I have a question which I'd like to ask in here, as Creamo, Funked & Mr. Toad are present.

(I could start my own thread, but that pisses GTOra2 off - oh wait, he has me on his ignore list - it wouldn't have mattered - LOL).
Most of the flying trips I do around Euroland seem to be by B737. It's a popular plane with the cut price airlines, and who am I to question it when
Ryan Air charged me only £1 (US $1.55) for a round trip flight to Dublin from "London" Luton (LTN/EGGW). Only one problem - the tax was another £25 - doh, but still good.
Anyway, the question is about the 737 ailerons. When landing at a field like Nice, conditions can be choppy. As Mr. Toad knows, because of the mountains and the town, and conflict between incoming and outgoing, sometimes an inbound plane has to make a 180° at low level. Hehe, all the passengers were screaming one time as we bounced in. Quite large aileron deflections were necessary, and I noticed that the spoilers popped up on the downward pointing wing in the turn. Have seen this since on 737s - are the spoilers designed to give additional aileron authority in this way?
Looking forward to meeting Mr. Toad in Nice or some other town on the Côte d'Azur later in the year. He will get a freebie to Nice from JFK with Mrs. Toad, and I will turn up with
Tomato and we will spend a nice weekend soaking up France. The Toads might need visas by then - LOL. Dinner will be on us - either at Les Artistes in Nice, or one of the places in Cannes. The day after will be a good time to drive to St. Tropez along the coast road.
One small thing - Mr. Toad doesn't know about any of this yet.
