Flew XL-58 this evening in the course of chasing a beautiful sunset. But in spite of this being the fourth summer I've flown the little bird, there are still things to either discover or call to remembrance.
1) This is most definitely a "rudder" airplane. I decided to fly around for awhile using the stick only to maintain an altitude and making several turns with rudder only. My plane has the standard 3" of dihedral and will fly very nice, nearly coordinated turns in smooth air solely with rudder input.
The issue that has been the biggest aggravation about XL-58 is the heavy (low sensitivity) ailerons in turbulence. My other plane is a RV-6 and aileron response is instantaneous with more authority than you would ever need. It is a dramatic change to jump into the Eagle and row the stick side-to-side in turbulence without a whole lot of response.
But me thinks I need to be more aggressive with the rudder. Instead of just using rudder to initiate bank in a gentle turn, it needs to be aggressively kicked simultaneously with lots of aileron when the plane is upset by turbulence. This is a technique that is foreign to flying the RV, but one I am going to refine in the Eagle.
2) This evening I was making some of the cobbiest landings I've ever inflicted on the Eagle. "What is going on...have I forgotten how to fly??" In my defense, today had the highest density altitude our area has seen in two years. As I analyzed the "arrivals" it became apparent I was falling victim to using my lower-density-altitude-calibrated eyeballs to gauge landing speed instead of the airspeed indicator. The high DA required the Eagle to approach at considerably higher ground speed than I had flown the past two summers, but my old habits were allowing the plane to get too slow because I was flying the 'old' ground speed. Once I started watching the airspeed indicator and touched down at the proper 30 mph IA, good landings resumed.
Lesson learned; These little planes will humble us if we get complacent or neglect to use good airmanship. A 250 lb aircraft requires much more finese to fly smoothly and accurately than a heavier plane. Little mistakes are magnified instead of concealed.
A reminder from the "Still Learning" department is a good thing. Fly fun and safe.