Hi all,
My first post and not one I wanted to start with. But here goes. I really like the concept of flying, the freedom and enjoyment. But.. whenever I've had a chance to take the wheel, feel a little turbulance, try to make turns, I start to perspire, get tense, I can't relax. I feel like I'm not in control and that if I were all alone I might really mess up.
Has anyone else been where I am? Do you ever get over such tensed up feelings to where you actually enjoy it and it no longer feels like work where any wrong move and I might die?
Sorry - but this is honestly how I feel. I would like to be a great pilot - but maybe this is not for me.
70 hours in "real" planes, couple hundred with RC models, and a couple thousand in simulation. The most stressful thing for me still is also turbulence: I'm a bit of a control freak, and having the plane constantly rolling and yawing in ways I didn't tell it to gets irritating fast. I am, however, coming to terms with it. It's one of those things you just have to learn to accept.
Now, for getting over the initial jitters and worries about stalls and spins, there are three cures for that:
1. Trust your instructor. He's not going to let you kill him, he does this all day, every day, and he has seen worse **** from students than you can (or want to) imagine. He will get you home alive.
2. Learn the aerodynamic theory for how planes fly, what causes stalls and spins, etc. Learn the subject as if you were studying to be an aeronautical engineer. Once you understand what causes stalls and spins, understanding how to avoid them and recover from them follows naturally.
3. Get out and practice slow flight and stalls with your instructor. I've had a Tecnam as slow as 20KIAS in controlled, level flight. Once you do that a few times in a plane, you understand just how hard you have to work to stall them (and therefore, to spin them). For the record, I've also had my Mooney down to 55 MIAS straight-and-level. She rocked and bucked and did not like it at all, but she also didn't kick off into a death spiral and kill me (as some people will tell you that they do).
NOTE: don't ever practice slow flight and stalls without a competent instructor along to act as safety pilot: See item 1 above.
Final tip: keep half an eye on your instructor next time you're up: if he doesn't look nervous, then ask yourself how hard he's working. I knew I was ready to solo when I realized that my CFI had never once put his hand on the stick to correct something I was doing: He wasn't working at all, every time I've flown with him, I was the only one flying the plane, except when he wanted to set up something or demonstrate something. Once you get to that point, take a deep breath and realize you're already a pilot.
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