Absolutely. And thank goodness, or I'd have missed the runway every time. lolCan you slip a glider?
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Absolutely. And thank goodness, or I'd have missed the runway every time. lolCan you slip a glider?
There is a VOR nearby named RMG. There is also an airport 20 miles away KRMG. Now how would ATC want me to file that?
RMG ?? How's that fit in here on the KBCT KAUO flight?There is a VOR nearby named RMG. There is also an airport 20 miles away KRMG. Now how would ATC want me to file that?
Best not to do it. Controller gonna be scratchin' his head wondering what's up. This guy wanna shoot a couple practice approaches at Ocala and Lakeland on his way to Boca or sumpin'. He can't read your mind so he's gotta ask ya wazup.I’ve got 750 hours or so. Recently filed this flight -lan. KBCT KLAL KOCF KAUO. When ATC started questioning me about landing at KLAL it caught me totally off guard. I’d never heard to not use the K if simplying over flying the field. Now I know
RMG ?? How's that fit in here on the KBCT KAUO flight?
I’ve got 750 hours or so. Recently filed this flight -lan. KBCT KLAL KOCF KAUO. When ATC started questioning me about landing at KLAL it caught me totally off guard. I’d never heard to not use the K if simplying over flying the field. Now I know
Always remember @Salty, for everything you learn in aviation, there's always someone there to point out that you're wrong!That isn't a new tool. It's an old tool, and it's usually the wrong tool. You gain speed by diving, speed that you then have to bleed off somehow, and most guys end up floating far down the runway, waiting for it to bleed off. Slowing below best glide works better, but yeah, watch the airspeed.
Even better is to plan the approach properly and not find yourself high.
Gotcha. An example.I also have never heard of "not use the K if simplying over flying the field".
I don't see how that would work in the following scenario. If I made a flight plan wanting to overfly KRMG airport, and I left the "K" off because I simply wanted to over fly it, I would put in "RMG". Which now looks like I want to fly over the VOR, not the KRMG airport.
...I have yet to not have them drop my entire route and give me a totally different one, or direct, one of the two. Kinda irks me.
I spend a lot of time thinking about the "pitch for speed, power for altitude" mantra, and I just don't think there's a simple way to boil it down. Flying is dynamic. For example, on approach if you're too fast and your rate of descent is too great, just pull the nose up slightly. No need to adjust power. You will slow down and your rate of descent will decrease. Two birds, one stone.I was flying with and instructor recently and we were high on approach with flaps in and I was slowing below best glide to sink better and he asked “why don’t you push the nose down”? Well, I’ve been playing with that ever since and I’ll be darned if it doesn’t work really well as long as the circumstances warrant it. In a draggy plane it slows right back down again and you stay further from stall speed and can see better to boot.
Sounds like your friend didn't follow the notam which explicitly states "no S-turns" and to break off the approach and start over. Not all planes are capable of 90 knots, I followed a bushcat in pedalling as fast as possible at 80 knots and I survived. Blaming others for poor airmanship is a bad look.
Can you slip a glider?
Yeah, you can work through it, but sometimes it's just annoying. Like, when I fly to Key West from Tampa, I like to hug the coast a little, so I'll file via GOODY or DEEDS, and invariably they will give me direct and put me way out over the gulf. Yeah, you just have to tell them what you want to get it. But I already did that when I filed!Same... A couple weeks ago, I wanted to go from Peter O (TPF) to Melbourne. Storms came through the Tampa area, so we waited to depart. The storms pretty much hung out between Tampa and Melbourne and further to the North. Weather was clear to the South (through the Restricted areas and near Okeechobee). I filed a route down that way and over and back up to MLB. They returned the "Expected" pretty much as direct (or almost)... which is the typical route they'll give. So I called up Tampa CD and asked how to get routed to the South and around the storms. The answer was pretty much file it direct, then when picking up the clearance ask for a Southerly departure for weather. They worked it out and I flew almost exactly what I originally wanted, but what I filed was pretty much direct. Learned a little that evening/night - a quick phone call can sometimes help a whole lot!!
Question I got is why do it at all? If your filing via Direct airports, it means you have RNAV. There thousands of Airways and Waypoints out there. Why not just use Enroutey kinds of things for the Enroute part of the Flight Plan. Like you said, that’s what they usually do when you get the Clearance.I can see why not using an airport in an IFR plan would simplify things. Especially if there is a VOR nearby.
Of course, I have yet to not have them drop my entire route and give me a totally different one, or direct, one of the two. Kinda irks me.
