I'm toying with the idea of going to Oshkosh this year. Either as a PPL or if i'm still a student then with a CFI. What is the best technique for a spot landing? Should I treat it like a short field?
I'm toying with the idea of going to Oshkosh this year. Either as a PPL or if i'm still a student then with a CFI. What is the best technique for a spot landing? Should I treat it like a short field?
You just soloed. I think you're getting ahead of yourself.
Maybe see if your airport or a local one would let you use a bag of flour to mark a "spot", maybe 1/3 of the way down the runway if that would be sufficient.
Then begin your flare at various runway stripes before the flour spot to get a handle on how far your flare takes you with full flaps and the speed pretty close.
In my light sport on a typical runway, I think maybe two stripes works pretty well.
As an example, aiming for the closest displaced threshold arrow puts my wheels down in a full stall pretty much on the numbers:
http://youtu.be/dhauE4oUeE0?t=3m44s
You just soloed. I think you're getting ahead of yourself.
practice, practice practice.I'm toying with the idea of going to Oshkosh this year. Either as a PPL or if i'm still a student then with a CFI. What is the best technique for a spot landing? Should I treat it like a short field?
Spot landings? Use all your flaps, nail your speed, trim so speed stays nailed, and manage glide path with power.
Why? Either he has PPL or he goes with CFI. With CFI would be a great way to build time. And to practice what it takes as a PPL before he goes is a good plan too.
practice, practice practice.
practice landing on any point on the runway at home.
Thank you. MAKG1 is just being a dick like he was on my other thread.
If I have my PPL by then I will most likely find a flying buddy to go with me.
Specifics please. I need some details. How do you do it? Compare it to a normal landing or a short field please.
Except, perhaps, for approach speed, which might be a touch higher than when trying for minimum landing roll -- say, 1.25-1.3 Vs0 rather than 1.15-1.2 Vs0. However, when you're trying to make one of the colored dots at Oshkosh, you might want to make it at short-field approach speed since they want minimum roll and clear of the runway as soon as you can do so safely.Thanks Ron. So should I treat it like a short field?
Specifics please. I need some details. How do you do it? Compare it to a normal landing or a short field please.
You're all missing the easiest solution to hitting your landing spot every time. Not within 50' or 20' or 10'. Hitting it right on the spot - every time.
You're all missing the easiest solution to hitting your landing spot every time. Not within 50' or 20' or 10'. Hitting it right on the spot - every time.
Spot landings? Look at this video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Eopl5QLQ5zs
And don't do what they did.
With some good tail wheel time this would not happen.
Go get rated in rotor craft.
I didn't say cheapest.
You're all missing the easiest solution to hitting your landing spot every time. Not within 50' or 20' or 10'. Hitting it right on the spot - every time.
That's too simple--land first, then tell your buddies where you were trying to land. You'll be closest every time!
P.S.--this works with shooting, too. Shoot first, then call the target as whatever you hit. Or not, as the case may be.
P.S.--this works with shooting, too. Shoot first, then call the target as whatever you hit. Or not, as the case may be.
I've been trying to land where I'm aiming but it is tough. Sometimes I land in front of and sometimes beyond. It's all over the place! So how close do you need to be to the dot at oshkosh they tell you to land on? Is it okay to land 200-300 feet in front of or beyond it?
Excellent advise! hope he listens to it. Oshkosh is no place for a beginner solo.PTS for a spot landing is 200 feet for private pilot and 100 feet for a commercial pilot.
You may think I'm a "dick," but it is every pilot's responsibility to call unsafe behavior. Knock it off. You have no business yet operating in such high traffic environments. There is nothing at all wrong with practicing precision -- quite the contrary; it's a very good thing -- but you're trying to run a marathon when you're having difficulty finding the front door.
Learn to operate at moderate traffic airports before you go after the huge cluster****s. Oshkosh is the busiest airport in the world for that weekend, and air shows and other events are not good training grounds for new pilots. Go NEXT year and you'll be much more prepared, assuming you have polished up your landings.
I hope you don't think the certificate means you're good. It means the examiner thinks you're safe, a relatively low bar. You will still need training and/or practice after the certificate. Everyone does.
And keep in mind that there are a lot of landing critiques on YouTube and even AOPA for Oshkosh. You'll make your WORST landings when you know other pilots are watching, especially early on.