If you don't think it can happen to a competent CFI, you're short on experience.
Boom! Hahaha!LOL.
Wanna talk experience Skippy?
If you don't think it can happen to a competent CFI, you're short on experience.
Boom! Hahaha!LOL.
Wanna talk experience Skippy?
Isn’t it funny when someone disagrees or fails to have the experience to back up their statements how they start throwing around adjectives about you?
LOL.
Wanna talk experience Skippy?
Since you're itching to regurgitate your resume, it's up to you whether you want to enthrall us LOL
Don’t have too. I’m just pointing out, once more, what a poser you’ve become on this forum with your constant chest thumping when these conversations pop up.
You’re a legend in your own mind.
That’s all.
I have enough experience to see both sides of the stall avoidance vs. spin training debate. The posers are the ones who only have experience with the avoidance side yet feel righteous in their steadfast opinion of the entire matter. I don't talk about things with which I lack sufficient experience to have a decent perspective. If I call out those who clearly don't, you can call this chest thumping all you want, it matters not to me.
You make some ridiculous claims, such as the one I called you out on. Then you get all defensive and start the chest thumping and making accusations on items you have zero knowledge on.
Feel free to list further ridiculous claims on the subject of flying that I continue to make.
How close do you follow the controls with a rated pilot in VMC?No controls on your side?
How close do you follow the controls with a rated pilot in VMC?
So on the controls in less than a second without any attempt to let the student correct when you’re 400 feet up?My technique is to appear not to be following. But I maintain SA at all times.
I have considerable time teaching in helicopters. A helicopter 3 feet off the ground with a new student is right up there with being on the edge of something that could go very wrong, very fast. One has to develop a SA and a technique of being rapidly prepared to take over while not appearing to be riding the controls.
This translates to fixed wing as well. I’m not up on and riding the controls, but I’m keeping an SA and ready to intervene quickly if I have to. Of course, it also depends on the regime of flight at the time.
In my time instructing (fixed and rotor) I’ve been more surprised by rated pilots than by students. Again, experience teaches.
I had a rather bizarre primary instructor and we did spins on the second lesson in the 152. The 172 on the other hand is really hard to spin. It devolves into a steep spiral even if you do get it to start.
So on the controls in less than a second without any attempt to let the student correct when you’re 400 feet up?
Nope but I could fly with you and show you how it could happen to clearly even a hero CFI such as yourself LOL
If you don't think it can happen to a competent CFI, you're short on experience.
Oh, I know the wing dropping wasn't a spin, or even super close to it. It was the fact that he made me recover it, and I didn't respond that fast. LOL It obviously wasn't as close as it felt, or he would have recovered it, but as a student with maybe 3 hours, it felt close!
So on the controls in less than a second without any attempt to let the student correct when you’re 400 feet up?
So you’re saying I’m competent.Nice twist, but I didn’t say that.
Part of instructing is knowing how far to let the student go without getting into a dangerous situation.
Maybe. Maybe not. I had that happen with a student in a Skyhawk. It was definitely an incipient spin. I even saw in coming in advance.
So you’re saying I’m competent.
Yes, I had dual controls.I don’t know you, never seen you fly. And nowhere here, in this thread, did I question your competence.
I asked a simple question.
Here you go:
The look on his face tells it all ...
Do you have a link to the FAA recommendations to which you refer?Sorry guys, I don’t care about anyone’s opinion, no matter how hard they beat their chest. I care about data. The relevant data has already been cited in this thread. Anyone who ignores that and FAA recommendations because they just know better is arrogant in the book of Steingar. Hate slinging mud and don’t mean to, but that’s how I see it.
Someone seeks spin training and you do it, good on you. But to force students to do it for the PPL despite the fact that the FAA doesn’t require it because it’s too dangerous smacks to me as one of the dangerous pilot attitudes. Again, I am genuinely sorry to put it this way. Most of the stuff that comes from the FAA is written in blood.
The look on his face tells it all ...
Maybe the student didn't see it coming, but the instructor surely did (if he was competent...)
Would take way too much of my time.
Sorry guys, I don’t care about anyone’s opinion, no matter how hard they beat their chest. I care about data. The relevant data has already been cited in this thread. Anyone who ignores that and FAA recommendations because they just know better is arrogant in the book of Steingar. Hate slinging mud and don’t mean to, but that’s how I see it.
Someone seeks spin training and you do it, good on you. But to force students to do it for the PPL despite the fact that the FAA doesn’t require it because it’s too dangerous smacks to me as one of the dangerous pilot attitudes. Again, I am genuinely sorry to put it this way. Most of the stuff that comes from the FAA is written in blood.
Anyone who ignores that and FAA recommendations because they just know better is arrogant in the book of Steingar. Hate slinging mud and don’t mean to, but that’s how I see it.
Someone seeks spin training and you do it, good on you. But to force students to do it for the PPL despite the fact that the FAA doesn’t require it because it’s too dangerous smacks to me as one of the dangerous pilot attitudes. Again, I am genuinely sorry to put it this way. Most of the stuff that comes from the FAA is written in blood.
Hopefully for your passengers that’s spin avoidance not recovery.
Don't actually understand why there's such a fear of that maneuver, including expressed by a few folks on this thread. The plane is stalled. It's not as though it's going to come from together during a spin.
Yeah, but is it likely to happen?If you don't think it can happen to a competent CFI, you're short on experience.
Back elevator and right aileron to counter a left wing drop = incorrect control inputs. Maybe the student didn't see it coming, but the instructor surely did (if he was competent...)
Don't actually understand why there's such a fear of that maneuver, including expressed by a few folks on this thread. The plane is stalled. It's not as though it's going to come from together during a spin.