FlySince9
En-Route
FTFY...
SVT as in de la Vie et de la Terre?
FTFY...
I'm pretty sure that's what he means, but don't mind me, I ride the short bus.SVT as in de la Vie et de la Terre?
I'm pretty sure that's what he means, but don't mind me, I ride the short bus.
This is pretty validating coming from a recent CFI. I've said this for a LONG time.To a degree. I see some pretty terrible pilots during flight reviews.....
Nate how did you fix it? Did you steepen the bank and let the nose drop? What was your bank angle? Just curious
I can't remember the last time I flew a "Square Pattern". First off, I fly my downwind close enough that squaring up a base leg would require excess loading in the turns so I could straighten before final, then I'd have to bank and yank onto final. It doesn't make a lot of sense when your downwind is close enough that there is no new traffic on final that you need to look for (the reason for leveling the wings on base). I just make a constant turn to final if I am on a downwind leg.
And you feel you have to do something about it.Let me make this simple. This is how you die:
- You realize you are going to overshoot final.
For an inexperienced pilot who finds himself in this situation I wouldn't advocate anything except a go-around.
It's great for us to have it explained that it's not the banking that increases stall speed, but rather it's the loading. Awesome information, really (I'm not being sarcastic here). But the best thing you can advocate for a pilot is that if things aren't right, don't try to force it...just set yourself up to do it again...correctly.
(man, I hope I don't set myself up as being holier-than-though because I've been guilty of overshooting base-to-final myself on more than one occasion)
There is nothing that says you have to be perfectly lined up with the runway on final, you just want to be on the runway when you land. The plane will line up just the same at 10'agl as 1000.
Henning is past fixing.Tell that to the "Stabilized Approach" mafia... they'll be along shortly...
Oh cool, I'll make room for you on the short bus then!Didn't realize I was broken.
If he came to me -- I'd cover up his attitude indicator, DG, airspeed indicator, and altimeter...and we'd master the pattern just like that.
But he still didn't file a flight plan.......
Best advice yet!!! Between my PPL and IR, with the CFII friend who became my IR instructor, we took the plane out, daytime, and covered EVERY instrument on the panel except the mag compass. He asked me to state my airspeed and altitude on various segments of flying approaches, landings and take offs in the pattern, for over an hour. He also told me that I was limited to looking 3 times at my relative position to the runway in the pattern. Me and the bird got a much better understanding of each other after that, it's a lesson I will never forget...why do it? For a number of reasons, and one may be because at night, if your electrical system craps out and you have no panel lighting, you gotta be able to do this.
The obvious is to be able to do it and comfortable with the situation...you have to be able to do it first, then develop the comfort level over time and with practice, that's a no brainer.
I don't know how bright your panel lights are at night, mine are pretty well low level and most of the time I fly with red only at night. But, like I always say, WTH do I know...
You will be amazed at how much difference just the lowest level of light makes in disrupting your maximum night vision capacity. If everything doesn't have a blue-violet cast to the scene you aren't there. If you can differentiate color, you're not even close.
Isn't it backwards for night VFR, when one actually needs the instruments to fight illusions? I'm sure it would do a lot for the basic airmanship, but perhaps not for the situation described in the opening post.If he came to me -- I'd cover up his attitude indicator, DG, airspeed indicator, and altimeter...and we'd master the pattern just like that.
The issue described was from lack of basic airmanship. Illusions are only illusions if you let them be. He completed ignored the basics like the relationship of pitch and power, sight picture, etc. With practice you'll know your airspeed by simply hearing the engine and seeing your pitch. I don't spend much of any time looking at the instruments instructing vfr in the airplanes I know well. Everything I need to know I can see out the window and hear with my ears.Isn't it backwards for night VFR, when one actually needs the instruments to fight illusions? I'm sure it would do a lot for the basic airmanship, but perhaps not for the situation described in the opening post.
Everything I need to know I can see out the window and hear with my ears.
