WannFly
Final Approach
No you don’t.
I was actually told by my CFI - “it doesn’t matter how many times your bounce, I will only give you one landing”
No you don’t.
@Johnc3640,
Check out this video, see how far he carries the stabilized approach down to the runway before doing anything, look how close he gets before rounding out. I like how it pauses to demonstrate when he is transitioning his aiming point.
denverpilot - Kansas flyer I am DETERMINED to learn to fly, I show up for every lesson at least 15 minutes earily, as prepared as I can be with positive attitude. Many days I drive home after my lesson feeling embarrassed, but after the drive I "leave it there", spend the afternoon thinking about my mistakes and developing a plan for the next day. As I am sure you can tell, I am new flying, I don't have friends that fly and embarked on this journey on my own. Consequently, I don't have the knowledge base to determine just how "bad a student" I am - I guess my assumption was, that as an older person (earily 60's), my mistakes were atypical, the responses were natural and, well, required to drive home the severity of my errors. I even started this process wrong - concurrently with starting lessons I purchased an online course, studied hard, and within a few weeks took and passed the FAA written examine (98%) - lol thought I was being proactive - I didn't think it was a big deal not learning this during ground school and not waiting until after I soloed - I offered to take the examine again at the right time ---- just kidding.
It seems to me that a lot of frustrated student pilot online posts blame their problems on the CFI - pretty convenient excuse for your own short comings - but I haven't considered trying a different CFI, maybe I should.
Yep, I agree not the best landing, I just liked the graphics and pause stuff. He didn't hold it off long enough either.He's never going to land on any shorter small-town strip, much less any bush strip. That was a long, dragged-in, fast, flat landing.
It seems to me that a lot of frustrated student pilot online posts blame their problems on the CFI - pretty convenient excuse for your own short comings - but I haven't considered trying a different CFI, maybe I should.
"The secret to a good landing is to not give a ****. Over think it and it comes out wrong every time."
I know two of them!Or...”There are 3 secrets to perfect landings every time...
...unfortunately, no one knows what they are!”
I'm borrowing this quote from Airline Pilot Central, where they were discussing landing technique on a particular airframe -
"The secret to a good landing is to not give a ****. Over think it and it comes out wrong every time."
Sounded applicable for the OP.
I had trouble too. Until I stopped thinking about flairing and more about a transition to slow flight. For me that gave me the right thought process and mental sight picture. I tead about it in a few places. Jason zshappert at m0a.com is one. Also reading stick and rudder by Wolfgang Lang------- was helpful - his explanations were helpful too.
See how it flys.com is in depth and again provides another perspective.
Runways come in different widths and different slopes. You can't use the same sight picture to determine the correct height to level off. One thing people neglect to point out is the importance of peripheral vision. Forward vision helps you maintain center line, and peripheral vision helps you maintain the proper height. What you see out the corner of your left eye (assuming you are sitting in the left seat), helps you a great deal in determining height above ground. You don't turn your eyes to look sideways, but just pay attention to what your eyes are already seeing. The importance of peripheral vision becomes even more important in sloped runways or during night landings.
The older you get, the worse your peripheral vision gets, and this is one of the reasons for why it is difficult to learn landings when you are older.
One thing people neglect to point out is the importance of peripheral vision. Forward vision helps you maintain center line, and peripheral vision helps you maintain the proper height. What you see out the corner of your left eye (assuming you are sitting in the left seat), helps you a great deal in determining height above ground.
When people wear glasses this can also be a problem. The traditional “look down the runway” doesn’t work completely for them (or me). You just teach them to take quick glances out the side window at the altitude to the runway.
Many early landers are frozen stiff anyway, and getting them to move their head on a swivel or see anything but the numbers getting bigger in the windscreen is a chore unto itself.
First, I can not thank all you enough for your encouragement, your views and suggestions. I decided to try a different CFI, a pleasant young man. We talked about 30 minutes before our first flight and discussed many of the thoughts and suggestion offered here. In summary, I tried a combination of "slow flight" as close to the runway as I could - short, small corrections to keep the nose "up" - and actually trying "not to let the plane land." So, my first attempt, the main wheels hit the runway "firm" but not hard - and my new instructor says "nice job!!!!!!!!!". I had no idea what to say - he offers a suggestion and says let's go again!!! And so the day goes, he offers encouragement and I actually start feeling confidence - holly #$÷# I actual make 2 landings where the stall warning sounds followed quickly by smooth "kiss of the runway"!!!!!!!!(OK maybe not quit that good but close). Wow, flying can be fun lol.
Now, today was just a start - I have alot of work to do using my peripheral vision to improve estimating height, finding the "right places" for me to see and judge the appropriate manner to control the nose, and improving on timely but small corrections. But, for the first time, I have a good idea, picture if you will, of what I need to work on and, what a world of difference encouragement and positive suggestions made!!!
My new CFI, during our debrief, actually tells me a few more days like today and I'll have the privilege of "making him walk back" to flight school -i.e. solo. I can't honestly say I feel ready today, but darn, I think I can SEE THAT DAY.
THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU ALLLLLL!
First, I can not thank all you enough for your encouragement, your views and suggestions. I decided to try a different CFI, a pleasant young man. We talked about 30 minutes before our first flight and discussed many of the thoughts and suggestion offered here. In summary, I tried a combination of "slow flight" as close to the runway as I could - short, small corrections to keep the nose "up" - and actually trying "not to let the plane land." So, my first attempt, the main wheels hit the runway "firm" but not hard - and my new instructor says "nice job!!!!!!!!!". I had no idea what to say - he offers a suggestion and says let's go again!!! And so the day goes, he offers encouragement and I actually start feeling confidence - holly #$÷# I actual make 2 landings where the stall warning sounds followed quickly by smooth "kiss of the runway"!!!!!!!!(OK maybe not quit that good but close). Wow, flying can be fun lol.
Now, today was just a start - I have alot of work to do using my peripheral vision to improve estimating height, finding the "right places" for me to see and judge the appropriate manner to control the nose, and improving on timely but small corrections. But, for the first time, I have a good idea, picture if you will, of what I need to work on and, what a world of difference encouragement and positive suggestions made!!!
My new CFI, during our debrief, actually tells me a few more days like today and I'll have the privilege of "making him walk back" to flight school -i.e. solo. I can't honestly say I feel ready today, but darn, I think I can SEE THAT DAY.
THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU ALLLLLL!
First, I can not thank all you enough for your encouragement, your views and suggestions. I decided to try a different CFI, a pleasant young man. We talked about 30 minutes before our first flight and discussed many of the thoughts and suggestion offered here. In summary, I tried a combination of "slow flight" as close to the runway as I could - short, small corrections to keep the nose "up" - and actually trying "not to let the plane land." So, my first attempt, the main wheels hit the runway "firm" but not hard - and my new instructor says "nice job!!!!!!!!!". I had no idea what to say - he offers a suggestion and says let's go again!!! And so the day goes, he offers encouragement and I actually start feeling confidence - holly #$÷# I actual make 2 landings where the stall warning sounds followed quickly by smooth "kiss of the runway"!!!!!!!!(OK maybe not quit that good but close). Wow, flying can be fun lol.
Now, today was just a start - I have alot of work to do using my peripheral vision to improve estimating height, finding the "right places" for me to see and judge the appropriate manner to control the nose, and improving on timely but small corrections. But, for the first time, I have a good idea, picture if you will, of what I need to work on and, what a world of difference encouragement and positive suggestions made!!!
My new CFI, during our debrief, actually tells me a few more days like today and I'll have the privilege of "making him walk back" to flight school -i.e. solo. I can't honestly say I feel ready today, but darn, I think I can SEE THAT DAY.
THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU ALLLLLL!
Good for you. Now you need reps and it will get easier every day. Good luck! We've all been there.First, I can not thank all you enough for your encouragement, your views and suggestions. I decided to try a different CFI, a pleasant young man. We talked about 30 minutes before our first flight and discussed many of the thoughts and suggestion offered here. In summary, I tried a combination of "slow flight" as close to the runway as I could - short, small corrections to keep the nose "up" - and actually trying "not to let the plane land." So, my first attempt, the main wheels hit the runway "firm" but not hard - and my new instructor says "nice job!!!!!!!!!". I had no idea what to say - he offers a suggestion and says let's go again!!! And so the day goes, he offers encouragement and I actually start feeling confidence - holly #$÷# I actual make 2 landings where the stall warning sounds followed quickly by smooth "kiss of the runway"!!!!!!!!(OK maybe not quit that good but close). Wow, flying can be fun lol.
Now, today was just a start - I have alot of work to do using my peripheral vision to improve estimating height, finding the "right places" for me to see and judge the appropriate manner to control the nose, and improving on timely but small corrections. But, for the first time, I have a good idea, picture if you will, of what I need to work on and, what a world of difference encouragement and positive suggestions made!!!
My new CFI, during our debrief, actually tells me a few more days like today and I'll have the privilege of "making him walk back" to flight school -i.e. solo. I can't honestly say I feel ready today, but darn, I think I can SEE THAT DAY.
THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU ALLLLLL!
Here's my default answer on how to land properly.
Don't "round out" or "flare".
Come in on final with your sight picture locked, use a area just before where you want to touch down, it shouldn't move in your windshield, if it gets low you're too high and vise versa, --> don't be afraid to slip <--
Once you're a few feet over that point, runway assured, pull the power, look all the way down the runway to the point that moves the least, think of those paintings of a road with power lines at both ends, how they disappear into one infinity point, look at that.
Now with the power out, try to fly down the runway to that infinity point holding the plane 6" off the deck, keep holding her off, once the mains touch, keep flying the plane to that point till she's slowed to a speed of a brisk jog, don't just let go of the back force and prang that flimsey nose gear down.
Once you get low over the runway, remeber it's alerons to keep the plane in the middle of the runway, rudder to keep it pointing down the runway.
Lastly, imagine the yoke has a ratchet on it, once you pull back when you're down low you can't put the stick forward again, if it starts to sink just burp in a little power.
A good landing will have the stall horn going off just after you transition from your landing target to flying to the infinity point.
These things should NOT be a laundry list of steps, it's one fluidic thing, don't strap into the plane, strap the plane onto you.
And remember
--> don't be afraid to slip <--