a tailwind so his crosswind correction is correct by keeping it in the same direction as when he landed. The only difference is his tail needed to be not held back but not full forward either because he is enduring a tail wind during takeoff or taxiing. Am I wrong?
@GrimshawAviation7 ай бұрын
Depends on the wind strength and direction. Usually, if you have a tail wind yes, you will put in opposite of the headwind correction. But if the wind is not significant…you always put in correction as needed.
@jimmydulin9288 ай бұрын
You are correct that the C-170 did not have the wing stabilized in the proper bank angle to cancel the slight crosswind drift. That would not require the aileron to be down, just the wing once set. Longitudinal alignment is the mission of the rudder, more accurately the dynamic proactive proper yaw left, right, left, right rapid movement of the rudder to bracket the centerline between our legs (student's and mine as it is optical.) Like the tennis player who shift left, right, left, right foot to be moving when the service comes, we do the same to already be moving with correct yaw at the time the airplane tries to gyroscopic precession of prop when we bring the tail up or P factor when we raise the nose to bring the nose off or gusts or the airplane just does its weight behind center unbalanced thing. No on can balance a broom on their palm without moving dynamically and proactively. Set the wing if necessary for corsswind but once set or with level wing in no wind, leave the aileron with its adverse yaw alone. The nose will always go the wrong way unless we lead rudder and we are busy with other things on short final and we don't need to be doing Dutch rolls on short final anyway. Those who walk the rudders dynamically and proactively to bracket the centerline do not wing wag and have no problem staying ahead of the airplane, which is far more effective than reacting to misalignment. Notice where the nose goes first when you make a turn without leading rudder. So you step on the ball to fix it, which is fine at altitude. On short final, adverse yaw is not fine. I jam my thumb against the stick or bottom of the one side of the yoke. When the student starts wing wagging to make little turns for alignment on short final, I say, "walk the rudders." If wing wagging persists, I have the student put hands in lap so he has to use dynamic proactive rudder properly to maintain alignment.
@TheWidebody7478 ай бұрын
So, who left the tow bar hooked to the nosewheel? Badly done Grim!
@GrimshawAviation7 ай бұрын
Haha what do you mean?!? I flew with it off! The videos just show after I’ve either pulled it out or getting it ready to put back. If I left it on I don’t think we’d be having this conversation. 🙃
@GreenHornTrucker8 ай бұрын
nicely done Grim!
@GrimshawAviation7 ай бұрын
Thanks brother!
@Account_abandoned-q7m8 ай бұрын
Wasn't that the man that faked a plane crash
@GrimshawAviation7 ай бұрын
Oh no….no not at all actually. That guy is an idiot and totally different plane.
@Account_abandoned-q7m7 ай бұрын
@@GrimshawAviation then I have no idea sorry..
@GrimshawAviation7 ай бұрын
No idea about what? I’m confused
@Account_abandoned-q7m7 ай бұрын
@@GrimshawAviation the video
@getuliosimoes98449 ай бұрын
Very nice manchine, congratulations.
@GrimshawAviation8 ай бұрын
I wish that were still the case
@tztz19499 ай бұрын
Energy management and proper control inputs.
@GrimshawAviation9 ай бұрын
Works like a charm!
@AndrewHardy-df7uv9 ай бұрын
I disagree with your comment regarding the pilot not moving the control to the opporsite side when backtracking. Provided the aircraft is taxied at a speed slower than the quatering tailwind, the aileron on the upwind side should be down to prevent the wind from lifting the wing. He did the right thing. Well done.
@GrimshawAviation9 ай бұрын
There’s always more than one way to skin a cat. But in reality, even though I made this comment, I always say do what circumstances require. It’s possible winds changed direction at the other end. We don’t know what elements he was dealing with as other factors because we were not present. But thanks for watching! Aviation is all about sharing our passion and learning from each other.
@vickyg285110 ай бұрын
Damn wasps! 😆 I’m glad you weren’t stung & managed to get the plane off & flying. Super cool footage! Thanks for sharing!
@GrimshawAviation10 ай бұрын
Oh man I’ve been stung many times…just didn’t wanna get stung! Haha
@maivaly-grimshaw618711 ай бұрын
❤❤❤❤ I love this, and I love you!!! It was absolutely the most beautiful day!
@GrimshawAviation11 ай бұрын
🥰😘🥰😘🥰😘
@markyanh6630 Жыл бұрын
Great
@looneytunes47 Жыл бұрын
Flyma8 Jon is a great great pilot
@GrimshawAviation Жыл бұрын
Absolutely! He is a great fellow and I hope to meet up with him one day!