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Seaplane Skiplane Flying Menu >Seaplane Operations ? Preflight and Takeoffs >Taxiing
and Sailing >Planing Or Step Position
In the planing position, most of the seaplane’s
weight is supported by hydrodynamic lift rather than the buoyancy
of the floats. (Because of the wing’s speed through the
air, aerodynamic lift may also be supporting some of the weight
of the seaplane.) Hydrodynamic lift depends on movement through
the water, like a water ski. As the float moves faster through
the water, it becomes possible to change the pitch attitude
to raise the rear portions of the floats clear of the water.
This greatly reduces water drag, allowing the seaplane to accelerate
to lift-off speed. This position is most often called on the
step. [Figure 4-7]
There is one pitch attitude that produces the
minimum amount of drag when the seaplane is on the step. An
experienced seaplane pilot can easily find this “sweet
spot” or “slick spot” by the feel of the floats
on the water, but the beginning seaplane pilot usually needs
to rely on gauging the position of the nose on the horizon.
If the nose is considerably high, the rear portions of the floats
contact the water, drag increases, and the

Figure 4-6. Plowing
position.

Figure 4-7. On the step.
The attitude is nearly level, and the weight of the seaplane
is supported mostly by hydrodynamic lift.Behind the step, the
floats are essentially clear of the water.
seaplane tends to start settling back into
more of aplowing position. If the nose is held only slightly
higher than the ideal planing attitude, the seaplane may remain
on the step but take much longer to accelerate to rotation speed.
On the other hand, if the nose is too low, more of the front
portion of the float contacts the water, creating more drag.
This condition is
called dragging, and as the nose pulls down and the seaplane
begins to slow, it can sometimes feel similar to applying the
brakes in a landplane.
To continue to taxi on the step instead of
taking off, reduce the power as the seaplane is eased over onto
the step. More power is required to taxi with a heavy load.
However, 65 to 70 percent of maximum power is a good starting
point.
Taxiing on the step is a useful technique for
covering long distances on the water. Carefully reducing power
as the seaplane comes onto the step stops acceleration so that
the seaplane maintains a high speed across the water, but remains
well below flying speed. At these speeds, the water rudders
must be retracted to prevent damage, but there is plenty of
airflow for the air rudder. With the seaplane on the step, gentle
turns can be made by using the air rudder and the ailerons,
always maintaining a precise planing attitude with elevator.
The ailerons are positioned into the turn, except when aileron
into the wind is needed to keep the upwind wing from lifting.
Step taxiing should only be attempted in areas
where the pilot is confident there is sufficient water depth,
no floating
debris, no hidden obstructions, and no other water traffic nearby.
It can be difficult to spot floating hazards at high speeds,
and an encounter with a floating log or other obstruction could
tear open a float. Your seaplane is not as maneuverable as craft
that were designed for the water, so avoiding other vessels
is much more difficult. Besides the obvious danger of collision,
other water traffic creates dangerous wakes, which are a much
more frequent cause of damage. If you see that you are going
to cross a wake, reduce power to idle and idle taxi across it,
preferably at an angle. Never try to step taxi in shallow water.
If the floats touch bottom at high speed, the sudden drag is
likely to flip the seaplane.
From either the plowing or the step position,
when power is reduced to idle, the seaplane decelerates quite
rapidly and eventually assumes the displacement or idle position.
Be careful to use proper flight control pressures during the
deceleration phase because as weight is transferred toward the
front of the floats and drag increases, some seaplanes have
a tendency to nose over. Control this with proper use of the
elevator.
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