Steve St.Laurent
Staff Alumni
You whirly bird guys crack me up
! Here in the states on the vast majority of planes it's right rudder to counter act P-factor, torque, and the slip stream (the three left turning tendencies). British engines in particular turned backwards from ours so those become become right turning tendencies and you have to use left rudder. I can still remember my flight instructor saying "right rudder, riiight rudder, RIIIIIGHT rudder"!
Here's a couple of planes that a friend of mine owns and I get to get rides in once in a while. He flies both of them in formation flights, the sound of 30 T-6's with their radials starting up and then flying overhead in formation is simply awesome! Especially when you get to ride in it sometimes!
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Here's the plane that I spent most of my last 100 flight hours (have 450 total) in. That big IO-550 six cylinder sounds pretty cool too! I can't wait to be able to afford to fly on my own again (had to give it up when my daughter was born two years ago).
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Here's a couple of planes that a friend of mine owns and I get to get rides in once in a while. He flies both of them in formation flights, the sound of 30 T-6's with their radials starting up and then flying overhead in formation is simply awesome! Especially when you get to ride in it sometimes!


Here's the plane that I spent most of my last 100 flight hours (have 450 total) in. That big IO-550 six cylinder sounds pretty cool too! I can't wait to be able to afford to fly on my own again (had to give it up when my daughter was born two years ago).
