I was up on Friday with my CFI in pretty blowy conditions, and holding altitude was a bear. My question is for you DPEs, so I can properly prepare.
Do you want (require?) full flaps for slow flight? Our Cessna 150 has 40 degrees of flaps, and it makes the plane a slave to the wind. Oh sure, she'll climb with full power, but only barely. I think 30 or even 20 deg would be more appropriate to demo slow flight, but what does this green student pilot know?
Also, how strict is that altitude allowance? If we're getting bumped around, is it (theoretically) enough for me to be reacting to being off altitude, or should I just discontinue for a smoother day?
Thanks in advance!
I typically have my students demonstrate slow flight with 20 degrees of flaps for the reasons you mention. Anything more that 20 degrees really doesn't lower the stall speed much and just adds lots of drag requiring you to perform the maneuver at a higher power setting and potentially making it more difficult or impossible to maintain altitude.
The slow flight demonstration teaches and demonstrates a lot of concepts...for example..
When to use power to control Airspeed
When to use power to control Altitude
When to use Pitch to control Airspeed
When to use Pitch to control Altitude.
How little pitch affect altitude at low speeds.
How easily you can change speeds at low speeds with little affect on altitude.
How to divide your attention inside and outside the airplane.
How flaps affect trim and power configuration of the airplane.
left turning tendency at high power, low speed configurations
How the airplane requires more power to fly slower when on the back side of the drag curve.
demonstrates the skill needed to change airspeeds without changing Altitude, like when entering the traffic pattern.
I am sure there is quite a bit more...
The hardest part of slow flight is the transition from cruise to slow flight while maintaining heading and altitude.
for the PPL you should slow down to within 10kts of the stall warning going off.
as far as how strict the dpe will be, generally as long as you promptly recognize the deviation and apply appropriate control inputs you will do fine.
if you stay 120ft below your target altitude for a full minute and never add more power (if possible) then you may have an issue convincing the examiner that you know how to, and have the skills to perform the maneuver.
if you are 120ft low, full power and holding your airspeed you should be fine as you did all you could do to recover from the low altitude situation.
Brian
CFIIG/ASEL