azure
Final Approach
I could almost have just asked this in the Mooney thread because this is about the same question, when to slow down during the approach. But I've already hijacked a thread on the Red Board and didn't want to do that again, so I decided to start my own thread, FWIW.
Friends and wiser pilots, I'm up against my first real stumbling block towards the IR, and it's a biggie. I'm right at the edge of giving up, at least on trying to finish my training in this airplane. Here's the problem:
The airplane is a 1976 C-172M with a 150hp engine and the old-style Cessna flaps lever that you have to hold down. Cruise airspeed is 100-105 kts tops, but even at 2200 RPM level it still pulls 90-95 kts. Deploying any degree of flaps is strictly prohibited above 85 kts.
The airspace is... busy. Most of the airports with ILS approaches are busy Class C and D fields: FNT, DET, PTK. They suffer little bugsmashers only reluctantly and in the 172 we're asked to keep our speed up as often as not; which means, cruise speed. Even 95 kts is a pretty slow approach speed in this environment.
According to most of the wisest minds on the Red Board, there are two ways to fly the ILS in an airplane like that.
1. Reconfigure for approach speed, including 10* of flaps, before crossing the FAF, then keep that configuration all the way down to DH, or until breaking out.
2. Fly the entire approach down to where you break out without flaps. If you don't break out until DH, so be it. Land without flaps if necessary, the runways are long and the bird isn't that fast. If you break out high enough, add flaps.
Option 1 sounds like the best way to train for a lowly student like me, but I can testify to the fact that you will at least 50% of the time not make it to the bottom of the glideslope. ATC will tell you to break off early so that more important freight and other commercial traffic can land. And rightly so, as my CFII says, the system is designed for them. Bugsmasher vs freight dog, bugsmasher loses every time.
So Option 2 would be my choice.. though landing without flaps is harder on the tires and I wouldn't want to do it on a regular basis, and I'll be flying a LOT of ILSs down to DH in order to get ready for the checkride.
My CFII insists on Option 3: reconfigure for approach speed once established. He recommends 2200 RPM, which as I said gives about 95 kts level. Once you've intercepted the GS, pull power back to 2000 RPM or so and ride it down to a few hundred feet (no more than 500) above DH. Then get one dot below the GS, level off (without reducing power) and add 10* of flaps once in the white arc. Then use forward pressure to get the airplane back onto the GS.
I've tried this at least 10 times and only twice got anywhere near back to a stable descent along the GS. I've always blown through the glideslope to at least two dots high before even re-establishing a descent, and usually either wind up chasing the GS needle (due to excessive power reductions) or never catch up to it at all, and sometimes lose the localizer as well. Tonight at FNT was especially bad, the worst I've flown since we started shooting approaches. The 15-20 kt crosswind from the south didn't make it any easier, but the same thing happened a few nights ago at DET under friendlier conditions.
Everyone I've talked to, including one close instrument rated friend, tells me that this is a bad idea because descending on the GS in IMC is no time to be majorly reconfiguring the airplane. I agree, but my CFII says the reason I'm screwing it up so badly is because I'm trying to do it my way and not listening to him. Maybe so, but I've tried to do exactly as he says and I've found that with no power reduction, the GS needle goes through the basement PDQ. Pulling on the yoke (takes more than just "pressure") and holding that flaps lever down is quite distracting and I'm finding it very hard to even keep the wings level while doing it.
I'm about ready to hang it up or start over in a different airplane. Maybe even with a different CFII. Any thoughts would be much appreciated.
Friends and wiser pilots, I'm up against my first real stumbling block towards the IR, and it's a biggie. I'm right at the edge of giving up, at least on trying to finish my training in this airplane. Here's the problem:
The airplane is a 1976 C-172M with a 150hp engine and the old-style Cessna flaps lever that you have to hold down. Cruise airspeed is 100-105 kts tops, but even at 2200 RPM level it still pulls 90-95 kts. Deploying any degree of flaps is strictly prohibited above 85 kts.
The airspace is... busy. Most of the airports with ILS approaches are busy Class C and D fields: FNT, DET, PTK. They suffer little bugsmashers only reluctantly and in the 172 we're asked to keep our speed up as often as not; which means, cruise speed. Even 95 kts is a pretty slow approach speed in this environment.
According to most of the wisest minds on the Red Board, there are two ways to fly the ILS in an airplane like that.
1. Reconfigure for approach speed, including 10* of flaps, before crossing the FAF, then keep that configuration all the way down to DH, or until breaking out.
2. Fly the entire approach down to where you break out without flaps. If you don't break out until DH, so be it. Land without flaps if necessary, the runways are long and the bird isn't that fast. If you break out high enough, add flaps.
Option 1 sounds like the best way to train for a lowly student like me, but I can testify to the fact that you will at least 50% of the time not make it to the bottom of the glideslope. ATC will tell you to break off early so that more important freight and other commercial traffic can land. And rightly so, as my CFII says, the system is designed for them. Bugsmasher vs freight dog, bugsmasher loses every time.
So Option 2 would be my choice.. though landing without flaps is harder on the tires and I wouldn't want to do it on a regular basis, and I'll be flying a LOT of ILSs down to DH in order to get ready for the checkride.
My CFII insists on Option 3: reconfigure for approach speed once established. He recommends 2200 RPM, which as I said gives about 95 kts level. Once you've intercepted the GS, pull power back to 2000 RPM or so and ride it down to a few hundred feet (no more than 500) above DH. Then get one dot below the GS, level off (without reducing power) and add 10* of flaps once in the white arc. Then use forward pressure to get the airplane back onto the GS.
I've tried this at least 10 times and only twice got anywhere near back to a stable descent along the GS. I've always blown through the glideslope to at least two dots high before even re-establishing a descent, and usually either wind up chasing the GS needle (due to excessive power reductions) or never catch up to it at all, and sometimes lose the localizer as well. Tonight at FNT was especially bad, the worst I've flown since we started shooting approaches. The 15-20 kt crosswind from the south didn't make it any easier, but the same thing happened a few nights ago at DET under friendlier conditions.
Everyone I've talked to, including one close instrument rated friend, tells me that this is a bad idea because descending on the GS in IMC is no time to be majorly reconfiguring the airplane. I agree, but my CFII says the reason I'm screwing it up so badly is because I'm trying to do it my way and not listening to him. Maybe so, but I've tried to do exactly as he says and I've found that with no power reduction, the GS needle goes through the basement PDQ. Pulling on the yoke (takes more than just "pressure") and holding that flaps lever down is quite distracting and I'm finding it very hard to even keep the wings level while doing it.
I'm about ready to hang it up or start over in a different airplane. Maybe even with a different CFII. Any thoughts would be much appreciated.
Last edited: