What I was thinking, too.Maybe he gets paid by tach time. This gives him a chance to pad it. Don't do it where it puts you and everyone else in jeopardy.
What I was thinking, too.Maybe he gets paid by tach time. This gives him a chance to pad it. Don't do it where it puts you and everyone else in jeopardy.
The instructor is deemed to be PIC in a training situation like this, and has the authority to make the final decisions. However...I'm new to this, but my feeling is, if you are in the left seat, your driving the airplane. Unless you have traded off with your instructor, your the pilot, you make the decisions.
...instructors are supposed to create "realistic distractions" to see how you deal with them, and extraneous chatter is one of those realistic distractions. The instructor's objective in that situation is to have you tell them to knock off the chatter....I have told instructors to hold down the chatter when I'm in the airport environment. Leaving or approaching, the chatter should be at a bare minimum.
That is one way of dealing with it the first time it happens, but there should not be a second.Ignore your instructor and continue your take off roll. If he says he has the airplane, repeat that back to him, hold both hands up, and let him do whatever he wants.
Maybe he gets paid by tach time. This gives him a chance to pad it. Don't do it where it puts you and everyone else in jeopardy.
Whoever is flying the airplane is the one who makes the calls. Ignore your instructor and continue your take off roll. If he says he has the airplane, repeat that back to him, hold both hands up, and let him do whatever he wants.
Not necessarily... tach time really only becomes noteworthy at full throttle or thereabouts. The hobbs ticks at an even rate after startup, whereas the tach timer varies with power. So it's been in my experience, anyway.The tach would record the same time on the other side of the hold short line.
Not necessarily... tach time really only becomes noteworthy at full throttle or thereabouts. The hobbs ticks at an even rate after startup, whereas the tach timer varies with power. So it's been in my experience, anyway.
Not necessarily... tach time really only becomes noteworthy at full throttle or thereabouts. The hobbs ticks at an even rate after startup, whereas the tach timer varies with power. So it's been in my experience, anyway.
Any time the engine is running, the tach is recording. Idle is idle, doesn't matter what side of the hold line you are on. But tach or Hobbs, doesn't really matter what side of the hold line you are on if you are just sitting there.
Some electronic tachometers don't start recording tach time unless above a certain RPM - I have seen as high as 2000 listed as the limit.
Some electronic tachometers don't start recording tach time unless above a certain RPM - I have seen as high as 2000 listed as the limit.
True. My EI tach doesn't start recording until over 1200rpm.
Yes, I have a pilots license. How did I scare you?
"Pray for Obama, Psalm 109:8" and the runway thing.....!
"Pray for Obama, Psalm 109:8" and the runway thing.....!
Perhaps this should go in the instructor thread, but it isn't really an instruction question.
I am certed single engine land with IFR rating but am working on becoming current again after a long hiatus. It is possible I am misremembering something, laboring under inaccurate perceptions, etc. I am flying out of a goog-sized non-towered airport working with an instructor pilot who is very good in my opinion, but who has twice given me a somewhat lengthy explanation (eg 5 minutes or so) of what he wanted me to do/gone over the salient points of some upcoming maneuver after the departure radio call has been made and the plane has been taxied onto the runway and lined up ready to go. Let me be very clear. We are NOT behind a hold short line, we are on the runway in takeoff position just prior to advancing throttle to max and rolling and have already told any traffic we are taking the active runway and departing. Perhaps complicating the matter is the fact that the airport does receive some commerical use and does have some quick-moving flights arrive without radio contact or with very minimal radio contact. I have also witnessed a regular inbound commercial flight "chase" a Cessna 172 down the runway a couple of times as it landed close enough behind the smaller plane that the 172 pilot had to hold up the nose and pour on the gas to make and take a taxiway to get out of the way.
I am certain runway sitting never happened when I was initially taking instruction years back; I am quite sure that I was told then to essentially stay off the runway until ready to go and not to delay after informing unicom I was departing. I can definitely say that I never taxied out and sat on a runway for several minutes like this in any of my solo or passenger-carrying flights after passing that all-important first checkride.
The instructor pilot can be autocratic (like all instructors ), but I think now that it's happened twice I need at least to discuss with him the difficulties I have concentrating on whatever he is saying while giving myself a cricky neck looking around for inbound planes. It's a much better plan than waiting for a third time and either taxing off the runway or telling him to can it and taking off. I would appreciate posting on anything thought relevant to such a situation from other GA pilots.
Analyze this: maybe after so many years, the instructor has reached a point where he's losing his nerve providing dual to other pilots that his last minute briefings are really a chance for him to calm himself on some sub-concious level. The dude just may need to rotate out for some R&R.Maybe he gets paid by tach time. This gives him a chance to pad it.
