Mistake Not...
Cleared for Takeoff
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- Jun 18, 2013
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Mistake Not...
I know this must have been asked an answered a billion times. I've even found magazine articles on it, but it seems like none of them actually answer the question "What's the best technique for staying on glideslope". Oh sure, they'll have that as the title, then it's all "keep your scan up and keep the needles crossed". Well. Duh.
So, previous instructor wanted a constant airspeed and a preselected descent rate interpolated (quick guess) required to maintain a 3deg slope based on ground speed reported by GPS. That is, look at ground speed, realize you need 478ft/min at 90kts, guess, then adjust power once starting down to maintain both 90kts and keep the needles centered.
Talking to more people since then, a common technique seems to be: Go to preselected power settings, hold glideslope with pitch.
I've tried both, and in the mooney and a sim, and the second is just WAAAAAAY easier for me at my current level of ability. And, it's what the autopilot would have to do, since I don't have a throttle servo. So.. is it a bad technique, and why the complicated one from the instructor?
So, previous instructor wanted a constant airspeed and a preselected descent rate interpolated (quick guess) required to maintain a 3deg slope based on ground speed reported by GPS. That is, look at ground speed, realize you need 478ft/min at 90kts, guess, then adjust power once starting down to maintain both 90kts and keep the needles centered.
Talking to more people since then, a common technique seems to be: Go to preselected power settings, hold glideslope with pitch.
I've tried both, and in the mooney and a sim, and the second is just WAAAAAAY easier for me at my current level of ability. And, it's what the autopilot would have to do, since I don't have a throttle servo. So.. is it a bad technique, and why the complicated one from the instructor?