Keystoner
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- Oct 10, 2021
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Keystoner
@rhkennerly, by the way, I appreciate it.
Is the rest of the rest the same group, or are they separate?But keep asking interesting questions. It makes the rest of us think (and annoys the rest ;->)
Re: 500 fpm. I thought I read that as a rule-of-thumb somewhere so I wanted to check the math.OP’s not a nag and nothing wrong with questions on here, just wondering where the OP got 500 FPM descent rate on downwind? Also, a 3 degree glide path on base? Is this in the traffic pattern AC or AFH?
The FAA recommends speeds on base and final and to shoot for 3 degrees (stabilized approach) but how you get there will vary with aircraft and pilot.
I'm an engineer
***DELETIA***
Fly the numbers of your plane (power wise) and then adjust *based on your site picture*. I can't stress that enough.
See, this is where y'all are going to say I'm overthinking.If runway is starting to flatten out, add power and decrease pitch slightly to gain a little airspeed and lift to pull you back up (i know, counterintuitive...I want to go DOWN!)
Don't laugh. I've actually heard arguments about one being right and the other wrong!Obviously accuracy is not important, because you’re using the wrong formula…you cut your ground speed in half and add a zero to get VS.
The relationship isn't neither all that linear nor all that immediate. Try it at altitude. Well trimmed for level flight. Let go of the yoke. Add power but don't touch anything else. Yes, the airplane will ultimately settle in a climb at the same airspeed. But notice that the first event in most airplanes will be a pitch up moment as the airflow is increased over the wing which will initially reduce your airspeed too.See, this is where y'all are going to say I'm overthinking.
"Flatten out" - means I'm too low, right?
"Add power" - Got it--power for altitude--I'm with you so far.
"Decrease pitch" - Now you lost me. I've gathered that adding or reducing power without changing pitch will not affect airspeed (much). Adding power will cause me to pitch up to maintain the airspeed I was at. Now you have me pitching up slightly, which will cause me to slow down. If I had already established my final airspeed, why am I pitching for altitude?
Unless you're flying a tow plane and the gliders are waiting and you're trying to avoid the baby Cessna pilots flying bomber patterns. But not under normal circumstances, no.I’m lost at the OP’s assumptions and purpose.
No one’s doing 2,000 ft/min in a GA traffic pattern
I'll talk to my CFI about this but what would you recommend as more practical?
Unless you're flying a tow plane and the gliders are waiting and you're trying to avoid the baby Cessna pilots flying bomber patterns. But not under normal circumstances, no.
I wasn't questioning the direction of pitch, just the act of pitching at all.You're on final with 200-300 feet to go. You don't want to let go of the yoke, add power, and wait while the airplane pitch wallows a bit. So, while I would not refer to it as decreasing pitch, it is a forward pressuring of the yoke to maintain the - sorry - visual pitch picture you had.
It's about descent rate, not increasing altitude, you are still descending.I wasn't questioning the direction of pitch, just the act of pitching at all.
The scenario was that we were low.
@BryanAV8R said add power and "decrease pitch." I understood this to mean pitch up. Fine. We'll slow down a bit but we won't be low anymore.
What I understand you to be saying is add power and add *forward* pressure to the yoke. Power + Nose down pitch = definitely increases airspeed. Why am I pitching down when I want to increase my altitude, that is, achieve a shallower glide path?
When you add power, the airplane may try to pitch up. Hence the forward pressure on the yoke to maintain your pitch attitude.I wasn't questioning the direction of pitch, just the act of pitching at all.
The scenario was that we were low.
@BryanAV8R said add power and "decrease pitch." I understood this to mean pitch up. Fine. We'll slow down a bit but we won't be low anymore.
What I understand you to be saying is add power and add *forward* pressure to the yoke. Power + Nose down pitch = definitely increases airspeed. Why am I pitching down when I want to increase my altitude, that is, achieve a shallower glide path?
Being able to land from pattern altitude abeam the numbers and get down and off the runway before the larval airline pilot turning base in the next county calls short final is a skill anyone can benefit from.That's advanced stuff, we mere private pilots really have no need to fly like that.
I'm with you on this. Pitch affects airspeed and altitude. My first inclination is to use it for airspeed though. If I want to increase my cruise airspeed, I'll use both pitch and power in coordination, and stay at the same altitude but at a faster airspeed. Pitching down + Adding Power, in a coordinated manner will accomplish that. Gas pedal on a car isn't just "go." Letting up on it will slow down. Totally with you on this point.The other part is that it's not a pure pitch = airspeed; power = altitude relationship. There have heated arguments about it and the reverse forever, including incredibly stupid examples to prove one side or the other is right. It's really about coordinated use of both. Ultimately, one predominating over the other is nothing more than a teaching technique to move the new pilot from the 2-dimensional world to the 3-D world of flying where the relationships are a bit different than driving a car where hitting the gas pedal means "go."
