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- Q1711524 subject Q8994103.
- Q1711524 abstract "The tailslide is an aerobatic maneuver that starts from level flight with a 1/4 loop up into a straight vertical climb (at full power) until the aircraft loses momentum. When the aircraft's speed reaches 0 and it stops climbing, the pilot maintains the aircraft in a stand-still position as long as possible (this is greatly helped by thrust vectoring on newer fighter aircraft), and as it starts to fall to the ground backwards, tail first, the nose drops through the horizon to a vertical down position and the aircraft enters a dive. A 1/4 loop (push or pull) recovers to level flight.Tailslides will transiently reverse the airflow on many aircraft surfaces, giving abnormal forces compared with forward flight. The control surface linkages must be able to handle these forces without damage or deformation. Not all airplanes capable of aerobatics are capable of tailslide maneuvers.".
- Q1711524 thumbnail Aeros_fig_tailslide.svg?width=300.
- Q1711524 wikiPageWikiLink Q11436.
- Q1711524 wikiPageWikiLink Q127771.
- Q1711524 wikiPageWikiLink Q2094922.
- Q1711524 wikiPageWikiLink Q2095549.
- Q1711524 wikiPageWikiLink Q41273.
- Q1711524 wikiPageWikiLink Q43261.
- Q1711524 wikiPageWikiLink Q624380.
- Q1711524 wikiPageWikiLink Q743135.
- Q1711524 wikiPageWikiLink Q8994103.
- Q1711524 comment "The tailslide is an aerobatic maneuver that starts from level flight with a 1/4 loop up into a straight vertical climb (at full power) until the aircraft loses momentum.".
- Q1711524 label "Tailslide".
- Q1711524 depiction Aeros_fig_tailslide.svg.