I wish there were more pilots who came to training with goals of their own beyond the paperwork.I wish there were more cfi’s who promoted different specialized training packages... to encourage people to do more than just a bfr....
i found this video very informative. i for one have a habit of answering the controller whenever they ask me to do something even if it is the most inappropriate time... gotto change that
Do you ever take aerial photos?I've always thought some of the required PTS maneuvers are silly for anything other than demonstration and simple feel practice.
on every review...CFI - "ok, do you remember Turns Around A Point?"
Me..."well of course" I'm thinking yeah, the wind pushes the circle out of round so bank angle changes as I go around, no problem....but to properly 'set it up by the book', do I enter the turn upwind, downwind, crosswind?...ugh....does any of that even matter really.
I could be missing your point....but I think maybe I didn't make myself clear. I didn't mean to say that practicing turns around a point (or s turns, etc.) weren't beneficial...... that wasn't my point. it's the minutia with most of those maneuvers......Do you ever take aerial photos?
I still don't understand all this hype about jamming the nose down ASAP after an engine failure on climb out. This guy Dan Gryder in the video here is the dude who, with no facts, pompously attributed last year's Franklin Augustus Pitts S-2B crash in New Orleans to his failure to get the nose down on climbout after his assumed engine failure then and there. He assumed he just stalled/spun right out of the climb because he didn't get the nose down right away... as if that's the typical LOC scenario. It's not. According to NTSB info that came out later, Franklin had already made his way to downwind and crashed attempting to maneuver back to the runway he took off from. Jamming the nose down immediately after the engine quits on climb out does not address the energy issues associated with folks attempting to turn/maneuver to a landing spot under stress.
I still don't understand all this hype about jamming the nose down ASAP after an engine failure on climb out. This guy Dan Gryder in the video here is the dude who, with no facts, pompously attributed last year's Franklin Augustus Pitts S-2B crash in New Orleans to his failure to get the nose down on climbout after his assumed engine failure then and there. He assumed he just stalled/spun right out of the climb because he didn't get the nose down right away... as if that's the typical LOC scenario. It's not. According to NTSB info that came out later, Franklin had already made his way to downwind and crashed attempting to maneuver back to the runway he took off from. Jamming the nose down immediately after the engine quits on climb out does not address the energy issues associated with folks attempting to turn/maneuver to a landing spot under stress.
One thing worth pointing out is that 30% margin over stall is not just 1.3 times the indicated stall speed. The indicated stall speed must be converted to calibrated airspeed, multiplied by 1.3, and then converted back to indicated speed. In a 182, Vso=39kts (indicated), but 1.3Vso=62kts (indicated). If you simply multiply 39 *1.3 you will get 51 knots which is 11 kts slower, and you will have a much smaller margin than 30%. This is also one of the reasons why the airspeed falls off quicker at slower speeds.
I agree completely. He's often got a lot of good information, especially in LOC cases. He does like to post about these cases the same day the accident happens and leaves a lot of people sore.Gryder runs his mouth quite a lot on social media, and often without knowing any of the actual facts.
That being said, his unformed analysis of that one incident is not a reason to immediately discount what he's saying overall in that video.
During training my CFI pulled the power on climb out more than once... and to me, when you're already at 65-75 kts and lose power, you don't have much time to get the nose over before you lose speed quickly, and if you're close to the ground, well...
6 seconds?
IMO, I don't see anything wrong with encouraging immediate response and proper technique.
I agree that “proper entry” shouldn’t be the emphasis, but understanding WHY entering downwind is better than other points is worthwhile.I could be missing your point....but I think maybe I didn't make myself clear. I didn't mean to say that practicing turns around a point (or s turns, etc.) weren't beneficial...... that wasn't my point. it's the minutia with most of those maneuvers......
so turns around a point....
I could enter the circle from any tangent.....can see the result from bad technique....can use it to increase my seat of the pants stick and rudder finesse....a couple turns...yep, my memory is refreshed on it.....nope. Gotta remember to enter the maneuver down wind to get it "correct". Why does that matter? The whole point is for me to understand how to track a course anyway.
Airplanes are not like cars going uphill when you lose power. You're only gonna lose significant airspeed and near a stall if you fight the airplane's natural tendency to seek the airspeed it's trimmed for by momentarily trying to maintain your climb pitch attitude after the engine has quit. Next time you're trimmed for your climbout speed (with some altitude), pull power off and let go of the controls. What happens to your airspeed? You will only lose speed if you ADD a pull back after losing power.
Even most high powered aerobatic airplanes planes don't climb steeply enough for an engine failure on climb out to turn into much other than a parabolic arc back toward the ground at around the airspeed we're trimmed for. You don't have to jam the stick forward ASAP in this situation, just don't pull back. Just try to relax and let the nose naturally come down..help it down if you want, but it's not as critical as folks make it out to be. Most folks get into trouble with hasty turns and maneuvering to a landing spot, not simply losing control on climbout.
Airspeed/G-load awareness with respect to maneuvering is key, but simply shoving the nose down ASAP doesn't address the bigger picture. Dan has not come up with some sort of magic bullet as he seems to self-proclaim.
I for one have a habit of answering the controller whenever they ask me to do something even if it is the most inappropriate time... gotto change that