Understood, but I want it to pitch up. I'm low. (Not arguing here, just trying to keep this back and forth until I have it down.)When you add power, the airplane may try to pitch up. Hence the forward pressure on the yoke to maintain your pitch attitude.
I appreciate you trying to scratch my engineering tendencies.Google "Region Of Reverse Command". Or visit code7700.com for good technical information.
If you're low on final, when you're flying something like 1.3 VS0, and you pitch up without adding power, you'll slow down, near stall speed, and steepen your approach. This is bad.Understood, but I want it to pitch up. I'm low. (Not arguing here, just trying to keep this back and forth until I have it down.)
Agreed. We want to decrease the descent rate if we're low, not increase altitude. Again, I don't want to pitch down to accomplish that.It's about descent rate, not increasing altitude, you are still descending.
Being able to land from pattern altitude abeam the numbers and get down and off the runway before the larval airline pilot turning base in the next county calls short final is a skill anyone can benefit from.
This why I'm pounding this: in my head, I've already established (with pitch and trim) the airspeed I want to land and I don't want to change it. If I'm high or low, I only want to touch the power to correct it.If you're low on final, when you're flying something like 1.3 VS0, and you pitch up without adding power, you'll slow down, near stall speed, and steepen your approach. This is bad.
If you increase power and maintain pitch attitude, you will increase your speed and shallow your approach. This is good.
Because you don't want to slow down too. You press forward, as others said, to maintain pitch. You are in a dynamic aerodynamic event.I wasn't questioning the direction of pitch, just the act of pitching at all.
The scenario was that we were low.
@BryanAV8R said add power and "decrease pitch." I understood this to mean pitch up. Fine. We'll slow down a bit but we won't be low anymore.
What I understand you to be saying is add power and add *forward* pressure to the yoke. Power + Nose down pitch = definitely increases airspeed. Why am I pitching down when I want to increase my altitude, that is, achieve a shallower glide path?
Who flies a pattern at 10,000 feet?Yeah, not at 2000 fpm from 10,000 feet.
Who flies a pattern at 10,000 feet?
The highlighted phrase doesn't mean anything to me. And I'm not sure what you intend it to mean. But if you're low, you haven't established anything. You can't be low and on speed. Think about it as an energy state, and you have potential and kinetic energy. Being too low = being too slow. If you try to shallow your approach, you'll slow down, so you must add power. Being too high = being too fast. If you just try to steepen your decent, you'll accelerate, so you have to decrease power (if you have it in, otherwise dissipate potential energy without accelerating by slipping or using drag devices).This why I'm pounding this: in my head, I've already established (with pitch and trim) the airspeed I want to land and I don't want to change it. If I'm high or low, I only want to touch the power to correct it.
So, you want to slow down too instead of maintaining target airspeed?Agreed. We want to decrease the descent rate if we're low, not increase altitude. Again, I don't want to pitch down to accomplish that.
I'm stumped again.Who releases parachuters at pattern altitude?
Are you saying that the pitching up that occurs with adding power will slow me down?So, you want to slow down too instead of maintaining target airspeed?
I want to land between 65-70 mph. I'm on final and I'm trimmed for that airspeed, but I'm low, so I'll "power for altitude," and that will shallow my descent--decrease my descent rate. No?The highlighted phrase doesn't mean anything to me. And I'm not sure what you intend it to mean. But if you're low, you haven't established anything. You can't be low and on speed. Think about it as an energy state, and you have potential and kinetic energy. Being too low = being too slow. If you try to shallow your approach, you'll slow down, so you must add power. Being too high = being too fast. If you just try to steepen your decent, you'll accelerate, so you have to decrease power (if you have it in, otherwise dissipate potential energy without accelerating by slipping or using drag devices).
This is exactly what I want to verify the next time I fly, and vice versa.Are you saying that the pitching up that occurs with adding power will slow me down?
I'm stumped again.
This is exactly what I want to verify the next time I fly, and vice versa.
Yes. But with no forward pressure to maintain pitch, it will also initially decrease your airspeed. It may even cause a momentary balloon, increasing your altitude. And if it decreased your airspeed to the reverse side of the power curve, it will increase your descent rate.I want to land between 65-70 mph. I'm on final and I'm trimmed for that airspeed, but I'm low, so I'll "power for altitude," and that will shallow my descent--decrease my descent rate. No?