jpower
Cleared for Takeoff
I'm a pretty low-time pilot (120-130 ish hours), and I had my first in-flight issue today--a flaps failure. Some of you are definitely saying to yourselves, "psh, what's the big deal about a no-flap landing?" Well, nothing really. Just that it's out of the ordinary and I learned from it, so I figured I'd share.
I had just come back from doing a little sightseeing in a 172P, and I figured I'd shoot a few touch and goes just for the fun of it. When I was on base for my full stop, I could tell that something wasn't right with the approach. I looked around and saw that my flaps weren't down at all! By this time I was about to turn final, and I didn't want to mess with things, so I flipped the switch back to "up" and made a greaser of a no-flap landing. When I taxied off, I tried the flaps again, and they started coming down with no issues. Weird!
A couple of takeaways:
First, when I started processing the chain of events, I couldn't figure out how I didn't notice that the flaps weren't coming out, because there's usually a noticeable change in pitch. It wasn't perfectly smooth, so I must have subconsciously chalked up the lack of a pitch change to turbulence. I'm also not in the habit of visually confirming the flap position either with the indicator or with a glance at the wings. I'm definitely going to be paying more attention to that.
Secondly, and more importantly, I'm happy that I'd done plenty of no-flap landings before, including one in this particular airplane during my checkout. It really is a non-event, but the extra speed and different sight picture could catch you off guard if you didn't know what to expect. Also, this particular airplane has a very aggressive cruise prop, so it floats and floats and floats. I was ready for it and made sure to be slow enough over the numbers.
An instructor and a student took the plane out when I got back, so I'd be interested to see whether they have any issues. The mechanic wasn't on site, but he's going to check it out later tonight. He suspects that it was the flap indicator getting stuck, because apparently that can actually cause the flaps from moving? We'll see.
I had just come back from doing a little sightseeing in a 172P, and I figured I'd shoot a few touch and goes just for the fun of it. When I was on base for my full stop, I could tell that something wasn't right with the approach. I looked around and saw that my flaps weren't down at all! By this time I was about to turn final, and I didn't want to mess with things, so I flipped the switch back to "up" and made a greaser of a no-flap landing. When I taxied off, I tried the flaps again, and they started coming down with no issues. Weird!
A couple of takeaways:
First, when I started processing the chain of events, I couldn't figure out how I didn't notice that the flaps weren't coming out, because there's usually a noticeable change in pitch. It wasn't perfectly smooth, so I must have subconsciously chalked up the lack of a pitch change to turbulence. I'm also not in the habit of visually confirming the flap position either with the indicator or with a glance at the wings. I'm definitely going to be paying more attention to that.
Secondly, and more importantly, I'm happy that I'd done plenty of no-flap landings before, including one in this particular airplane during my checkout. It really is a non-event, but the extra speed and different sight picture could catch you off guard if you didn't know what to expect. Also, this particular airplane has a very aggressive cruise prop, so it floats and floats and floats. I was ready for it and made sure to be slow enough over the numbers.
An instructor and a student took the plane out when I got back, so I'd be interested to see whether they have any issues. The mechanic wasn't on site, but he's going to check it out later tonight. He suspects that it was the flap indicator getting stuck, because apparently that can actually cause the flaps from moving? We'll see.