MAKG1
Touchdown! Greaser!
- Joined
- Jun 19, 2012
- Messages
- 13,411
- Location
- California central coast
- Display Name
Display name:
MAKG
My wife is a bit scared of light aircraft. No problem with jets or with heights; it's specifically the small plane.
So, I took the natural course at first. Perfect, clear smooth days, very simple flights. Excellent views. Lots of ATC chatter because it's unavoidable where I fly. The idea was to get her comfy with normal ops in the aircraft.
This didn't work. I got my first clue when my son started talking about stalls (correctly -- despite his 7 years, he does understand what an aerodynamic stall is) in the dining room. My wife thought the aircraft was going to fall out of the sky!
So, I hit on an idea. With her consent, we took out a Warrior on Saturday, out to the Livermore practice area, to do simple (nonturning) stalls and steep turns. Altitude was kept over 4000 AGL -- intentionally excessively high. Coming in at high cruise, I pull the power and hold altitude. It takes forever for the nose to slowly pitch up. I stop the deceleration at 80 KIAS to do some clearing turns, then slow to 55 KIAS, and do a few more turns with the stall horn running continuously. Then pull power and do a clean power off stall. The wife can't identify when the stall takes place (it's quite subtle in that aircraft). Recover and try it again, this time dirty and descending. Same result. Recover, speed back up to 80 KIAS, do a departure stall. Point the nose uncomfortably far up, make an abrupt recovery when the stall breaks (once again, subtly enough that the wife can't identify when it happens). the wife remarks how wrong the sight picture looks prior to a stall (good!). It's true -- especially with departure stalls, you really can't see anything in front because the nose is so high.
So, then we do some steep turns. Va in this aircraft is much higher than in a Cessna (111 KIAS, instead of 90), but I slow it down to keep the turning radius down. LVK isn't far north, and it's a busy weekend. We do two right 360s and one left, at 45 deg bank. Wingtip pointed right to Lake Del Valle. Not great steep turns, but good enough. The wife complains of a bit of airsickness because she's been staring at the artificial horizon. So, we go back.
Basically, the idea was to give her a feel for the limits of the aircraft, so she would know we were far away from them under normal conditions. Preliminary indications are that it was very successful, but only the next flight will tell for sure.
Things I didn't try that I think I should have were an extended maximum range glide (say, from 4000 to 1000 AGL), and a power off 180.
So, I took the natural course at first. Perfect, clear smooth days, very simple flights. Excellent views. Lots of ATC chatter because it's unavoidable where I fly. The idea was to get her comfy with normal ops in the aircraft.
This didn't work. I got my first clue when my son started talking about stalls (correctly -- despite his 7 years, he does understand what an aerodynamic stall is) in the dining room. My wife thought the aircraft was going to fall out of the sky!
So, I hit on an idea. With her consent, we took out a Warrior on Saturday, out to the Livermore practice area, to do simple (nonturning) stalls and steep turns. Altitude was kept over 4000 AGL -- intentionally excessively high. Coming in at high cruise, I pull the power and hold altitude. It takes forever for the nose to slowly pitch up. I stop the deceleration at 80 KIAS to do some clearing turns, then slow to 55 KIAS, and do a few more turns with the stall horn running continuously. Then pull power and do a clean power off stall. The wife can't identify when the stall takes place (it's quite subtle in that aircraft). Recover and try it again, this time dirty and descending. Same result. Recover, speed back up to 80 KIAS, do a departure stall. Point the nose uncomfortably far up, make an abrupt recovery when the stall breaks (once again, subtly enough that the wife can't identify when it happens). the wife remarks how wrong the sight picture looks prior to a stall (good!). It's true -- especially with departure stalls, you really can't see anything in front because the nose is so high.
So, then we do some steep turns. Va in this aircraft is much higher than in a Cessna (111 KIAS, instead of 90), but I slow it down to keep the turning radius down. LVK isn't far north, and it's a busy weekend. We do two right 360s and one left, at 45 deg bank. Wingtip pointed right to Lake Del Valle. Not great steep turns, but good enough. The wife complains of a bit of airsickness because she's been staring at the artificial horizon. So, we go back.
Basically, the idea was to give her a feel for the limits of the aircraft, so she would know we were far away from them under normal conditions. Preliminary indications are that it was very successful, but only the next flight will tell for sure.
Things I didn't try that I think I should have were an extended maximum range glide (say, from 4000 to 1000 AGL), and a power off 180.
Last edited: