Bob,
Many thanks for your email. My decision will be between the factory audible
alarm (much closer to what I'm used to than buffet strips) or an AoA
indicator which offers an audible alarm as well as an angle readout. The
former will be for the really slow work, and the latter for the cruise and
short-field approaches.
Kind regards,
Jeremy
-----Original Message-----
From: forum-owner@europaclub.org.uk
Subject: Re: Angle of Attack indicators
Hi! Jerremy.
For my money the best alarm you can get when you have many more things on
your mind is the stall strips on the inboard end of the leading edge of the
wing. When the 'plane shakes, you instantly know to push the stick
forward,even if you are still in ground effect and trees/ overhead cables
are fast approaching . You won't have time to be looking at gauges. (Been
there, got the "tee" shirt!)They will need some very accurate testing to
find the exact location.
However I think Europa have developed a simple audible alarm that works from
the same location.
Regards
Bob Harrison G-PTAG
-----Original Message-----
From: forum-owner@europaclub.org.uk
Subject: Angle of Attack indicators
I'm at the stage of deciding whether to fit a simple stall warner or to go
for a more sophisticated angle-of-attack indicator.
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