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Taming The Taildragger

Ive long wanted regular access to a tube-and-fabric taildragger, something to fly low and slow, with my arm hanging out the window. Im happy with my go-places airplane, which fits most of my missions, but variety is a good thing. A few flights in a friend and neighbors nice, simple, original Aeronca 7AC Champ didnt whet my appetite for that kind of flying. Instead, it was stronger than ever.

Gemini Sparkle

Key Takeaways:

  • The author, an experienced pilot of heavier tricycle-gear aircraft, acquired a light taildragger (Aeronca Champ) for a different flying experience, necessitating specific instruction to master its unique characteristics.
  • The most significant challenge of flying the Champ is its ground handling, primarily due to its strong tendency to weathervane, which demands constant concentration and active rudder and brake inputs during taxiing and post-landing deceleration.
  • The Champ's extremely light weight makes it highly susceptible to wind, and directional control on the ground is further complicated by the critical interplay of rudder, brakes, and pitch control (stick position) during takeoff and landing.
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I’ve long wanted regular access to a tube-and-fabric taildragger, something to fly low and slow, with my arm hanging out the window. I’m happy with my go-places airplane, which fits most of my missions, but variety is a good thing. A few flights in a friend and neighbor’s nice, simple, original Aeronca 7AC Champ didn’t whet my appetite for that kind of flying. Instead, it was stronger than ever. So when another friend emailed me a link to an auction for a similar airplane, with the simple question, “Halfsies?” the deal was all but done. A couple of weeks later, there literally was a used Champ on my door step.

There was one small problem: I had never flown a Champ as pilot-in-command. I had lots of time in similar airplanes—Super Cubs on straight floats, mainly—but some of that was as self-loading freight. I had logged 0.5 hour PIC in a wheel-equipped Cub one Sunday afternoon decades ago and was grandfathered from needing a specific endorsement, so I was legal to solo a taildragger. But I had enough conventional-gear/taildragger experience in other airplanes, including Decathlons and J-3 Cubs, to understand I didn’t know what I was doing, and needed some dual. After airplane readiness, weather and instructor schedules aligned themselves, I finally got enough stick time in Champs to figure out most of it. Here’s what a Debonair driver learned about taildraggers.

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