A runway used by scheduled commercial traffic will have specific visual cues such as lighting, painted markings, etc.How do you judge 3000 feet from the air?
The Psalm reference that goes with it means that whoever is saying it is actually praying for Obama's death. Pretty sick if you ask me."Praying for Obama" scares you???
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Would what you say be different in the instance of a BO suddenly appearing on very short final after you had visually cleared the runway and then seeing it safe, you positioned for departure? That happened to me at a non-towered field.Some folks are so timid they feel "exposed" when sitting that 5 seconds for a Short Field or IFR departure.
We're not flying rockets -- there's a few seconds to get everything squared away.
The Psalm reference that goes with it means that whoever is saying it is actually praying for Obama's death. Pretty sick if you ask me.
The complete quote
This aint SZ.The Psalm reference that goes with it means that whoever is saying it is actually praying for Obama's death. Pretty sick if you ask me.
The complete quote
The Psalm reference that goes with it means that whoever is saying it is actually praying for Obama's death. Pretty sick if you ask me.
The complete quote
The Psalm reference that goes with it means that whoever is saying it is actually praying for Obama's death. Pretty sick if you ask me.
I hadn't looked it up, but that is pretty bad to be posting no matter hhow you feel about the job he's doing.
The Psalm reference that goes with it means that whoever is saying it is actually praying for Obama's death. Pretty sick if you ask me.
The complete quote
Would what you say be different in the instance of a BO suddenly appearing on very short final after you had visually cleared the runway and then seeing it safe, you positioned for departure? That happened to me at a non-towered field.
Further, said BO had spiriled down from above the mid-point of the rwy and he demanded he would be landing. I agree with what Tony said, runways are like railroad tracks.
While those type of things are rare, it only takes one and it's the one you don't see which gets you. Being in position is increased risk.
If you're going to provide the "complete" quote, reference the entire Psalm.
Anyway, "Praying for Obama" is not scary and shouldn't be.
The one thing I do not handle well at all is stupid instructors. From the "Slips are prohibited with full flaps in Cessna 172" CFIs to the "Lets get clearance into the Charlie" CFIs, I don't hold back.
Interesting. My long ago former bomber command pilot/instructor pilot and then civvie instructor, when I told him about the severe slip at the airport that asked me to expedite, asked me if I'd had flaps down. I hadn't. He told me to remember flaps were not the same as spoilers and cautioned me that a slip as severe as I described could damage the airplane should I have on full flaps.
I don't want to start a disagreement with you, but after reading the above I am curious. Are you just saying no reg prohibits slipping with full flaps? Or maybe that you'd slip with full flaps, but not necessarily a full (severe) slip with full flaps? Or?
I agree. I admit it was a stretch of my example to counter what you were saying. And I agree that any scenario can be stretched to disaster. So, I guess I'm missing something; how can lingering on the runway be an example of timidity and feeling "exposed" but not an example of increased risk?Look, if a "Bo" pops up on you in 5 seconds, the same would have happened if you did a rolling start.
Any scenario can be stretched to disaster.
I agree. I admit it was a stretch of my example to counter what you were saying. And I agree that any scenario can be stretched to disaster. So, I guess I'm missing something; how can lingering on the runway be an example of timidity and feeling "exposed" but not an example of increased risk?
Perhaps that was true on the bombers he flew, but not any light single of which I am aware.Interesting. My long ago former bomber command pilot/instructor pilot and then civvie instructor, when I told him about the severe slip at the airport that asked me to expedite, asked me if I'd had flaps down. I hadn't. He told me to remember flaps were not the same as spoilers and cautioned me that a slip as severe as I described could damage the airplane should I have on full flaps.
The only applicable reg would be 91.9(a) regarding compliance with the aircraft's placard/flight manual limitations, and as I said, I am not aware of any light single which has a limitation prohibiting slipping with flaps of any amount, including fully extended.Are you just saying no reg prohibits slipping with full flaps?
I use full flaps on all landings in light planes unless conditions dictate otherwise, and when a slip is needed with full flaps, I'll slip as much as needed including the maximum slip possible.Or maybe that you'd slip with full flaps, but not necessarily a full (severe) slip with full flaps? Or?
I use full flaps on all landings in light planes unless conditions dictate otherwise, and when a slip is needed with full flaps, I'll slip as much as needed including the maximum slip possible.
To me, a severe slip has one purpose --to lose a great deal of altitude quickly-- so why would you want to use something lift-producing with a severe slip?
Can't remember the last time I was on a runway with 3000 feet behind me.
True, I should have specified forward or side slip.