Exactly!Yeah, you can work through it, but sometimes it's just annoying. Like, when I fly to Key West from Tampa, I like to hug the coast a little, so I'll file via GOODY or DEEDS, and invariably they will give me direct and put me way out over the gulf. Yeah, you just have to tell them what you want to get it. But I already did that when I filed!
AgreeQuestion I got is why do it at all? If your filing via Direct airports, it means you have RNAV. There thousands of Airways and Waypoints out there. Why not just use Enroutey kinds of things for the Enroute part of the Flight Plan. Like you said, that’s what they usually do when you get the Clearance.
Just to be clear, were you in a glider or a powered plane when you were high on that approach?Nearly 1000 hours and a glider rating and I’m happy but embarrassed to have just learned a new tool.
my glider instructor screamed at me if I went too fast in the pattern so that’s my excuse for this. Lame I know. I mean, I knew this cognitively, but didn’t use it.
I was flying with and instructor recently and we were high on approach with flaps in and I was slowing below best glide to sink better and he asked “why don’t you push the nose down”? Well, I’ve been playing with that ever since and I’ll be darned if it doesn’t work really well as long as the circumstances warrant it. In a draggy plane it slows right back down again and you stay further from stall speed and can see better to boot.
I love having a new tool.
Powered aircraft. cezzna 150Just to be clear, were you in a glider or a powered plane when you were high on that approach?
Ah ok. I thought it was a glider in which case I'd have nothing to offer on the matter.Powered aircraft. cezzna 150
I thought it was a glider in which case I'd have nothing to offer on the matter.
Absolutely. And thank goodness, or I'd have missed the runway every time. lol
... I used it today when circumstances beyond my control put me very high very close to the numbers in a draggy 150 with 40 degree flaps. I landed on the numbers with the stall alarm chirping using this technique. No floating.
Can you slip a glider?
In a glider this is probably a bad idea due to the difficulty in bleeding off the extra energy. I never tried it though as my instructor wouldn't let me get even a little bit fast.
I'm sorry for your loss.Low, slow, turning. A tendency to use shallow bank with more rudder to turn faster, leads to stall, spin, crash, and burn.
Lost a friend who crashed at Oshkosh trying to S-turn behind some moron who did not follow the NOTAM on speeds.
The glider I flew most didn’t have spoilers.Most times, I found spoilers to be enough.
Not sure why more GA planes don't have them. At least the higher performance ones.
I've thought about it just to fly over as many airports as possible in case I needed one unexpectedly.Question I got is why do it at all? If your filing via Direct airports, it means you have RNAV. There thousands of Airways and Waypoints out there. Why not just use Enroutey kinds of things for the Enroute part of the Flight Plan. Like you said, that’s what they usually do when you get the Clearance.
I can see that as a consideration.I've thought about it just to fly over as many airports as possible in case I needed one unexpectedly.
Trade potential for Kinetic is exactly right. In a car, brakes convert some into heat, slowing the car. In a plane, things like speed brakes convert that potential energy into drag/turbulence slowing down the plane so it goes down more steeply, but does not gain as much speed (kinetic energy) as it would in slippery mode. A high performance sailplane would demonstrate this best. Speed brakes extended, nose down it goes down. No speed brakes, nose down you accelerate and can go the whole length of the runway in ground effect and do a wingover at the other end and come back and land. Same potential energy in both cases. Knowing how draggy or slippery your particular aircraft is lets you know the extent to which you can get down by steepening your descent. Not an aeronautical engineer, nor have I stayed in a Holiday Inn Express recently.Putting the nose down loses altitude..??
Who knew??
That said, it seems to me that is trading potential energy for kinetic. Still must disípate energy, just a different kind. I’m not sure how I see “draggy” as a valid argument, as it will draggy in both phases of flight.
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Slipping works just fine. But it has it's limits, and it's not very pleasant for passengers that aren't excited about flying.
Look at the graph above. As you speed up past best glide, total drag starts to increase very quickly. This means that even though you are pointed down, you're loosing more energy to drag. So, maybe a slip isn't always needed, depending on circumstances.
It's a little counter-intuitive to speed up in order to stop sooner, but it's true. Just like pulling back doesn't make you glide further once you get below best glide.... Just the other side of the power curve. Which is a another good thing about speeding up to add drag instead of slowing down. It keeps you on the positive side of the power curve.
Of course, I have yet to not have them drop my entire route and give me a totally different one, or direct, one of the two. Kinda irks me.
Speeding up and then slipping to keep you in flap speed can really bring you down like an elevator.I see, thanks for that and makes sense.
The glider I flew most didn’t have spoilers.