Kenny Phillips
Final Approach
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Kenny Phillips
I wasn’t making a general statement about using the autopilot when flying in icing conditions. I have plenty of experience flying in ice and if I were on a missed approach with an immediate climbing turn carrying ice in a small turboprop with boots, I’d prefer to hand fly the airplane.I have flown 1000 s of miles in icing conditions with the auto pilot on in the winter it happens every day
It vacillated between 6900 and 7100 while accelerating throughout the ~40 seconds after initiating the missed. I wouldn’t call it much of a climb at all.The turn looks ok to me and he was climbing 1000 fmp at 145 kts , the more I look at it maybe he did have a fuel problem but again sad story
Agree with all, but if the data are correct it looks like the entry to the loss of control was a little more like a spiral than a pure stall/spin. Of course, that could have been exacerbated by ice and/or wing loading into an accelerated stall. But the groundspeed of 140-150 knots around that time, where the left turn begins, stands out.I fly the RNAV 20 frequently with IR students. The missed is a full 180 degree right turn with terrain all around. Sounds like a classic got-slow, stall-spin. Perhaps the airplane was never cleaned up, and had ice, but the visibility is almost certainly a factor. It was snowing last night with poor visibility there but much better in Reno.
News is reporting “moderate snow falling in the Truckee area at the time of the crash with visibility of a half-mile, though winds were light."
That sounds about right. LP minimums are one mile visibility for Category B.
So frustrating that this continues to happen.
That plane should have had "envelope protection" to prevent stalls, but it does allow one to fly the plane into the ground.That sure sounds like he stalled it , those planes have such wonderful avionics that could fly the plane a lot better than they did , I wonder why they don’t use it , all he had to do was hit the go around button and work the lever let the AP and flight director fly the plane , sad story and it can be a very unforgiving experience, a lot of us have been real close and we were lucky some aren’t
It's not as easy as that. A go around in IMC is one of the hardest maneuvers in flying. The transition from getting ready to land and climbing intoThat sure sounds like he stalled it , those planes have such wonderful avionics that could fly the plane a lot better than they did , I wonder why they don’t use it , all he had to do was hit the go around button and work the lever let the AP and flight director fly the plane , sad story and it can be a very unforgiving experience, a lot of us have been real close and we were lucky some aren’t
I'm thinking a tail stall will be the ultimate culprit.
It does.The 960 is highly automated with auto throttles. I'm wondering that if pushing the toga button with the AP engaged will initiate a climb and add power automatically?
I'm thinking a tail stall will be the ultimate culprit.
If it happened with a configuration change, a tail stall would happen when adding flaps, not retracting them.However, a tail stall could make sense if it was concurrent with raising the flaps at that moment. That’s the only aerodynamic explanation I could see for it seemingly having plenty of performance then suddenly not.
Ah, right. It makes it even less likely that it was the case. I’m just trying to make the mental leap that a stall led to the departure and not the other way around. I missed a step.If it happened with a configuration change, a tail stall would happen when adding flaps, not retracting them.
Good question - I forgot to add FLC (flight level change) into what I said above. You can either go VNAV/FLC in what I fly.If you push the GA button, go to takeoff thrust, and let the airplane fly the missed with no further input, what airspeed will it fly? I see the missed approach for the RNAV 20 has a max speed of 200 KIAS until after the initial turn.
Sounds like a good chance that “letting the automation take care of it” could have been perceived as “too much work.”Good question - I forgot to add FLC (flight level change) into what I said above. You can either go VNAV/FLC in what I fly.
Or just go FLC and dial in 200 knots for what I do. But the dial is still cumbersome when you're really busy with the other
stuff that I mentioned. If you go VNAV and then FLC, the airspeed will automatically go to 200 because that's in the program.
But, like anything, there's no panacea - VNAV/FLC can be dangerous if there's an engine failure, because, if that happens, I'm
supposed to fly out at approx 114 knots (Vapp) and that MUST be dialed into the FLC / VSI roll 'wheel.'
Even with the TBM 960's autothrottles, I imagine that you still need to disengage the autopilot and then turn it back on at
about 450 to 500 feet AGL. At least that's what I need to do without autothrottles.
The bottom line is that there's a lot going on. And, quite honestly, I think that autothrottles could mess up someone like
me whose so used to doing it the other way for years.
Muscle memory and habit are a funny thing. Sometimes, when I'm calling for a clarence at my airport in Florida, the
first thing I say is "Westchester clearance...." My brain automatically says that sometimes (when I'm just going through
the motions) because that's where I learned to fly....and that's where I've done a lot of my flying. I think that they
laugh at that a bit...but it's definitely habit / 'brain muscle memory.'
PS: I even had a really good golf instructor tell me that, under pressure, your 'new golf swing' (after taking a few
lessons) will completely fall apart unless it's built into muscle memory. That's why there must be consistent
practice of the proper repetitions - to build a complex sequence into our muscle memory.
The problem with flying is that it's not golf - the stakes are much higher.
In the M600 implementation of the G3000 at least, press of the GA button results in a specific climb angle, and TOGA power.Sounds like a good chance that “letting the automation take care of it” could have been perceived as “too much work.”
I presume by “climb angle” you mean “pitch attitude?” What airspeed does that give you after you clean up?In the M600 implementation of the G3000 at least, press of the GA button results in a specific climb angle, and TOGA power.
I presume by “climb angle” you mean “pitch attitude?” What airspeed does that give you after you clean up?
According to the POH, TOGA with autopilot gives 10° pitch up and max torque until 500’ AGL, when envelope protection kicks in. Same as takeoff. I don’t know what speeds and climb rates that yields, as you said, someone with experience in type will need to chime in. But the AP should also limit the turn rate to 3°/sec and looks like it was beyond that initially.Maybe someone with TBM 960 experience can chime in and describe how the automation will work.
The initial step of the missed approach is simple. Climbing right turn to an altitude well above the minimums on a heading that is almost 180 degrees opposite of what you were flying. If a pilot is proficient in using the automation to its fullest, everything will work. Unless there is another issue working against it (say an autopilot disengaging on its own due to servo loads reaching limits with an out of trim airplane; due to ice for example) or one of the automation features failing. If a pilot is proficient in hand flying he could say "At the MAP I'll select G/A, kick off the autopilot, execute a climbing right turn and then reactivate the automation when I'm ready" and it should work. Unless there is another issue working against him (say spacial disorientation). Either way it's performed, proficiency matters. As mentioned earlier there is a lot going on, and you have to be ready.
How will they know?
Which is why I’m wondering where the speed would end up. I see quite a few pilots who haven’t got the automation management skills to ensure that the airspeed wouldn’t exceed the limits of this procedure. I also see two ways pilots deal with that…either automation off and hand-fly, which could result in what you noted, or leave the automation on and hope there’s enough margin built into the procedure that they don’t hit anything.But the AP should also limit the turn rate to 3°/sec and looks like it was beyond that initially.
Agreed. During training we do a lot of them. Mostly simulated rather than because we flew to minimums and saw nothing. In real world GA, they are very rare. So this busy workload time is something we are not very good at.It's not as easy as that. A go around in IMC is one of the hardest maneuvers in flying. The transition from getting ready to land and climbing into
the soup is a big one.