I was watching some YouTube videos last night and the CFI told his student to only use one hand on the yoke...I am going to ask my CFI about this today when I fly.
What are your guys' thoughts on this?
2 fingers and a thumb, mostly. Shocker, I know lol.
I want to fly with 2 hands but I can't
<--The other hand goes here.
Thought the shocker was two fingers and the little finger
I was watching some YouTube videos last night and the CFI told his student to only use one hand on the yoke...I am going to ask my CFI about this today when I fly.
What are your guys' thoughts on this?
<--------- I only have one hand to fly with.
A
"Your right hand is your co pilot".
I remember being surprised how well the plane flies with no hands. Planes like to fly, you don't have to muscle them around the sky.
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I was watching some YouTube videos last night and the CFI told his student to only use one hand on the yoke...I am going to ask my CFI about this today when I fly.
What are your guys' thoughts on this?
I want to fly with 2 hands but I can't.
Even more than that. One finger and one thumb.
A light touch is extremely helpful. You'll learn to feel what the air and airplane are telling you.
Somewhere back during the Nixon Administration I got in the habit of two hands while on instruments (other than while fiddling with power, trim, radios, gear, flaps, etc., of course). Not sure why, but it works for me and I'm not about to change now. One hand in VMC.
It's amazing how much smoother the airplane flies with two fingers. A firm grip means clumsier corrections. Imagine a surgeon using his whole fist on the scalpel...
Besides, how does one keep up with facebook on his smartphone if he doesn't have one hand free?
Two hands in instruments seems even worse than two hands in VMC, imo.
I recently did flight reviews for two very experienced pilots - each has been flying for over 40 years. Neither one knows the other as far as I know.
They BOTH did the same thing which seemed bizarre to me - once set up and trimmed for that phase of flight, or maneuver, or whatever, they would very visibly take their hand off the yoke and let the plane fly. So, no hands on the yoke at all. It was almost like making a show of it.
Now, I've done this to show students the effects of trim and such, and from time to time if I'm flying long distances or something, but generally I always have one hand on the yoke, granted with a very light touch.
My question is, was this a "thing" decades ago in flight training? To prove you had things trimmed, or under control, or something, you'd take your hand off the yoke and show the instructor?
We're talking in steep turns, slow flight, basically any phase of flight where the controls weren't actually be moved at that time they both did this. With the first guy, I figured it was just a little quirk. But then the second guy did it too!
I recently did flight reviews for two very experienced pilots - each has been flying for over 40 years. Neither one knows the other as far as I know.
They BOTH did the same thing which seemed bizarre to me - once set up and trimmed for that phase of flight, or maneuver, or whatever, they would very visibly take their hand off the yoke and let the plane fly. So, no hands on the yoke at all. It was almost like making a show of it.
Now, I've done this to show students the effects of trim and such, and from time to time if I'm flying long distances or something, but generally I always have one hand on the yoke, granted with a very light touch.
My question is, was this a "thing" decades ago in flight training? To prove you had things trimmed, or under control, or something, you'd take your hand off the yoke and show the instructor?
We're talking in steep turns, slow flight, basically any phase of flight where the controls weren't actually be moved at that time they both did this. With the first guy, I figured it was just a little quirk. But then the second guy did it too!