Its easy to measure the AoA on the ground ..... measure vertically up from
level ground (hardstanding is best) to the centre of the centre section LE
and to the centre of the centre section TE. Divide the difference by the
wing chord and that is the sine of your at rest AoA. For a tailwheeler its
pretty close to the touch down AoA (excepting landing gear spring
compression). One of mine is about 13 degrees, the other about 7.  ... both
tailwheelers! (if you drop a plumb line down to the floor from the LE and
the from the TE, and use that distance instead of the wing chord, the figure
you get is the tangent of the AoA ..... 

By the way, from that, if you know your stall speed, you can guess your
touchdown speed in a three pointer ... its stall speed x sqr root(stall
speed coefficient of lift / touch down Coefficient of lift) .. 
Cheers!
Martin

Martin Pearce
 - KR2 with Subaru EA81 + KR2 S with GMH Saturn
 - Both in my garage, neither registered or flying in Au ---yet!
rocketdri...@optusnet.com.au




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