The issue described was from lack of basic airmanship. Illusions are only illusions if you let them be. He completed ignored the basics like the relationship of pitch and power, sight picture, etc. With practice you'll know your airspeed by simply hearing the engine and seeing your pitch. I don't spend much of any time looking at the instruments instructing vfr in the airplanes I know well. Everything I need to know I can see out the window and hear with my ears.
If it is night and VFR and you can see the lights of the runway there is no reason you can't land on it without instruments. Period. I'm not saying everyone should rip their panels out, I'm saying there is a lot of information one can use to get themselves down to the runway and in this case it seems he didn't use any of him, nor did he use the instruments.This is a perfect recipe for getting killed on a dark night. Maybe not on a clear night with a full moon, but on an overcast night with few lights on the ground, those illusions will kill you unless you have some instrument training to counter them. It's little different than entering a cloud during the day and thinking that your seat of the pants "basic airmanship" will keep you safe.
If it is night and VFR and you can see the lights of the runway there is no reason you can't land on it without instruments. Period. I'm not saying everyone should rip their panels out, I'm saying there is a lot of information one can use to get themselves down to the runway and in this case it seems he didn't use any of him, nor did he use the instruments.
How do you improve your ability to detect all of the small details? How do you see and notice things you've never noticed before? You force yourself to pay attention to those things. Something I focus on heavily in training. I want someone to be able to fly by instruments, by visual, by their ears, by the feel, by the tiny detail available in every instrument that many people just gloss over.
You don't need to be instrument rated to understand the illusions of the night. Even with an instrument student, before I sign them off for a checkride, I'll make them fly under the hoods for hours. Then I'll dump them into an approach that becomes increasingly difficult with failure after failure with them finally breaking out at circling minimums with their panel failed. It's as hard as it gets, the transition from instruments to visual is tough.
A note on this:
A few months ago, I had a classic black hole takeoff. I assessed beforehand whether or not I was good to do this. I was (and am) instrument rated and current, familiar with the aircraft, and the aircraft was well-equipped with avionics.
As Jesse says, I used -everything- I learned to do this. I listened to the sound of the engine as I rolled down the runway; I verified the healthy sounds with a quick glance at the engine indicators; I lifted off at the ideal airspeed; I set a pitch for Vy which I verified using my avionics, because there were NO visual references; and I flew away, adhering to the SOPs for this aircraft.
Now. Having said this, I would never have recommended this departure for a non-IR pilot.
A note on this:
A few months ago, I had a classic black hole takeoff. I assessed beforehand whether or not I was good to do this. I was (and am) instrument rated and current, familiar with the aircraft, and the aircraft was well-equipped with avionics.
As Jesse says, I used -everything- I learned to do this. I listened to the sound of the engine as I rolled down the runway; I verified the healthy sounds with a quick glance at the engine indicators; I lifted off at the ideal airspeed; I set a pitch for Vy which I verified using my avionics, because there were NO visual references; and I flew away, adhering to the SOPs for this aircraft.
Now. Having said this, I would never have recommended this departure for a non-IR pilot.
That would be an accurate statement, once you see the runway, there is no longer a need for any instrument.But Jesse isn't saying this. He said "If it is night and VFR and you can see the lights of the runway there is no reason you can't land on it without instruments. Period.".
That would be an accurate statement, once you see the runway, there is no longer a need for any instrument.
Huh?? You're kidding, right??
If I have visual contact with the runway, what instrument do I need?
But Jesse isn't saying this. He said "If it is night and VFR and you can see the lights of the runway there is no reason you can't land on it without instruments. Period."
You obviously believe that on some nights, reference to the instruments is necessary and that relying strictly on outside visual cues and other senses, are not enough. I've experienced just about every sensory illusion there is and if not for training that made me verify by reference to instruments my condition of flight, I'd have been a statistic. It's easy to become complacent if all your night flying is done at the same level, well lit airfield. Let's hope the first time Jesse experiences a marginally lit, sloping runway, on a dark night, he does more than rely on outside visual cues and the seat of his pants.
All that said you did not say what instrument I need to land on a VFR night.
that are working! :wink2:To be as safe as you can possibly be??
All of them..