After receiving my private ticket in 1993 and having been current only once since that time--in about 2003--I soloed again earlier this week. I'm still getting back into the swing of things but I'm really enjoying it. My few hours in the plane over the last 2-3 weeks have led to some questions.
I tend to add some margin for error in altitude and airspeed. For example, I'm not yet comfortable with climbing out at 60 knots (172M), the speed at which my instructor tells me to climb, and I find myself adding 10 kts of "cushion". Similarly, I am almost always high on final approach, and usually a bit too fast. It's almost a subconscious habit of adding a little margin for error. My initial training back in the early 90s was at a little airport way out in the country and I'm not yet accustomed to my current home base in the suburbs of Atlanta. Perhaps all of the buildings, poles, etc. are more mentally distracting than I should allow them to be.
How much margin of error is built in to the takeoff and landing speeds and the PAPI/VASI glideslope? How concerned should I be with something quickly and unexpectedly going wrong if I'm at 60 kts on takeoff and landing?
I tend to add some margin for error in altitude and airspeed. For example, I'm not yet comfortable with climbing out at 60 knots (172M), the speed at which my instructor tells me to climb, and I find myself adding 10 kts of "cushion". Similarly, I am almost always high on final approach, and usually a bit too fast. It's almost a subconscious habit of adding a little margin for error. My initial training back in the early 90s was at a little airport way out in the country and I'm not yet accustomed to my current home base in the suburbs of Atlanta. Perhaps all of the buildings, poles, etc. are more mentally distracting than I should allow them to be.
How much margin of error is built in to the takeoff and landing speeds and the PAPI/VASI glideslope? How concerned should I be with something quickly and unexpectedly going wrong if I'm at 60 kts on takeoff and landing?