Ask Captain Lim

Wednesday, 23 July 2008
Home arrow Profession arrow Why greater flaps are needed for landing than for take off?
Wednesday, 23 July 2008
Main Menu
Home
Welcome
Ask Me
Forum
Disclaimer
Privacy
Search
Links
OnLine Stores
Pilot Career
Becoming a Pilot
Female Pilots
Education
Medical Examination
Eyesight
Height
Age
Interviewing Process
Aptitude Tests
Flight Simulator
Training
Technical Questions
Professional Pilot
General
Licenses & Ratings
A320 Training Videos
Salary
Job Opportunities
Flying
Air Travel
Airways
Ditching
Dr JB Lim's Corner
Emergencies
ETOPS
Fear of Flying
Flying on the Boeing 777
Flying the Plane
Medical
Profession
Aviation
Airlines
Airplanes
Airports
Air Crash
Air Crash Investigations
Air Safety
Air Security
Humor
B777 Photo/Routes/Seats
Video
Stories, Truths & Myths
Weather
Air Turbulence
Contrails
Crosswinds
Icings
Lightnings
Night Flights
Thunderstorms
Windshears

Google
 

Why greater flaps are needed for landing than for take off?
 

By Capt Lim, on 08-01-2008

Favoured : None

Published in : Flying, Flying the Plane

Hi Capt Lim,

I was at the airport observing how planes take-off and land. I have 2 questions. Please correct me if I am wrong.

1. While the leading edge flaps were fully extended during take-offs and landings, I noticed the inboard and outboard flaps were at a smaller angle during take-offs when compared to landings. What is the reason for that? Don't we need just as much assistance from the flaps to create the lift required during the take-offs and landings? Is it because we need to create more drag during landing to slow the plane down?

2. How does a plane rotate after reaching V1? I always thought the rotation is brought about by moving the elevator up, but I did not see that during the take-offs.

Thank you in advance for you assistance and a wonderful website.

Regards,

Ken

Hi Ken,

1. You are right. The flaps on landing is selected to full extension because of the drag and speed factor. You get a lower landing speed with full flaps, hence a shorter runway. During the take off, you want the a flap setting that gives the best lift and the least drag. That is usually set at 5 degrees in the case of a Boeing 777. That is why the 5 degrees flaps is also known as the 'Take Off Flaps' whereas the 'Landing Flaps' is at 30 degrees.

2. During the rotation, the pilot would gently pull back the control wheel at a rate of about 2 degrees per second when the speed reaches the rotation speed (VR) and not V1 in the case of a Boeing 777. By doing so, the elevator moves up at the back and cause the nose of the airplane to pitch up and takes off. It is not easy to see the small movement of the elevators. However, if you were to look a the elevators during the pre-take off checks, you would notice their movement quite clearly because the pilot would be doing the mandatory test on the flight controls prior to the take off.

   
Print
Send to friend
Save this to del.icio.us

Users' Comments  
 
 


Add your comment
Name
E-mail
Title  
Comment
 
Available characters: 600
   Notify me of follow-up comments
  This image contains a scrambled text, it is using a combination of colors, font size, background, angle in order to disallow computer to automate reading. You will have to reproduce it to post on my homepage
Enter what you see:

   
   

No comment posted



mXcomment 1.0.8 © 2007-2008 - visualclinic.fr
License Creative Commons - Some rights reserved
< Prev   Next >


Latest Comments
A successful aspiring pilot...
Thank you.
Haha.. I see.. I thought it was some...
12/07/08 More...
By Ng Liang Quan

What are your views on the...
Boeing 747 crash in Belgium
I still have no information as to exact...
09/07/08 More...
By Captain Lim

What are your views on the...
Boeing 747 crash in Belgium
Thanks Capt Lim, I was thinking,...
09/07/08 More...
By Mike Hodson

A successful aspiring pilot...
What's 33x45
it is a maths qn....
08/07/08 More...
By killerdark

A successful aspiring pilot...
What's 33x45
33x45 should be a normal mathematical...
08/07/08 More...
By killerdark

© 2008 Ask Captain Lim
Joomla! is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL License.