List Price

$26.95

Textbook Details

  • EDITION:
    1st Edition
  • ISBN:
    0070362408
  • ISBN-13:
    9780070362406
  • PUB. DATE:
    September 1990
  • PUBLISHER:
    McGraw-Hill Professional Publishing
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Stick and Rudder: An Explanation of the Art of Flying / Edition 1 by Wolfgang Langewiesche, William Langewiesche

$26.95 List Price
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Customer Reviews

THE How-to-Fly Bookby Anonymous

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I read Stick and Rudder in 1978 before taking my first flight lesson, and it remains the runaway number one book for teaching the principles of flight. No other book I ever read came close to matching it for ease of reading and dead-on accuracy in answering the questions aspiring pilots have and dispelling the many misconceptions commonly held about flying. I'm glad I read it before I got into an...

Quintessential Coffee Table Bookby Anonymous

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This is a famous old book. They are really not kidding when they call it Aviation's Bible. I remember having read it some 50 years ago, as a child, wanting to be a Private Pilot. Finally old enough to sign up for lessons, they wanted me to take a Ground School which I could not afford, but I asked them to give me a verbal test... to see if I needed their Ground School. They asked a series of...

Awesome bookby Anonymous

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If you need any help in aviation, take this book!! It's awesome and the best I really recommend it but it would be good to put an excerpt so people can have an idea or the first chapter


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Overview -

Stick and Rudder

Product Details

  • Pub. Date: September 1990
  • Publisher: McGraw-Hill Professional Publishing
  • Sales Rank: 96,719

Synopsis

WHAT'S IN STICK AND RUDDER:

  • The invisible secret of all heavier-than-air flight: the Angle of Attack. What it is, and why it can't be seen. How lift is made, and what the pilot has to do with it.
  • Why airplanes stall How do you know you're about to stall?
  • The landing approach. How the pilot's eye functions in judging the approach.
  • The visual clues by which an experienced pilot unconsciously judges: how you can quickly learn to use them.
  • "The Spot that does not move." This is the first statement of this phenomenon. A foolproof method of making a landing approach across pole lines and trees.
  • The elevator and the throttle. One controls the speed, the other controls climb and descent. Which is which?
  • The paradox of the glide. By pointing the nose down less steeply, you descend more steeply. By pointing the nose down more steeply, you can glide further.
  • What's the rudder for? The rudder does NOT turn the airplane the way a boat's rudder turns the boat. Then what does it do?
  • How a turn is flown. The role of ailerons, rudder, and elevator in making a turn.
  • The landing—how it's made. The visual clues that tell you where the ground is.
  • The "tail-dragger" landing gear and what's tricky about it. This is probably the only analysis of tail-draggers now available to those who want to fly one.
  • The tricycle landing gear and what's so good about it. A strong advocacy of the tricycle gear written at a time when almost all civil airplanes were taildraggers.
  • Why the airplane doesn't feel the wind.
  • Why the airplane usually flies a little sidewise.
  • Plus: a chapter on Air Accidents by Leighton Collins, founder and editor of AIR FACTS. His analyses of aviation's safety problems have deeply influenced pilots and aeronautical engineers and have contributed to the benign characteristics of today's airplane.

Stick and Rudder is the first exact analysis of the art of flying ever attempted. It has been continously in print for thirty-three years. It shows precisely what the pilot does when he flies, just how he does it, and why.

Because the basics are largely unchanging, the book therefore is applicable to large airplanes and small, old airplanes and new, and is of interest not only to the learner but also to the accomplished pilot and to the instructor himself.

When Stick and Rudder first came out, some of its contents were considered highly controversial. In recent years its formulations have become widely accepted. Pilots and flight instructors have found that the book works.

Today several excellent manuals offer the pilot accurate and valuable technical information. But Stick and Rudder remains the leading think-book on the art of flying. One thorough reading of it is the equivalent of many hours of practice.

Wolfgang Langewiesche first soloed in 1934 in Chicago. Early in his flying he was struck by a strange discrepancy: in piloting, the words and the realities did not agree. What pilots claimed to be doing in flying an airplane, was not what they did in practice. Langewiesche set himself the task of describing more accurately and realistically what the pilot really does when he flies.

The first result was a series of articles in Air Facts, analyzing various points of piloting technique. In 1944 Stick and Rudder was published.

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Biography

Wolfgang Langewiesche first soloed in 1934 in Chicago. Early in his flying he was struck by a strange discrepancy: in piloting, the words and the realities did not agree. What pilots claimed to be doing in flying an airplane, was not what they did in practice. Langewiesche set himself the task of describing more accurately and realistically what the pilot really does when he flies.

The first result was a series of articles in Air Facts, analyzing various points of piloting technique. In 1944 Stick and Rudder was published.