luvflyin
Touchdown! Greaser!
Smoke in the cockpit. Fire. Passenger just swallowed something and they can't breathe. Passenger is an uncaged pooch and is foamin at the mouth. Passenger says I double dog dare you to get the plane on the ground in one minute. Emergency descents as a checkride maneuver are kinda new and pop up on BFR's. I got one a couple years ago and confused what the CFI wanted with an engine out. It surprised me that he didn't just pull the throttle and say "now what" so I pulled it and started in on the engine out boogie until he said not that and explained it to me. The FAA recommended procedure goes something like pull throttle, 30-45 degree bank, pitch and trim to Vfe, drop the flaps and hold it at the top of the white arc and spiral down. Sounds like a reasonable enough thing to do. In the thread where this started it was brought up that you'll get a faster rate of descent by pointing the nose down and accelerate to Vno, the yellow arc. That makes sense, especially if it's a fire and you want to blow it out. I'm trying to figure out what is going to give you the mostest feets per minute descent. Only thing I ever learned about the yellow arc is stay outta it unless it's smooth out and the times I've been in it are with power in a gradual descent to get home quicker. Let's start with a C172. What gives you max 'rate' of descent.
Last edited: