Definition
The way an aircraft responds to control inputs around its longitudinal (roll) axis — how predictably and smoothly it banks left or right when the ailerons are deflected. In the icing context, it refers to whether the aircraft rolls cleanly and recovers normally, or whether it shows abnormal behavior such as uncommanded rolling, aileron snatch, or reduced response.
Plain English
How the aircraft behaves when you bank it — whether the wings tilt smoothly and predictably when you move the controls, or whether something feels wrong.
Context Anchor
Seen in discussions of aircraft icing, especially how ice on the wings can change the way the airplane responds to roll control inputs.
Derivation
Roll comes from the ordinary idea of rotating or turning over. Handling means how a vehicle responds to being controlled, and characteristics are its traits. Together, the phrase points to the aircraft’s roll-response traits, not just to the pilot’s skill.
Why Pilots Care
Ice can reduce aileron effectiveness or create roll asymmetries, leading to heavier controls, reduced roll rates, or unexpected rolling moments that must be anticipated and corrected.
Grounding Statement
With ice on the wings, a normal control movement may produce a weaker or less predictable wing movement than the pilot expects.
Intuition Check
Do not read “handling” as the pilot’s talent, and do not read “roll” as the takeoff roll down the runway. Here it means the airplane’s response when the pilot tries to tilt the wings left or right in flight.
Example Sentence 1
After picking up ice on the leading edges, the pilot noticed the roll handling characteristics had changed — the airplane felt heavy and slow to bank.
Example Sentence 2
The handbook describes how leading-edge ice can degrade roll handling characteristics even before stall warnings appear.