Just wondering if you guys did any spin recovery training for your PPL? I am wondering if it is something I should ask my instructor about at some point.
Experiencing a spin is great, it's fun, and being able to recover is critical, but the easiest way to recover from a spin is not to get into one in the first place--i.e. stall/spin awareness training.
Just wondering if you guys did any spin recovery training for your PPL? I am wondering if it is something I should ask my instructor about at some point.
Same deal with stalls.
Biggest factor is a FULL understanding of spins in all stages, plus going into and out of a spin yourself takes the fear of the unknown factor out of it.
Often those guys who you see landing at warp 3 have never done a spin.
These guys were able to get one to spin quite reliablyAs old as I am, the spin requirement didn't exist even back when I got my private. THat being said, my crazy flight instructor did them on the second lesson (just a demonstration) and on a later lesson I did recoveries from them. Of course, you have to find an aircraft that will really spin. A 152 barely will. A 172 is near impossible.
Feel sorry for the owner of that airplane. His gyros were just a caged as mine, and use as ruined as they would have been in my aircraft.
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Of course, you have to find an aircraft that will really spin. A 152 barely will. A 172 is near impossible.
As old as I am, the spin requirement didn't exist even back when I got my private. THat being said, my crazy flight instructor did them on the second lesson (just a demonstration) and on a later lesson I did recoveries from them. Of course, you have to find an aircraft that will really spin. A 152 barely will. A 172 is near impossible.
Of course, you have to find an aircraft that will really spin. A 152 barely will. A 172 is near impossible.
At the flight school where I learned to fly (part of a university program) spins were not allowed until a student was going for their CFI. I was lucky enough to have an instructor who thought that was a dangerous restriction, and he did spin training with me on a promise that we wouldn't discuss it with the school.
My airplane had caged gyros, so spins were out. Haven't been part of the PTS for awhile, but lots of guys will tell you how important spin training is. Real experts they are.
Of course, it never hurt to ask.
I did my initial training in a C-150, and in those pre-internet days I am embarrassed to admit I had no idea what either stall or spin were. At least until my 3rd lesson or so, when my crusty old (chain smoking) instructor told me to reduce power and keep pulling back on the yoke and do a "stall" (whatever that was). I obediently pulled the throttle and started pulling back, and although he did tell me to use the rudder to keep the ball centered, he never told me not to augment with the ailerons, and sure enough, just before my very first stall entry, my wing suddenly dropped so I put in full counter aileron input, and bam!
As the nose pointed what seemed like straight down and the ground started spinning itself into a blur (along with a replay of my life to date), I could hear my instructor ... laughing!
He waited a bit (I guess to drive the point home), then put in the counter inputs and got us out of it.
Needless to say, I was shaken and stirred, and to add insult to injury, as we walked back into the FBO, he told everyone within earshot about how I spun the 150.
Fortunately I quickly got over my fear of stalls after I read a bit about them and got to practice them more, to the point where I felt very comfortable practicing stalls on all my local solos.
But that was my last spin for a while, until I took aerobatic lessons (in a CAP10B) well after getting my PPL. Those were amazingly fun and I couldn't get enough of them, diametrically opposed to my first inadvertent one.
If I were teaching any primary student today, I'd definitely start with spins right after stalls, before letting them solo. But I wouldn't spring it as a surprise!
BradZ- Correct me if I'm wrong, but doesn't the POH of your airplane prohibit spins?
I am in the camp saying get the spin training from someone who is very experienced in spinning. Some CFI's don't have enough experience. Sometimes, things go wrong.
Yeah, that.There's the old problem with that... How does an inexperienced CFI get the experience?
I find that to be a real bummer for those who've never done them. And I'm sure glad my first CFI had that experience and made me get it. It wasn't optional to him. Still isn't and he still teaches.
Go up to altitude, simulate the turn to final whiile pulling back the yoke to "stretch it out" and putting in some "outside rudder" to tighten it up and see what happens ...
As old as I am, the spin requirement didn't exist even back when I got my private. THat being said, my crazy flight instructor did them on the second lesson (just a demonstration) and on a later lesson I did recoveries from them. Of course, you have to find an aircraft that will really spin. A 152 barely will. A 172 is near impossible.
Nothing to straighten out about your impression.
Somebody straighten me out here...I was always under the impression that one caged the gyros (if that feature available) prior to unusual attitude air work and that helped to reduce (but not eliminate) the stress on the gyros.
I believe you meant "inside rudder". The low altitude killer. People try to force the nose around the corner faster with inside rudder to the turn and that forces the nose down and creates an over-banking rate that they attempt to counteract with aileron opposite the direction of the turn, and the inside wing stalls.
Often exacerbated by them adding a gob of power.
Due to p-factor, torque, and all the left turning tendencies when power is added, Cessnas will fall off quicker in a left turn, to the inside, unfortunately, since that's the direction of turn of standard traffic patterns.
The gob of power will also hit the elevator at the same time as the inside rudder and, effectively push the nose up, while having the effect of adding even more inside rudder, accelerating the stall and starting the spin. (In fact, pushing in about half throttle right at a power off stall break with inside rudder helps get some airplanes to even start the spin. Cessnas love to recover early if the controls are released and will end up in a fast spiral dive with the nose way down, and build airspeed fast. This is killer spot number two where the panicking pilot pulls hard and either bends/breaks something or enters another accelerated stall, especially if they didn't pull the power to idle first, and they have any altitude left.
Outside rudder, especially power off, rarely can coax a spin out of a Cessna. It'll fall off nose down (slicing toward the inside both down and in) and enter a slipping turn. It takes a LOT of power and a hard pull on the elevator to get most Cessnas to go "over the top" and spin to the outside of a turn. Really have to work at it to get all but the worst rigged ones to go to the right that way. Left is a little easier.
My airplane had caged gyros, so spins were out. Haven't been part of the PTS for awhile, but lots of guys will tell you how important spin training is. Real experts they are.
Of course, it never hurt to ask.