|
|
Subject:
Aviation aerobatics and specifically recovering from a spin
Category: Sports and Recreation Asked by: aerobatics-ga List Price: $25.00 |
Posted:
26 Feb 2003 17:42 PST
Expires: 28 Mar 2003 17:42 PST Question ID: 167616 |
Just prior to the 1st world war, a British aviator by the name of Parke (Lt., I believe) worked out (first by necessity and then by choice) how to recover a aircraft that had entered a spin. This was referred to as Parke's dive or simply Parke dive. He was the first aviator to survive a spin and then went on to figure out what he did (in desperation) and repeated it. I need a historical account of this amazing accomplishment. My source is verbal tradition among aviators and Neil Williams 1975 book "Aerobatics" Thanks in advance, John Grinder | |
| |
|
|
Subject:
Re: Aviation aerobatics and specifically recovering from a spin
Answered By: byrd-ga on 02 Mar 2003 16:59 PST Rated: |
Hello John, As a pilot myself, who has had a little training and experience in aerobatics and spin recovery techniques, I was intrigued by your question, though I came up as disappointingly empty on my own as the other Researchers have. So I emailed Rich Stowell with the question, hoping hed have some information on the subject. Rich, as you may or may not know, is a leading authority on aerobatics, spins and emergency maneuvers training, widely known and respected not only for the depth and breadth of his knowledge, but his ability to share that knowledge with others through articles and books, reports, talks, seminars, clinics and hands-on one-on-one flight training. You can read more about him and his credentials at his website, here: http://www.richstowell.com as well as find much information about aerobatics and spins. Rich was good enough to reply, and quickly, and indeed had good information on this subject, which he was generous enough to share. As a matter of fact, as he says, he is in the process of finishing a new book entitled, "The General Aviation Pilot's Guide to STALL/SPIN AWARENESS" -- which takes an historic look at our understanding of stall/spin phenomena over the last 100 years of powered flight. He cited as his sources, "Flight Fantastic, The Illustrated History of Aerobatics," by Annette Carson "Acrobats in the Sky," by John W. Underwood The short answer to your question is that there is no historical account of Parkes Dive as youve described it because it didnt happen that way. Stowell says, To my knowledge, Parke never did intentionally spin an airplane. That distinction seems to have been given to pilot Harry Hawker. The first true scientific investigation of spins was conducted by F.A. Lindemann. He then provided an excerpt from Chapter Two of this new book, that directly pertains to Parkes Dive and your specific question. It says, " August 25, 1912 "A crowd gathers at Larkhill Aerodrome in Salisbury Plain, England for the return of test pilot Lt. Wilfred Parke, who has just broken the world endurance record in an Avro G cabin biplane. The Avro G has no forward windscreen, requiring the pilot to look out sideways for visual references. While spiralling down to land, the airplane suddenly enters a left spin. "Consistent with the prevailing theory on recovery from an apparent sideslip, Parke responds by adding full power, pulling the control wheel fully aft, and pressing the left rudder all the way to the stop. Rotation earthward continues unabated. Spinning ever closer to the ground, Parke perceives a force pushing him to the right. He releases the control wheel to center himself in his seat, then applies full right rudder. The airplane immediately pops out of the spin, levelling off barely 50 feet above the stunned crowd! The event becomes known as "Parke's Dive." "Wilfred Parke is the first to identify the need to use opposite rudder for spin recovery. His experience also highlights the fact that spin recovery actions are contrary to our natural instincts; hence, the appropriate response must be learned. Parke's Dive is chronicled in the British publication, Flight, including the first-ever spin recovery procedure: Apply rudder opposite to the direction of rotation. "Soon after Parke's Dive, Parke test flies a Handley-Page monoplane. The engine abruptly quits on takeoff. Attempting to turn back to the airstrip, the aeroplane spins into the ground. The man first responsible for uncovering one of the mysteries of spin recovery is killed. In the span of a few short months, Wilfred Parke experiences firsthand what remains the two most common stall/spin scenarios plaguing general aviation. In Parke's case, his first encounter with a spin in the traffic pattern is enlightening; his second encounter, deadly. "June 1914 "Harry Hawker amazes onlookers by being the first to spin an aeroplane deliberately. Following a debate with another aviator about the likely spin recovery characteristics of a Sopwith Tabloid, Hawker climbs aloft over Brooklands, England. He enters a power-off loop and falls into a spin near the top of the maneuver. Hawker freezes on the controls and the airplane augers into the trees. Incredibly, Hawker emerges from the wreckage unscathed. "Obsessed with recovering from a spin, Hawker takes to the air above Brooklands a day or so later. He stalls the aeroplane and enters a spin. After a couple of revolutions, Hawker centralizes the controls and the airplane promptly recovers. "Armed now with the knowledge about recovering from a spin, pilots use it as an evasive maneuver during World War I. A spinning aeroplane could lose height very quickly. By contrast, an enemy aeroplane would be in jeopardy of structural failure if it pursued the spinning plane. "1916 "At the battlefront in Europe, Farnborough FE.8's (four-bladed, pusher-prop biplanes) are spinning into the ground. The machine develops a bad reputation among service pilots. Even test pilot Frank Courtney is surprised by an inadvertent spin during a routine test flight in the aeroplane. Vaguely recalling Parke's Dive, he recovers from the spin. This and the recurring accidents at the front spawn a scientific spin research program at Farnborough, England. "Flight tests conducted by Courtney, duplicated by Farnborough's Chief Test Pilot Frank Goodden, exonerate the FE.8's design and point instead to inadequacies in pilot training. The following spin recovery actions become apparent from spin tests: switch off the engine, move the elevator forward and neutralize the ailerons, centralize the rudder. "Hot on the heels of the Courtney/Goodden tests, Dr. F.A. Lindemann and others set into motion a scientific study of spin aerodynamics, also at Farnborough. Spin tests -- which Lindemann refers to as "spinning nose dives" -- are conducted primarily in a B.E.2E. aeroplane. Lindemann personally performs an intentional spin entry and recovery in each direction to test his theories. Subsequent tests are recorded using a camera obscura. A report is published in March 1918 entitled, "The Experimental and Mathematical Investigation of Spinning." The recommended spin recovery actions include: "the rudder taken off gradually and the stick eased forward thus turning the spin into a spiral. A more rapid method is to take off rudder and push the stick forward ... without going through the spiral stage." " --Excerpted from The General Aviation Pilot's Guide to STALL/SPIN AWARENESS by Rich Stowell If anything isnt clear, please do ask for clarification before rating and closing the question, so I can be sure youre satisfied with the information provided. Blue skies and best regards, --Byrd | |
| |
|
aerobatics-ga
rated this answer:
Excellent material - Byrd. I thank you and the others who contributed for the research. I am satisfied and will include Hawker, Coutney, Godden and Lindemann along with Parke as patron saints each time a fly aerobatics. Thanks, John Grinder |
|
Subject:
Re: Aviation aerobatics and specifically recovering from a spin
From: serenata-ga on 27 Feb 2003 00:45 PST |
Add to the clarification above, the narrative, along with a picture of Parke's aircraft, is in a book now out of circulation called "Seconds to Live" (not to be confused with the essay "178 Seconds to Live" about flying in bad weather). I have not found more as of yet on either the book or a narrative of the spin. Serenata |
Subject:
Re: Aviation aerobatics and specifically recovering from a spin
From: omnivorous-ga on 01 Mar 2003 09:41 PST |
John -- I have some tangential information that may be helpful to you or other researchers. I've also put in a query to a British aviation history source that I know. You could do the Google researchers a favor by letting us know if you received e-mail notification of this clarification. In an essay by F. H. Hinsley in a book called "Churchill: A Major New Assessment of His Life in Peace and War," he contends that Prof. Frederick Lindemann (later Lord Cherwell), it is written that: "Chruchill would have heard of -- and perhaps even envied -- Lindemann's skill as a pilot, where he was famed as the first man to explain why an aircraft could go into a fatal spin, to work out the procedure whereby its pilot could recover it from the spin, and who then learned to fly and to demonstrate that his procedure worked." Lindemann would certainly have been familiar with Parke's feat. The passage in the book presumably refers to Lindemann's figuring out that lift had been disrupted on one of the wings -- leading to the spin. Now, to get REALLY off topic: Churchill himself had taken flying lessons while First Lord of the Admiralty (pre-WWI) and had made about 140 flights before the outset of the war. Then he asked his wife's opinion about the safety of flying and was forced to give it up. Some Lion of the Free World! Best regards, Omnivorous-GA |
Subject:
Re: Aviation aerobatics and specifically recovering from a spin
From: omnivorous-ga on 01 Mar 2003 09:51 PST |
BTW, Lindemann ran the Statistical Office for Churchill during WWII, doing independent analysis of scientific issues and interpreting many issues for Churchill and the War Cabinet Secretariat. He had long served as a science advisor for Churchill. |
Subject:
Re: Aviation aerobatics and specifically recovering from a spin
From: omnivorous-ga on 02 Mar 2003 19:55 PST |
Byrd and John -- That's the most phenomenal answer I've seen, correcting a historical record with an original source and synthesizing pieces of information related by others. All with phenomenal detail! Though I doubt that anyone but a pilot would appreciate this, it's really a gem! Ten stars to Byrd-ga. I hope that Stowell's book gets wide publication and distribution. It's an interesting, deadly and poorly understood area of aviation. I fly a Mooney (placarded against intentional spins) and they have quirky and unpredictable spin characteristics, sparking hot debates among experienced instructors about spin training. Once again gentlemen, thank you. Best regards, Omnivorous-GA |
Subject:
Re: Aviation aerobatics and specifically recovering from a spin
From: byrd-ga on 03 Mar 2003 08:47 PST |
John, Thank you very much for the generous rating and kind words. I'm very glad you were pleased with the answer, and also grateful for the opportunity to learn something myself! Omnivorous, Thank you too for such high praise, which means all the more coming from a fellow Researcher and Pilot! You're right, probably no one but another pilot will appreciate this information, but for us it certainly is a fascinating look at what you aptly desribe as a still poorly understood area of aviation. John and Omnivorous, Don't forget to keep an eye on the booklists and Stowell's website for news of the publication of this book. He sent me a further email saying he that, although he's been working on the book for several years, he is hoping now to have it out by the end of the year. I for one will definitely be buying it. And my appetite has been whetted for perhaps a little more training along these lines - think I might give our local CFI-A a call! Blue skies and tailwinds to both of you, --Byrd |
Subject:
Re: Aviation aerobatics and specifically recovering from a spin
From: omnivorous-ga on 08 Mar 2003 16:44 PST |
Byrd and John -- I just received this note from Phil Kemp at Air-Britain Historians. Byrd: I'm not sure that Aerobatics will receive e-mail notification of this comment; you might have to post a clarification for him to see it: Best regards, Omnivorous-GA --- The Dunstan Hadley book entitled "Only Seconds to Live - Pilot's Tales of the Stall and Spin" covers Lieutenant Wilfred Parke's Dive in some detail. Even the cover painting depicts the incident on 25th August 1912. The ISBN of the book is 1 85310 877 4. It has many references to the incident, including an extract from 'Flight' dated 31st August 1912 and even a photo of Parke emerging from his Avro Biplane after the incident. A search on www.bookfinder.com and there seem to be loads of examples of the above book, strangely ranging in price from just over £5 to nearly £22! The one at this link seems quite good though. See what you think. http://dogbert.abebooks.com/abe/BookDetails?bi=84787388 A further reference 'History of British Aviation 1908-1914' by R Dallas Brett, first published 1933, reprinted 1988 by Air Research Publications, which is quite widely available from the usual specialist dealers. The Guinness Book of Aircraft Facts and Feats (first issued 1970, with editions in 1973, 1977, 1984 & 1985 at least) also has more details on Lt Wilfrid Parke RN. The spinning incident referred to happened on 25 August 1912. Pilot Lt Wilfred Parke RN, with observer Lt Le Breton, RFC were flying an Avro cabin tractor biplane with a 60 hp Green engine. He went into a spin when turning onto finals at only about 700 ft, and discovered from necessity the full-opposite-rudder recovery procedure. Parke's was the second known recovery from a spin in Britain. The first in Britain and possibly the World was FP Raynham in about Feb 1911. He got disorientated after running into fog near Brooklands while flying an Avro Biplane, though he did not know how the recovery had happened (Possibly the aircraft had sufficient stability that it recovered itself - this is true of some modern trainers). Raynham went on to become a leading test-pilot. The first man who it is claimed set down the procedure for getting out of a spin is Major Frank Godden, test pilot at Farnborough, who in August 1916, "in view of recent accidents", spun an FE8 and summarised his method of recovery, as 1. Switch off motor; 2. Control stick put central and pushed forward; 3. Rudder put in centre. [source: ibid pp. 193-194.] Details of Parke's spin are also given in the book by Sir Geoffrey de Havilland, 'Sky Fever'. Parke was killed a few months after the event, along with his passenger A Hardwick the manager of Handley Page Aircraft Co., on 15 Dec 1912 when his Handley-Page Monoplane crashed near Cricklewood (north of London)due to engine failure. Regards Phil Kemp Air-Britain Historians (www.air-britain.com) |
If you feel that you have found inappropriate content, please let us know by emailing us at answers-support@google.com with the question ID listed above. Thank you. |
Search Google Answers for |
Google Home - Answers FAQ - Terms of Service - Privacy Policy |