When I was a student pilot flying a Cherokee 140 (uncontrolled airport) with my instructor I called out 3 miles out, on the 45, and then left downwind and this big twin called out 5 mile straight in final right after I announce downwind. I then turn and call out and announce left base and right after this twin announces 3 mile final straight in. I'm worried so I ask my instructor what to do and he says "turn final and announce it we're slower, lower, and in the pattern". So, slightly scared I turn final, announce, and about the time I'm over the fence this ******* in the twin overflies me by about 500' to let me know he's there as he banks hard to the left to go around. We were doing touch n go's at the time and I was a student pilot, if it happened today I'd park my plane on the ramp and wait for him to discuss his antics as I was lower and established when he decided to announce his intentions to force me to accommodate him.
14 CFR § 91.113 Right-of-way rules:
(g)Landing.
Aircraft, while on final approach to land or while landing, have the right-of-way over other
aircraft in flight or operating on the surface, except that they shall not take advantage of this rule to force an
aircraft off the runway surface which has already landed and is attempting to make way for an
aircraft on final approach.
When two or more aircraft are approaching an airport for the purpose of landing, the aircraft at the lower altitude has the right-of-way, but it shall not take advantage of this rule to cut in front of another which is on final approach to land or to overtake that aircraft.
So, in the situation as you describe it, you cut in front of him. He was on final. "
Aircraft, while on final approach to land or while landing, have the right-of-way over other
aircraft in flight".
Actually, I didn't "cut" in front of anyone. I was lower and in the pattern announcing my intentions.
The fact that you were lower only matters if he wasn't already on final. The fact that you were in the pattern and the fact that you were announcing your intentions are both completely irrelevant. The twin had the right of way. Since there was a conflict, that means you cut him off.
He piped up and then tried to cut in front of me. If there's traffic announcing in the established pattern you don't get to just announce a straight in approach and make everyone else accomodate you. That's not how this flying **** works.
Actually, that is exactly how it works. How did he "try to cut in front of you" when he was already on final?
Since I'm quoting the regs, there's this one as well:
§ 91.126 Operating on or in the vicinity of an
airport in Class G airspace.
(a)General. Unless otherwise authorized or required, each
person operating an
aircraft on or in the vicinity of an
airport in a Class G airspace area must comply with the requirements of this section.
(b)Direction of turns. When approaching to land at an
airport without an operating control tower in Class G airspace -
(1) Each pilot of an
airplane must make all turns of that
airplane to the left unless the
airport displays approved light signals or visual markings indicating that turns should be made to the right, in which case the pilot must make all turns to the right; and
Again, irrelevant. He was on a straight-in final, so he wasn't making any turns.
I understand what you're saying, but my thoughts on the subject are (looking back) that the twin pilot didn't take into consideration that there was already traffic in the pattern that was going to land prior to him.
But clearly, you weren't going to land prior to him, you were going to create a conflict. I knew what was going to happen as soon as you said you turned base when he was on a 3-mile final. Your instructor taught you a terrible lesson.
He wanted me to accommodate him by making his calls immediately after me and offering no alternative other than he was "straight in".
He was telling you he was straight in so that you would know he had the right of way. It's your job to accommodate him, and extending your downwind slightly would have been a very easy way for you to do so, and would have made for a MUCH safer situation for both of you.
He knew my intentions to touch-n-go as I was making my calls.
You knew his intentions too, and you created a conflict. It's never good to cut in front of a faster plane.
Since I was flying across the fence when he decided to "show me" that he was displeased by aggressively overflying me it seems the argument could be made that he could have throttled back at 5 miles out to allow me to touch-n-go instead of everyone on here telling me to extend my downwind. Courtesy goes both ways.
Safety, however, does not. Likely, the twin was already on their final approach speed at 5 miles, and certainly would have been by 3 miles, and the slowest safe approach speed in a twin is quite a bit faster than the approach speed of a trainer. In fact, it's likely close to or above the cruise speed of said trainer. You can't just "throttle back" in the twin.
That being said, since this long ago student pilot incident I've extended my downwind in the pattern many times to accommodate straight-in traffic and have no problem doing so if the pilots are actively communicating which is encouraged. I've also been the pilot calling for a straight-in approach at uncontrolled fields and have slowed down to allow traffic in the pattern to land or gone around to enter the pattern if the straight in can't be accomplished without disrupting the traffic.
So then, it seems that you've figured out that what your instructor had you do was neither safe nor courteous... Why do you insist on defending his actions in the situation you presented?
Or he could have just throttled back 5 miles earlier and avoided the whole situation. But that doesn't fit your narrative.
Again, not necessarily an option. Looking at a few POHs I have here for light twins, they have a Vmc of 79-80 knots, a Vyse between 106 and 115, and short final speeds listed between 93 and 100 knots. Normally, you want to stay above Vyse as far as possible into the approach, but that may be irrelevant. Let's do some math:
If you're in a 172, 60 knots is the place to be on approach... Now, let's say you're flying a really tight pattern, and you're turning base a half mile after being abeam the numbers and you're a half mile from the runway centerline, and you're using a 20-degree bank. Your path through the air to the threshold is about 7100 feet/1.16nm and will take you about 70 seconds to fly from the turn to base until crossing the runway threshold. In that amount of time, the twin has flown 2 1/4 miles. You have 20 seconds to round out, flare, land, and get off the runway before the twin crosses the threshold... But the twin pilot isn't going to take the risk, so he goes around, which involves going to full power, accelerating to Vyse if necessary, and then climbing, which you took to be "aggressive" when it is merely normal procedure.