jspilot
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jspilot
I was thinking about something the other day and wanted people’s input. Let’s say, God forbid, you have an engine out on a windy day. The engine quits high enough where you can glide to the airport. You set up and make a normal approach to land and follow the normal traffic pattern to land into the wind. Here’s where my thoughts went into effect. Let’s say it’s real windy( gusting above 25 knots and straight down a runway.) If you lined up for that runway straight into the wind, is’ent it a lot more likely you will have a harder time making the runway than if you landed down wind? Granted landing downwind would be brutal in these conditions but I’m always shocked at how much power it takes to maintain even 60 knots in a 172 in windy days( granted I’m normally flying with flaps out and things like that,) and I can’t imagine a 172 or similar would glide very far into those types of winds. It seems like it would be very easy to come up way short!
I’m just wondering that if your only objective is to make it onto the ground( which is likely what it would be in a pretty bad engine out,) then why would a pilot want to land into the wind in this scenario as it seems like you have less gliding distance once you turn into the wind and no way to recover from that if you are fighting a heavy head wind. At least if you went downwind you’d have a lot of help getting to the runway and it seems like more options to control glide distance( you could always pitch up if your ground speed is increasing thus regulating speed vs distance traveled without losing altitude,) whereas into the wind the only way to gain speed is to pitch down which would cause a loss of altitude while only slightly increasing distance travelled.
I practiced engine outs during training and was always taught to never extend your pattern beyond where you can safely glide back to the runway so I guess you could always just keep the pattern extremely tight but again once you turn into the wind you’d be really loosing altitude and groundspeed real quick!
Hoping someone will come along and explain this better to me!
I’m just wondering that if your only objective is to make it onto the ground( which is likely what it would be in a pretty bad engine out,) then why would a pilot want to land into the wind in this scenario as it seems like you have less gliding distance once you turn into the wind and no way to recover from that if you are fighting a heavy head wind. At least if you went downwind you’d have a lot of help getting to the runway and it seems like more options to control glide distance( you could always pitch up if your ground speed is increasing thus regulating speed vs distance traveled without losing altitude,) whereas into the wind the only way to gain speed is to pitch down which would cause a loss of altitude while only slightly increasing distance travelled.
I practiced engine outs during training and was always taught to never extend your pattern beyond where you can safely glide back to the runway so I guess you could always just keep the pattern extremely tight but again once you turn into the wind you’d be really loosing altitude and groundspeed real quick!
Hoping someone will come along and explain this better to me!