labbadabba
Pattern Altitude
So here in Kansas, most airports have a single North/South runway. I was getting some X/C time and hopped over to KEMP with a 1/19 runway with winds at 270 at 12G15 on the ASOS.
Knowing I was at the edge of the demonstrated X-Wind of 12kts I did a low approach knowing that there is a slight ridge on the west side of the field. The sock was indicating 290 5-10kts so I wend ahead and made a solid X-Wind landing on Runway 1.
Feeling pretty confident that I had gotten the hard part (x-wind landing) out of the way, I rolled to a full stop and reconfigured the aircraft for a X-Wind takeoff. I did a mental checklist, hold the centerline with rudder and left aileron deflected into the wind, then fly coordinated with a wing-low attitude after rotation.
Takeoff roll was a bit squirrelly but that's not unusual for the 162 but then the plane lifted off on its own at about 45kts indicated and immediately the plane drifted hard to the right. This happened quite suddenly and I found myself at full power, low airspeed, with cross-controlled inputs. I glanced over at the rapidly approaching FBO building to my right while feeling the controls start to mush and I let go of my inputs and leveled out to build airspeed all the while drifting farther off centerline (actually I was over the taxiway at that point). Once my airspeed was up I turned towards the Northeast and noted my Groundspeed was 90kts indicating 70kts and climbed the hell out of there.
Heart racing and airspeed and altitude rising I said to myself, "what the hell was that? What just happened?" Did I just about kill myself? So my guess is there must have been a pretty good gust that took the plane just before I hit my normal rotation speed of 55kts. There was enough of a headwind component to get the plane abruptly airborne and enough crosswind to really push me sideways. I was so stuck on trying to hold the centerline that I got into a dangerous cross-controlled attitude at low airspeed.
Lessons learned:
1. There's a reason why the 162 has such a low demonstrated crosswind
2. Crosswind takeoffs can be every bit as challenging as crosswind landings
3. Fly the plane first. Always.
Knowing I was at the edge of the demonstrated X-Wind of 12kts I did a low approach knowing that there is a slight ridge on the west side of the field. The sock was indicating 290 5-10kts so I wend ahead and made a solid X-Wind landing on Runway 1.
Feeling pretty confident that I had gotten the hard part (x-wind landing) out of the way, I rolled to a full stop and reconfigured the aircraft for a X-Wind takeoff. I did a mental checklist, hold the centerline with rudder and left aileron deflected into the wind, then fly coordinated with a wing-low attitude after rotation.
Takeoff roll was a bit squirrelly but that's not unusual for the 162 but then the plane lifted off on its own at about 45kts indicated and immediately the plane drifted hard to the right. This happened quite suddenly and I found myself at full power, low airspeed, with cross-controlled inputs. I glanced over at the rapidly approaching FBO building to my right while feeling the controls start to mush and I let go of my inputs and leveled out to build airspeed all the while drifting farther off centerline (actually I was over the taxiway at that point). Once my airspeed was up I turned towards the Northeast and noted my Groundspeed was 90kts indicating 70kts and climbed the hell out of there.
Heart racing and airspeed and altitude rising I said to myself, "what the hell was that? What just happened?" Did I just about kill myself? So my guess is there must have been a pretty good gust that took the plane just before I hit my normal rotation speed of 55kts. There was enough of a headwind component to get the plane abruptly airborne and enough crosswind to really push me sideways. I was so stuck on trying to hold the centerline that I got into a dangerous cross-controlled attitude at low airspeed.
Lessons learned:
1. There's a reason why the 162 has such a low demonstrated crosswind
2. Crosswind takeoffs can be every bit as challenging as crosswind landings
3. Fly the plane first. Always.
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