Will Kumley
Line Up and Wait
Dang, today was a rough day. What I thought was going as a decent practice flight didn't end as well as I wanted. Before todays flight I was right at the 9.2 hour mark of training if you count my discovery flight. I feel like I've been progressing well and since lately it seems like I've played a little bit of the instructor shuffle due to scheduling conflicts and delayed ferry flights for my primary instructor. Last Sunday the instructor commented that things were going so well he could see me soloing in 3-4 more flights. Wednesday I ended up with the Chief Flight instructor that performs that stage checks and afterward her comments seemed promising as she wanted me to commit to memory the emergency checklist items then handed me a sheet of what to prepare myself for on the stage check to go solo.
Today, my instructor had to swap with another person I've never flown with and informed him that I should be practicing for my solo stage check. Everything went great. Slow flight, stalls, steep turns were all looking great to the instructor and I was in agreement that although there was room for improvement everything was feeling and looking solid. We figured we would end with a few touch and goes to practice the pattern and landing.
I was good on my pattern altitude and speeds, then for some reason just started gooning up the actual landing. The first one was rough, so rough that I'm pretty sure we were close to a bounce. I was considering a go around before touchdown as there were some wicked crosswinds fighting me but figured the instructor would tell me if I was being unsafe and tried to land it. Well, it landed but wasn't pretty. I knew immediately that it wasn't what I was looking for in a pre-solo practice and chastised myself as I raised the flaps, removed carb heat and added power to takeoff again. Again, pattern work was decent, not as solid as I've done in the past but not bad and my speed and altitude was still where I wanted it. The second landing was better but still had a roughness to it that I didn't like. Third times a charm right. Well, sort of, while everything was looking good and the landing was actually fairly smooth it was off centerline and I touched down with about a 5-10 degree turn as I was fighting the gusting winds. At that point I was out of time and we called it for the day.
In the end after talking to the instructor I've come to the conclusion I'm not looking up to the end of the runway soon enough. When do you transition your sight from your aiming point to the end of the runway? I was waiting until I was ready to transition and was pulling back pretty hard and fast for some reason today. He suggested looking to the end of the runway either as I cross the threshold or maybe a little sooner. Of course, this conversation happened after we were done so I'll have to wait a few days to put it into practice and it will be with the instructor that performs the stage check. At this point, I'm thinking if she even agrees to do a stage check with me, once she sees how hosed my landings are she'll tell me to keep practicing and try again. Although, if I perform like I did today I can't really blame her.
Today, my instructor had to swap with another person I've never flown with and informed him that I should be practicing for my solo stage check. Everything went great. Slow flight, stalls, steep turns were all looking great to the instructor and I was in agreement that although there was room for improvement everything was feeling and looking solid. We figured we would end with a few touch and goes to practice the pattern and landing.
I was good on my pattern altitude and speeds, then for some reason just started gooning up the actual landing. The first one was rough, so rough that I'm pretty sure we were close to a bounce. I was considering a go around before touchdown as there were some wicked crosswinds fighting me but figured the instructor would tell me if I was being unsafe and tried to land it. Well, it landed but wasn't pretty. I knew immediately that it wasn't what I was looking for in a pre-solo practice and chastised myself as I raised the flaps, removed carb heat and added power to takeoff again. Again, pattern work was decent, not as solid as I've done in the past but not bad and my speed and altitude was still where I wanted it. The second landing was better but still had a roughness to it that I didn't like. Third times a charm right. Well, sort of, while everything was looking good and the landing was actually fairly smooth it was off centerline and I touched down with about a 5-10 degree turn as I was fighting the gusting winds. At that point I was out of time and we called it for the day.
In the end after talking to the instructor I've come to the conclusion I'm not looking up to the end of the runway soon enough. When do you transition your sight from your aiming point to the end of the runway? I was waiting until I was ready to transition and was pulling back pretty hard and fast for some reason today. He suggested looking to the end of the runway either as I cross the threshold or maybe a little sooner. Of course, this conversation happened after we were done so I'll have to wait a few days to put it into practice and it will be with the instructor that performs the stage check. At this point, I'm thinking if she even agrees to do a stage check with me, once she sees how hosed my landings are she'll tell me to keep practicing and try again. Although, if I perform like I did today I can't really blame her.