Spinning out of the clouds was a technique used by the airmail and barnstorming pilots in the old biplanes. It probably worked better in those draggy light planes.
Also those planes didn't likley have a single gyro in them.
OP said he's pre-solo. How about NO.
There's a time tested and true system of training pilots. Stick with that.
OP said he's pre-solo. How about NO.
There's a time tested and true system of training pilots. Stick with that.
You mean, "don't be like the flight instructor that gave me my last flight review"?Do it! Well worth it.
Just don't scream like a girl though.
You mean, "don't by like the flight instructor that gave me my last flight review"?
I would agree on getting the spin training - if nothing else, it's fun.
Canada requires spin training for their PPL...
Oh heck no. Tach (maybe), Altitude, Airspeed and a compass.
-> falling leaf stalls ->
Plus, why do we bother to teach pre solo guys stalls?
Spins are the natural evolution of the stall maneuver, not teaching spins is a result of the fact that ether your plane can't handle it, or your CFI can't handle it, both fixable, simply find a different plane or a different CFI, but only one is excusable.
Slow flight -> stalls -> falling leaf stalls -> spins
it's one whole lesson, with occasional review and fine tuning on following lessons.
So going IMC it's going to be interesting trying to keep straight and level with no gyros at all, thus a spin or stall depending on the plane might be your only real option
In most of the fleet, especially trainers, you normally have a full six pack, so the spin isn't the smartest move when equipped with three different gyros, infact its likley to require more of the pilot when compared to flying a simple AI through, or back out of a cloud.
Of course if you're a VFR pilot caught in IMC and already disoriented, try any thing you can think of but you're probably hosed.
John
Or just let go! Many trainer type planes will recover from a spin without input from the pilot, as long as you have altitude and haven't allowed it to get really established.
I've never had "the leans" even in IMC (very limited experience) but it sounds like it takes a great deal of presence of mind to ignore.
Not really as long as you've been trained to trust your scan and instrument indications.
if you can't even handle straight and level, yet you're going to preform an aerobatic maneuver in IMC
Which is exactly what a VFR pilot in IMC is not...
Not true! They've had some instrument training when they were a student. I had a woman student who, on a XC, flew into a cloud layer, got on the instruments and flew a 180* turn out of it. I understand and agree though what you're saying. Most VFR pilots don't retain proficiency (hell some IFR pilots too) enough that would keep them out of trouble.
If you ever get completely wadded up in IMC, the stall spin allows you to descend without hitting anything provided you stop before dirt level. Remember, you're unintentionally in IMC or otherwise disoriented so an upright spin is a known condition and, if you are used to it because you practice it all the time, an easy and simple condition to exit once you can see again.
I wouldn't bother spinning, I'd just hold the stick fully aft with the ailerons and rudder neutral. You won't spin in that configuration, airspeed will be under control, and you'll be able to recover more quickly with less altitude loss once you break out compared to doing a spin.
Only if you start in straight and level flight. That's exactly the control input that gets you in a death spiral if you've already started to turn...
Then the gyro excuse is BS. That system is solid state, you ain't going to hurt Jack spinning it, minus maybe the backup steam AI, but you could even pull the breaker for that.
So if the airplane is in a 45 or greater bank and I pull the elevator full aft, I've saved my ass and the airplane? COOL.. I'll remember that...
when did the "no gyro" scenario creep into the conversation....Missed that one...You'd rather disperse you and the airplane over the ground like confetti if faced with the worst case of IMC and no gyro instruments? Try and follow the point that is being made here.
when did the "no gyro" scenario creep into the conversation....Missed that one...
He was in the clear when he started (knew he was starting from straight and level)Not the same scenario you started with... The whole scenario sounds like a fish story to me, but hey... Whatever....!
You are missing the point and don't know crap.
The standby AI is vacuum.
Actually, I've heard this before: is it better to exist the clouds in an uncontrolled over speed spiral dive, or at slow speed and descent rate in a spin? I'd take the control in a spin knowing that I can exit the spin in less than 500 feet.Really? Are you really suggesting that a VFR pilot finding himself in IMC should spin out of the clouds? OMG! Yea, that's a great idea!
Actually, I've heard this before: is it better to exist the clouds in an uncontrolled over speed spiral dive, or at slow speed and descent rate in a spin? I'd take the control in a spin knowing that I can exit the spin in less than 500 feet.
Really? Are you really suggesting that a VFR pilot finding himself in IMC should spin out of the clouds? OMG! Yea, that's a great idea!
I know of several pilots that couldn't tell me what axis an aircraft spins on.