How would you correct for the misinformation of the ASI?
This may have been addressed earlier but relying on IAS will mess you up on some/many aircraft.
The key in my experience is angle of attack, but I’m not talking about an instrument. Pick a proper IAS while in coordinated flight on final. Take a mental picture of your AOA based on the nose and the ‘horizon’. Then go into your slip while keeping the AOA constant based on the nose and the ‘horizon’ (forget the ASI).
You may think that with the nose yawed one way and the wings banked in another that any reference between the nose and what I’d call the apparent horizon, would be screwy. It’s not. Try it and you’ll see. Set your approach configuration and trim that gives you your target IAS. Take a mental picture and them enter your slip. You will immediately find a bit of back pressure is required to maintain the AOA picture. That’s normal in every one of the few aircraft I’ve flown. Check the ASI but don’t fly it. Once you know how it acts, it’s a good cross check for that aircraft.
Do that and you enter a slip that will increase your descent angle and rate to the touch down point. It will be in in front of where you would have landed without the slip if you don’t increase power.
I don’t trim out the extra back pressure. If I come out of the slip early. I’m perfectly trimmed. If I hold it to round out, I just keep the back pressure on as I come out of the slip increasing to whatever is required for landing.
This is useless info for pilots of planes that don’t slip well, which means planes where the rate and angle of descent doesn’t increase significantly in a slip.
This is a key to the castle for someone learning to land something like a Schweitzer 2-22 glider. Gliders are close to impossible to land without spoilers or flaps. The 2-22 has very ineffective spoilers. Therefore a slip is part of all normal landings. And theirs no engine to confuse things.
Rent a Cessna 15x 17x and figure it out.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro