nj-pilot
Pre-takeoff checklist
Just stumbled across this video (it's not mine) - the CFI sounds extremely skilled!
I notice you just said you were able to get lined up with the runway... but it sounds like you didn't actually land.We did that training when I prepared for my private. Open doors to induce drag right or left. trim up or down. add or remove power as needed. We were able to get llined up with the runway for a reasonable landing if necessary. wasn't too difficult with a cessna 1xx series.
Sounds like my instructor. If I was having problems in the pattern he would ask to fly one. He would fly the whole thing with throttle, rudder, and trim, using the flaps as normal. "Throttle and trim to maintain 90 knots and pattern altitude. 10 degrees flaps and trim it out abeam the threshold. 20 degrees flaps at the perch and since I am lazy I'll just use the trim and rudder to turn." The man can fly.I knew an old CFI who would pull out that trick whenever he had student that wouldn't stop over controlling during landing.
Flaring with trim alone sounds like a fairly iffy proposition, not something your CFI would want you to actually do for practice. I wonder if anyone has actually practiced this.
That was my thought too...If you’ve lost aileron and elevator control I’d say you did real good if you managed to ball it up on a runway and walk away.
It is not as hard as seems done it many times to full landing in a zlin 242l. Kathy@ wingsoveraerobatics in leesburg fl will make you a pro at it.That was my thought too...
That video exercise shows a plane that's nicely balanced flying a huge pattern to a big runway on a calm day. None of that applies to my regular flying. Ending in a survivable crash would be the best I'd hope for.
...I wouldn't want to land it fast without the yoke...
It doesn't have to be a good landing--just survivable and on the runway.
Big airport is not needed unless 2500 x 40 is considered big, Part of the exercise is to return to the airport from 40 miles away and not turn a situation into a emergency.I may bend your precious airplane, but I'll get it down.
Ummm... in my book, flight control failure IS an emergency.Big airport is not needed unless 2500 x 40 is considered big, Part of the exercise is to return to the airport from 40 miles away and not turn a situation into a emergency.
Or as Al Hayes said: You want to be particular and make it a runway, huh?"Big airport is not needed unless 2500 x 40 is considered big, Part of the exercise is to return to the airport from 40 miles away and not turn a situation into a emergency.
It’s an entirely different kind of flying.Or as Al Hayes said: You want to be particular and make it a runway, huh?"
It's an entirely different kind of flying, all together.
What are the failure scenarios that result in a disabled elevator with a working trim? I donut get it. Probably because I fly a mooney.
What are the failure scenarios that result in a disabled elevator with a working trim? I donut get it. Probably because I fly a mooney.
I never thought it was about preparing anyone for any kind of likely real world failure mode. I always figured it was an exercise to help break students of their habit of over controlling the plane in the pattern.What are the failure scenarios that result in a disabled elevator with a working trim? I donut get it. Probably because I fly a mooney.
Not to mention that in some planes with elevator trim on only one side you'll get a little rolling moment at no extra charge.Teaching to fly with trim is good but also teach that if flying with trim, if the control surface is jammed, the trim has to be used the opposite direction if the trim is now being used as a flight control.
Going to surprise someone someday if they think they can fly with trim with a jammed elevator if you don’t.