Deelee
Pattern Altitude
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Deelee
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I think you are number 8. Soon I'll be monetizing!! Then I can lose it all to you at golf.
sub'd!
Definitely this.
Many focus way too close in front of them.
If you are driving down the highway at landing speeds, do you only focus 100' or 200' in front of your car? The answer is no, you're looking way down the highway.
Most bad landings I've made is because I added extra corrections that weren't needed because there was nothing wrong. So resist the temptation to make things better in the round out and flare to make thing better - and they will be.
I struggled with starting my flare too high just like you are, and I was following all the tricks - looking way down the runway, etc. Two things helped - one, I got a cushion to sit on so I had better visibility. I'm only a few inches over 5', so I couldn't actually see over the nose of the Archer I was flying until I got the cushion. Being able to see helped a lot, and something you want to fix if you are short like me. The other thing that helped was using my peripheral vision. There is a moment as you come down close to the runway when the runway seems to widen and flatten out of the corner of your eye. I started waiting until that moment to begin my flare/pitch up, and I have yet to flare too high since!
70 knots on final seems a touch fast for a warrior. I had trouble at first too. Being afraid to get too close to Vso. Really nailing the speed helps that ground effect balloo and stall that I (and sounds like you as well) initially had trouble with.
That airplane has a flaps-extended stall speed of 44 knots. Approaching at 70 means you're at 1.6 Vso, when the old general rule-of-thumb was 1.3 Vso. The restart Cessnas AFMs also have similarly inflated approach speeds, and I can only presume it's because the OEMs are afraid of pilots stalling on final or something. And yet, high approach and landing speeds often result in damaged or wrecked airplanes. Bouncing, porpoising, ballooning and stalling, wheelbarrowing, runway overruns, burned-out brakes and blown tires. Lots of risks associated with too much speed."The airplane should be trimmed to an initial approach speed of about 70 KIAS with a final approach speed of 63 KIAS with flaps extended."
Get the correct downwind/base/final speeds and stick them. Every time. Not 5kts over, not 1kt over.
The more aggressive the headwind, the more it showed my lack of power and speed management on final. It finally clicked when I had to add what felt like far too much power on final to compensate for the headwind.
It wasn't like the car where you lift the throttle coming to a stop, you have to manage throttle all the way to touchdown. It seemed elementary after the realization, but was a real hangup for me.
I had some poor instruction previously and never flew in much wind or on bumpy days. My current instructor is 75, and we flew in whatever.
Get the correct downwind/base/final speeds and stick them. Every time. Not 5kts over, not 1kt over.
especially if your fast.Go around early and often.
especially if your fast.
Don't over control. Many learners are constantly moving the ailerons & elevator.
Don't over control. Many learners are constantly moving the ailerons & elevator. I accuse them of trying to wear out the hinges. One you have a stabilized approach established make very small corrections but only as needed. Of course, shifty winds with changing velocities require more control input.
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I used to tell my students that the landing started way back on downwind. Sloppiness there carries forward to add to whatever further sloppiness the pilot inserts into the base and final legs. One of the BIGGEST mistakes a pilot can make is to dive at the runway when he /she finds him/herself too high. It doesn't work. It just results in excess speed that is then carried into ground effect, usually too far down the runway already. Either an aggressive slip, or raising the nose to kill airspeed and getting more sink, is the way to fix that. One needs to fool with that stuff at altitude, especially the low airspeed sink stuff. I taught it in taildragger training; it helped the students understand not only the use of drag to get lower, but that trying to stretch the glide by raising the nose is useless. One can get the airplane well down, then lower the nose and recover the airspeed you need for the flare. It should be done with a CFI first, one that knows about this stuff and isn't afraid of a 1.2 Vso or something.
Takeoffs are optional; landings are mandatory.
Challenger/ColumbiaTakeoffs are optional; landings are mandatory.
I’m not sitting through 20-plus minutes of some guy’s clickbait video to see what the “one thing” might, in his opinion, be. Is it the same “one thing” the gut doctor urges everyone to avoid? Or the same “one weird trick” that … oh, never mind.
Trim, trim trimI'm right at the point of soloing, but am having an issue on final. When I'm about to land I have a tendency to overcorrect and rather than tease the plane down to the ground by holding the nose, I flare a bit too soon. Any good tips on maintaining the right nose attitude so i don't bounce the plane or balloon. I'm flying a Piper Warrior, I have good speed control, usually at 70 Knots on final.