tmyers
En-Route
Since I cannot see the gear down in the Arrow I call out three green on all three legs of the pattern
For what it's worth, sometimes I find myself reaching for the gear lever on a 172, just like I find myself stomping in the clutch when driving an automatic.
This. The only way to never forget the gear is to never forget the gear. When on approach, always be aware that the gear need lowering until they're down. Keep the gear in mind until they're confirmed down and locked. Even then, do the GUMPS check once, twice, however many times it takes to be comfortable.The only sure way to prevent a gear up landing is exactly the same method I use to keep from flying into mountains.......I pay attention to what phase of flight I am in and what I need to do next. Practice standardized procedures and have the self discipline to do it every single time. The only times I have landed with my gear up in 30+ years of flying many different types is when it was supposed to be up, per the checklist. Pay attention.
Take a look at the panel of a first generation Bonanza. The flap switch and the gear selector switch look and feel identical. In fact every switch looks exactly the same as does the ashtray.
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A lot of fuss was made about the switches being reversed from every other airplane, but I didn't think it was that big of a deal… unless you were not paying attention....
Yea, I wasn't trying to imply that it was a bad design, just that it was used as an excuse as to why a mistake might have been made and that leads to an endless chain of modifications in a vain attempt to make it impossible for even the most advanced idiot to screw up.
That's what I do. When flying the company's jets our SOP also requires us to do the same, additionally the PF also points at the gear handle in confirmation after the PNF has made the "Gear - DOWN, 3 GREEN, NO RED" call.
I have a couple tricks I use to keep me from becoming "one of the ones that have". When I touch the gear switch I announce aloud gear coming up, then announce gear up when the up light illuminates and vice versa upon gear deployment. I also deploy the gear before I am in the traffic pattern. I'm not waiting for a particular point on downwind, only to forget the gear during an abnormal approach ie, straight in etc. Also when I'm centerline for the runway I'll verify gear down, green light as well as gump checks during the approach.
....they really are out to get you.
Comanches are tricky because the motor runs, the handle moves and then it all stops, leading the pilot to believe the gear is extended--and it would be, except for the fact that a jepp book or something else wedged under the emer extension handle, causing the gear to stop when only partially down and the circuit breaker to pop from heating. So without checking lights and handle position the pilot can feel extra drag and think he's good to go--until the noise starts.
My Comanche killed a nice portable intercom due to the emergency extension lever going towards the floor upon selecting gear up. This was the previous owner's mistake. The intercom hangs on the wall in my hangar as a reminder. DON'T DO THIS!
I also did away with the automatic dimming feature of the gear lamps when the nav lights are switched on.
I also did away with the automatic dimming feature of the gear lamps when the nav lights are switched on.
We're they just trying to lower the total amps drawn on the whole electrical system when they did that?
I can't imagine dimming the gear lights saves even a significant fraction of an amp.
We all fly differently, and that's OK. IMO both my method and yours are safe and are taught. I fly the way I was taught and it works for me. You fly the way you were taught and it works for you. I incorporate full flap landings for refresher purposes or when necessary, but it isn't standard. We all fly differently, and I think that's good.
It was just lazy wiring. Everything on a single potentiometer.
It was just lazy wiring. Everything on a single potentiometer.
We're they just trying to lower the total amps drawn on the whole electrical system when they did that?
Something I have never understood about the Arrow is that there are two potentiometers with one on each end of the row of switches.
The one on the right turns on the instrument panel lighting and acts as a rheostat. The one on the left turns on the nav lights and acts as only a switch. It rolls like a dimmer but only turns on the nav lights.
Something I have never understood about the Arrow is that there are two potentiometers with one on each end of the row of switches.
The one on the right turns on the instrument panel lighting and acts as a rheostat. The one on the left turns on the nav lights and acts as only a switch. It rolls like a dimmer but only turns on the nav lights.
Hmmm... It might not be working. In the PA28's I've flown, one of them controls the light levels on the six-pack, while the other one controls the light levels on the radio stack and the navs.
Hmmm... It might not be working. In the PA28's I've flown, one of them controls the light levels on the six-pack, while the other one controls the light levels on the radio stack and the navs.
It was an attempt to simplify things for the pilot. And if you only use the nav lights after sunset it works pretty well. Putting the gear indicator lights on the same dimmer as the panel, instrument, and radio illumination could mean they'd stay dark if you turned the rheostat down when flying last night leaving you wondering why the gear didn't go down on your next flight in the daytime.It was just lazy wiring. Everything on a single potentiometer.