Good grief.
Let me clear:
Point 1:
The original post questioned this statement:
"The steeper the turn the less altitude lost in the turn."
The video linked demonstrated a dead stick approach and landing.
I agreed with the initial premise since a descending steep turn does not apply the G load a level steep turn will impose. The demonstration pilot in the video did a 180 turn at a bank angle of about 50-60 degrees, which qualifies as steep.
Point 2:
The "Death spiral" in IMC example is germane, since the doomed pilot's typical reaction is "Airspeed is increasing! I'll pull the nose back up..." thereby decreasing the radius and thus steepening the turn.
The Pilot feels 1 G initially and for long enough to conclude he is level.
As the spiral continues things get worse, but gradually enough to the sense-dependent pilot that he doesn't "feel" there's a problem until it's too late (unless he has the presence of mind to reduce the bank and then recover from the dive).
Point 3:
I've practiced the turn back in my Chief and in every airplane I've flown since I lost power over Fairmont, WV (and returned safely to the departure airport.
Description here).
The maneuver requires
significant push and roll to:
- maintain airspeed
- achieve the bank required to maximize the rate of turn
- minimize the loss of altitude going from initial heading to "get back to the field" heading (I don't care about runways for this maneuver as all I need is flat enough obstruction free landing area)
Point 4:
The "impossible turn"
is impossible below a certain altitude. Above that altitude you may be able to return to the field with partial or full power loss. It behooves us as pilots to beat this fact into our thinking before we release the brakes and break the surly bonds. Here's an
interesting read that provides a bit more detail and calculation.