Tristar
Pattern Altitude
It seems only a short while ago that I first stepped into this mysterious flying wonder called an airplane. I remember how mysterious all the gauges were and how excited I was to learn every aspect of the great and powerful 152. I've gone through a few ratings since then and have learned a lot about both flying and myself. Now I'm very excited to start learning how to share what I've learned and loved with others. Today was my first lesson.
It reminded me of how many ratings, especially private, started out; "Let's go see what you can do."
We flew out to the practice area and started out with some steep turns. I noticed that whatever side you're on is the side your turns will be the best so a few more left turns were in order but no big deal.
Slow flight was next which I had little problems with. Learning to keep altitude seems like the biggest issue but once you learn good power management, that too comes with ease.
Stalls were next. I was asked to do a power on stall. The procedures up to the stall went fine. As soon as the stall broke, the right wing dropped a little bit which I quickly caught with opposite rudder and recovered fine. "Good catch."
We then decided to come back and do some landings. The first two were right patterns due to some busy airspace. I'm glad it was since I was sitting right seat for the first few anyways. It gave me a chance to see the runway from a perspective closer to what I was used to. My landings went great! I was even on center line with no side skips. The funny part is on climb out, we hit the biggest bug which you could have passed as the state bird. I ended up having to look around the blob to search for traffic. Left traffic was a little trickier than right, not exactly because of the landings but more of the fact that the view messes with your head. The first one wasn't the prettiest but expectantly so. The second one, after I had seen the perspective, was a lot better. We ended the flight on that note.
I believe I did a really good job considering my amount of right seat experience. Rudder and learning the new view are definitely the lessons of the day but that too will come in time. My instructor agreed.
Even though today was a lesson on the flying from the right seat, most of CFI will be ground. Its intimidating but a great challenge. I really plan to be a good instructor so I'm sure POA will see many posts both for advice and also updates. Stay Tuned!
Fly safe,
Tristan
It reminded me of how many ratings, especially private, started out; "Let's go see what you can do."
We flew out to the practice area and started out with some steep turns. I noticed that whatever side you're on is the side your turns will be the best so a few more left turns were in order but no big deal.
Slow flight was next which I had little problems with. Learning to keep altitude seems like the biggest issue but once you learn good power management, that too comes with ease.
Stalls were next. I was asked to do a power on stall. The procedures up to the stall went fine. As soon as the stall broke, the right wing dropped a little bit which I quickly caught with opposite rudder and recovered fine. "Good catch."
We then decided to come back and do some landings. The first two were right patterns due to some busy airspace. I'm glad it was since I was sitting right seat for the first few anyways. It gave me a chance to see the runway from a perspective closer to what I was used to. My landings went great! I was even on center line with no side skips. The funny part is on climb out, we hit the biggest bug which you could have passed as the state bird. I ended up having to look around the blob to search for traffic. Left traffic was a little trickier than right, not exactly because of the landings but more of the fact that the view messes with your head. The first one wasn't the prettiest but expectantly so. The second one, after I had seen the perspective, was a lot better. We ended the flight on that note.
I believe I did a really good job considering my amount of right seat experience. Rudder and learning the new view are definitely the lessons of the day but that too will come in time. My instructor agreed.
Even though today was a lesson on the flying from the right seat, most of CFI will be ground. Its intimidating but a great challenge. I really plan to be a good instructor so I'm sure POA will see many posts both for advice and also updates. Stay Tuned!
Fly safe,
Tristan