Morne
Line Up and Wait
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- Sep 18, 2011
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Morne
Did a night flight recently, just to keep night current for passengers. Staying in the pattern, only having to let one Citation in, I got plenty of practice using the VASI. Funny thing is, I usd to ignore them completely.
While that might sound odd, let me explain. Where I learned to fly they didn't have VASI or PAPI. Further, they taught the power-off landing (as in, cut power when abeam of the numbers) with full flaps, so we were much steeper than 3 degrees glide on final. Lastly, it was a fairly short runway (2410') so we always aimed "for the numbers" rather than for "halfway down the first third".
The few times I went to another field at night during my training I always noticed that my "normal pattern" would start with the VASI showing "too high", then "on glide" and lastly "too low" just before touchdown near the numbers. As such, I tuned them out. Sure, I knew how they worked, but from a practice standpoint they were a waste.
Now that I fly a 182, my high-performance endorsement instructor coaxed me into flying bigger patterns and being willing to use partial-power on final. I'm thrilled with the result, namely smoother landings at a more consistent touchdown point. Coincidentally, during night landings I find I'm pretty much dead on with the 3-degree glide slope that the VASI expects. So I guess the VASI is not completely useless to me anymore.
While that might sound odd, let me explain. Where I learned to fly they didn't have VASI or PAPI. Further, they taught the power-off landing (as in, cut power when abeam of the numbers) with full flaps, so we were much steeper than 3 degrees glide on final. Lastly, it was a fairly short runway (2410') so we always aimed "for the numbers" rather than for "halfway down the first third".
The few times I went to another field at night during my training I always noticed that my "normal pattern" would start with the VASI showing "too high", then "on glide" and lastly "too low" just before touchdown near the numbers. As such, I tuned them out. Sure, I knew how they worked, but from a practice standpoint they were a waste.
Now that I fly a 182, my high-performance endorsement instructor coaxed me into flying bigger patterns and being willing to use partial-power on final. I'm thrilled with the result, namely smoother landings at a more consistent touchdown point. Coincidentally, during night landings I find I'm pretty much dead on with the 3-degree glide slope that the VASI expects. So I guess the VASI is not completely useless to me anymore.