Watch the AI at the 26 minute mark. Can't fly with the autopilot on. Can't fly with the autopilot off.
"got thrown off the course by the autopilot"
oy
Isn't there supposed to be some "blue" showing on that upper left screen?
Why bother looking at the AI when it’s much easier to simply ignore it?
Isn't there supposed to be some "blue" showing on that upper left screen?
(Skip to 25 minutes if you have not yet watched...)
Not unusual for him. Posts video, gets negative comments, removes video.Video taken down
I think it is still on Youtube.Video taken down
It’s still there on YouTube.Video taken down
I would revise this note…the airplane WILL try to stay upright if the pilot doesn’t interfere.Notes to self: 1.) remember airplane does not necessarily stay upright on its own;
Boy he's looking awfully close to AI tumble territory right there.
If properly trimmed and rigged, sure. I used to fly a club 172 that would enter a tightening left turn and eventually a spiral if left to its own devices. It was annoying. Club maintenance officer didn't seem to think it was a big deal. I don't know if they ever fixed it or not.I would revise this note…the airplane WILL try to stay upright if the pilot doesn’t interfere.
I noticed that the AI on the right does not seem to be indicating the nose down attitude that the PFD is.Boy he's looking awfully close to AI tumble territory right there.
Be interesting to see if that AI actually works right to start with, but I’m not going to watch his videos to find out.I noticed that the AI on the right does not seem to be indicating the nose down attitude that the PFD is.
If his Twin Cessna is so it of rig that it can’t be trimmed, that’s just another reason he shouldn’t be flying.If properly trimmed and rigged, sure. I used to fly a club 172 that would enter a tightening left turn and eventually a spiral if left to its own devices. It was annoying. Club maintenance officer didn't seem to think it was a big deal. I don't know if they ever fixed it or not.
If properly trimmed and rigged, sure. I used to fly a club 172 that would enter a tightening left turn and eventually a spiral if left to its own devices. It was annoying. Club maintenance officer didn't seem to think it was a big deal. I don't know if they ever fixed it or not.
At some point it becomes a usual attitude.
Disconnect the autopilot, yank the plane from 15 degrees left to 15 degrees right and then immediately fixate on the gps. Makes sense to me.The more I watch disasters like this, the more I'm convinced that the urge to disconnect the autopilot at the first sign of trouble is the wrong thing to do unless you absolutely know the autopilot has failed. For this issue, click the autopilot to heading mode, dial it in to follow the approach course magenta line, then figure out the problem. Turning off the autopilot is the same as taking your most valuable tool at the moment, opening the door and throwing it out. It makes no sense to me.
His deviation from controlled flight was probably about 10 seconds, then he began recovering, albeit not very gracefully, but his lack of attention to maintaining control will kill him someday if he doesn't smarten up.
His comments on YouTube saying it's good to know your airport make me laugh. Why do you need the gps so bad that you ignore the instruments if you know your way around so well?
I agree with @PaulS about using heading mode, but if he's so comfortable with the aircraft and airport, hand flying the entire approach would have been far safer than what he did.
What would prompt someone to put up a video of a loss of control incident…