AtlantaFalcons
Pre-Flight
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- Sep 17, 2013
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aviator23
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My instructor's comments and my observations are:
-I'm looking outside too much
-Trying to use slow-flight techniques (pitch=airspeed,power=altitude) in a non-slow flight maneuver
-Not properly trimming so I'm constantly fiddling with the back/forward pressure and power
Yup... edited to "staring at my point". Definitely not doing the proper scan, that's a big thing to practice.Let's re-word that...how about "you're not maintaining an appropriate scan"? It's a visual manuever, so you're supposed to be looking outside the airplane. You just need to be able to better detect changes in altitude by changes in the site picture along with evidence from your instruments.
Your goal is to maintain a constant distance from a point. Once you have found your point (a tree, a barn, an intersection) identify four or more things on the ground that appear to be equidistant from the central point. Fly over those things. Problem solved. This process is described on page 6-8 of the Airplane Flying Handbook.
Bob Gardner
Your goal is to maintain a constant distance from a point. Once you have found your point (a tree, a barn, an intersection) identify four or more things on the ground that appear to be equidistant from the central point. Fly over those things. Problem solved. This process is described on page 6-8 of the Airplane Flying Handbook.
Bob Gardner
Jesse said:Fwiw I teach my students to not look at the point and instead look where the airplane needs to go to fly a circle around it. Where you look is where you go.
Your goal is to maintain a constant distance from a point. Once you have found your point (a tree, a barn, an intersection) identify four or more things on the ground that appear to be equidistant from the central point. Fly over those things. Problem solved. This process is described on page 6-8 of the Airplane Flying Handbook.
Of course the object of the maneuver is to learn wind correction not pilotage. While the pilotage technique may be a useful crutch to get through a checkride it really leaves the student short sheeted in the skill department.
Favorite DPE tactic: "Let's go out to that small island (within gliding distance of shoreline) to do turns around a point..." "...the air is much smoother over the water." If an applicant has learned pilotage around a point (s)he will be pretty helpless without landmarks...
Of course the object of the maneuver is to learn wind correction not pilotage. While the pilotage technique may be a useful crutch to get through a checkride it really leaves the student short sheeted in the skill department.
SHIELDS UP
Favorite DPE tactic: "Let's go out to that small island (within gliding distance of shoreline) to do turns around a point..."
I was pretty sure that wasn't going to happen in Nevada.
Don't try at all. The point should move around like this, unless there's no wind:...I'm not sure why these particular maneuvers had me screwed up. Probably over-complicating things in my head and trying too hard to keep the point "in the same spot in the window."
Don't try at all. The point should move around like this, unless there's no wind:dtuuri
Your goal is to maintain a constant distance from a point. Once you have found your point (a tree, a barn, an intersection) identify four or more things on the ground that appear to be equidistant from the central point. Fly over those things. Problem solved. This process is described on page 6-8 of the Airplane Flying Handbook.
Bob Gardner