SpaceWeevil
SOH-CM-2024
Pam,
According to the French Hawk 75-A1 manuals (Notice sommaire générale du Curtiss H75 A1 and the Notice de Manoeuvre de l'avion Curtiss H-75-A.1), the Hawk started to show some lateral instability below 160 kilometers per hour and became less sensitive on the pitch below that speed.
According to the manual stall speed was between 80 and 110 kilometers per hour. Stall speed with lowered flaps is not mentioned.
Drag causes by the cowling flaps from the engine would cause a 10% speed reduction at any speed and setting.
During a normal landing the flaps should be lowered to 45º at 120 kilometers per hours. Flaps should never be lowered when speed exceeds 225 km per hour.
In all "standard" conditions (the French used 4 standard set-ups) the flaps should be up during take off according the manual. However in the flight specification the take off with lowered flaps is described.
The landing shown in the movie posted by Bomber_12th is exactly how it is described in the manual. Arrive at the runway close to stall speed and tilt the nose a bit (or according the French description "raise the engine")
I hope this helps you a bit.
Cheers,
Huub
EDIT: Some additional information I found in Section VI CARACTERISTIQUES DE VOL (Flight characteristics)
Start:
With a start weight of 2630 kg a minimum path of 250 meters is required to be clear of obstacles 8 meters in height.
With flaps lowered 45º take off speed is 118 km/hr. And the aircraft will requires a runway of 165 meters before it lifts.
Landing:
For landing path of 380 meters free of obstacles of 8 meters in height is required for landing.
With flaps down 45º and a touch down speed of 112 km/hr the aircraft will require 225 meters of runway from touch down until full stop.
Pam, I hope you remember to convert all that into MPH, lbs and yards! It must feel strange being brought up on the metric system but being forced to use 'alien' units when you go flying. Of course we need a universal system for safety, but I dare say most Europeans (apart from the Brits) feel it's the wrong one. For all its coldness and lack of folk history at least the metric system is consistent and logical.