Please do I would like to know how much centrifugal force is applied if the engine quits. I would be nice to know the amount of line pull there is overhead dead stick.
When your engine quits directly overhead, does it fall straight down at you from the top of the circle? Of course not, most of the time, that's perfectly recoverable.
I call shenanigans, this time you are just pulling our legs.
Of course, when the engine quits, it slows down pretty quickly, so you start losing it rapidly. Particularly if your airplane is too light, the drag is the same as everybody else's airplane, but the momentum is less, so it the acceleration slowing it down is higher. But you have to get down to less than half speed to get the centrifugal force down to zero.
By the way, my satellite is dead overhead right now, and the engines aren't running, what keeps it from falling straight down into the ocean?
Brett