denverpilot
Tied Down
Fascinating graphic. Plenty of constant emphasis in primary flight training on the base to final turn and stall/spin awareness, but not nearly enough in planning departures and knowing exactly where you are going when the engine quits on initial climb out, IMHO.
I posted a thank you to the CFI who pounded doing the TOLD numbers into my head and always asked, "where are you going to go when the engine quits?" and made me brief it out loud before pushing the throttle up for takeoff.
Sometimes there aren't good options but it's better to KNOW there aren't any, and how high one needs to be to make the cliche'd "impossible turn". Are you going in that field to the left, or are you doing an air return to the departure runway? Can you even make it? Did you look on Google Earth to find the most open place to go and that has the "softest" stuff to hit?
It certainly looks to me like we need a new training emphasis. What do you think? How were you trained?
I posted a thank you to the CFI who pounded doing the TOLD numbers into my head and always asked, "where are you going to go when the engine quits?" and made me brief it out loud before pushing the throttle up for takeoff.
Sometimes there aren't good options but it's better to KNOW there aren't any, and how high one needs to be to make the cliche'd "impossible turn". Are you going in that field to the left, or are you doing an air return to the departure runway? Can you even make it? Did you look on Google Earth to find the most open place to go and that has the "softest" stuff to hit?
It certainly looks to me like we need a new training emphasis. What do you think? How were you trained?