Jaybird180
Final Approach
The topic I think speaks for itself, but here's a bit more info:
I'm on my 2nd CFI, well advanced in the curriculum. I'm not comfortable with power-on stalls. My 1st CFI only served to scare the crap out of me on all stalls, I had no understanding of even why do them...how stupid is this, who would do this on purpose, keep the darned airspeed up and the AoA down and you don't stall, seems simple, why do we keep doing this crap every friggin flight, are you wasting my money...[rant off]
Anyhow, my 2nd CFI told me that nobody is comfortable doing power-on stalls (including himself- probably not a productive confession to a student pilot).
He was however successful in showing me power-off and now I don't have problems doing them, and find it fun (but don't tell him that). Unfortunately, I still have that power-on monkey on my back. Last time we were up dual, he took the controls during my attempted power-on because he said he was looking at the ball and it was pegged right. I didn't see yawing clouds nor feel it in my seat and was a bit hesitant to try again...don't even think about doing it solo...but eventually I'll get the nerve.
What tools do I need in my toolbag to do them confidently? I'm thinking of suggesting a ride with the Chief CFI, purposely putting the C-172 in the utility category and intentionally inducing a power-on spin, just to get over the fear. Is this a good strategy? It's my understanding that you really have to booger a power-on stall to get the Skyhawk to spin.
Clear this up for me. Tim (new CFI), what do you think?
I'm on my 2nd CFI, well advanced in the curriculum. I'm not comfortable with power-on stalls. My 1st CFI only served to scare the crap out of me on all stalls, I had no understanding of even why do them...how stupid is this, who would do this on purpose, keep the darned airspeed up and the AoA down and you don't stall, seems simple, why do we keep doing this crap every friggin flight, are you wasting my money...[rant off]
Anyhow, my 2nd CFI told me that nobody is comfortable doing power-on stalls (including himself- probably not a productive confession to a student pilot).
He was however successful in showing me power-off and now I don't have problems doing them, and find it fun (but don't tell him that). Unfortunately, I still have that power-on monkey on my back. Last time we were up dual, he took the controls during my attempted power-on because he said he was looking at the ball and it was pegged right. I didn't see yawing clouds nor feel it in my seat and was a bit hesitant to try again...don't even think about doing it solo...but eventually I'll get the nerve.
What tools do I need in my toolbag to do them confidently? I'm thinking of suggesting a ride with the Chief CFI, purposely putting the C-172 in the utility category and intentionally inducing a power-on spin, just to get over the fear. Is this a good strategy? It's my understanding that you really have to booger a power-on stall to get the Skyhawk to spin.
Clear this up for me. Tim (new CFI), what do you think?