Ok, Lima Charlie. I went offline and tried it in the Dora - I typically snap stall or mush. What makes a hammerhead different?
I don't have as much experience trying to actually control my direction down with the engine torque. However, this should be unnecessary in the Dora. Here's my process if say I am trying to rope somebody and need to use the vertical stall turn/bunt.
1) Go vertical (of course).
2) Roll to put my lift vector on them (this is what makes controlling roll direction less necessary).
3) Pull over the top slightly - this way the gravity bunt pulls the nose in the right direction.
4) Stall power off. Thus no actual rolling from the torque. Gravity pulls my nose downwards at this point. Controls are fairly dead, it doesn't matter if I'm pulling back or not.
5) When my nose reaches around horizon level, I power on. This rapidly kicks the nose down. No redout - there's not enough airspeed to create that many negative Gs.
6) Flaps to taste - depends where you need the nose in relation to the horizon.
A little context: I'm using a twisty stick. I abhor fancy rudder work because it's too closely coupled to the rest of my controls (i.e. physically via the stick motion). One can probably the torque roll far better than the process above, but the process does work and does away with some of the risk of snap rolling.
If I'm using this maneuver as an evasive measure, I skip 2 and 3. In that case I do the nose forward bunt in order to drop out of view.
Thank you sir
. I'm not in the market for a car right now (need a job first) but I'll certainly keep that in mind. If you ever need a physicist, let me know.
Thanks. I'll try this - though not as an evasive since it seems like, given your attacker has enough smash, you'd die at step 4 - unless you've correctly judged his e-state and are setting up the rope, in which case, steps 2&3 still seem to apply.
In the 109G-2 I was doing:
1. pull vertical from about 250IAS or better.
2. Stay vertical until about 120IAS
3. Kill Power 'til about 100 IAS, just before stall
4. Go full left rudder, full power
From a heading of due north, this would result in a heading of due south +/- 30d QUICKLY, albeit in a difficult-to-control fashion.
Physicist? My condolences. I had to go as high as Modern Physics to get through masters-level Aero Eng. - which I worked in for a number of years before crossing to the dark side with an MBA. Applied physics, imj, is a worthwhile field. Pure physics, it seems, is a harder one in which to work since it's always tied to grants. In any case, keep trying, you will one day find yourself ass-deep in work and insufficient time and it'll even pay. Then, email me and I'll be your corporate guardian angel, protecting you from unsavory dealers and service managers.
And thanks for your info - I'm sure it'll prove pretty useful. I'm looking forward to getting a little TA/MA time tonight.
See how dull life gets when you get your career established? During meetings I'll often scan this bbs from my laptop and dream about being a cartoon fighter pilot.