Quote:
Originally Posted by Saintblu
Am I incorrect to say the Hurri was spinning the wrong way? Isn't the remaining wing suppose to rise and not fall since there is no resistance left on the other side of the plane?
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not necessarily, in this case the crash caused the wing to stall and the nose to point down, therefore the spinning is caused by drag. The left wing has more drag then... the air on the right so it forces the plane around. Just a note the plane will continue rotating with a lowered nose unless the wing starts to create lift again. It's basically an auto-rotating lone wing so the plane behaves like it's in an upside down spin. Nasty.