flight2000
Pre-takeoff checklist
I guess you didn't bother reading the rest of the thread where I corrected myself and said it was the FOM and not the OpSpec. Whatever....and no, I will not publish it.I call BS. Publish the profile.
I guess you didn't bother reading the rest of the thread where I corrected myself and said it was the FOM and not the OpSpec. Whatever....and no, I will not publish it.I call BS. Publish the profile.
Yaw dampers help too, I'd imagine. So, I'm still thinking about See's crash. What category would it have been circling in? Or, what's the T-38s stalling speed in the circling configuration? Slayton said See was too timid and didn't fly "aggressively" enough. Whatever that means about a circling approach. In my experience, both high speed and high bank should be avoided on a circling approach. I'd call that sort of flying "too aggressive".
FWIW, when speaking to turbo jets and VFR patterns and circling approaches, these are the profiles recommended by Gulfstream for the GIV.
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What? You mean you DON’T put the gear down BEFORE entering the traffic pattern?
That’s just dangerous!
In the T-37, we had 2 VFR patterns we used, an Outside pattern and an Inside (or closed) pattern. We'd fly pattern turns in the outside pattern using about 85-90* AOB and 6.5 G's. The practical necessity was two-fold. One, the less time you're belly up to the rest of the pattern, the less time you're "blind" and more time to actually clear. Also, people looking for you are more likely to see you when you are showing as big of a cross-section as possible. By flashing them the whole underside of your belly made you much easier to see.So, what's the practical necessity of doing them other than to build skill in managing the plane. Just because you CAN do something doesn't mean you should. For instance, if the stsll speed is so high you need a 60° bank to stay within obstruction-free airspace, that's a good reason. OTOH, if you have room to spare, the accident record proves a shallower bank is less risky.
But I guess the USN and USAF have NO idea what they are doing and crash a lot in the traffic pattern.
Flew lots of visual patterns back in my KC-135 days.
In the T-37, we had 2 VFR patterns we used, an Outside pattern and an Inside (or closed) pattern. We'd fly pattern turns in the outside pattern using about 85-90* AOB and 6.5 G's. The practical necessity was two-fold. One, the less time you're belly up to the rest of the pattern, the less time you're "blind" and more time to actually clear. Also, people looking for you are more likely to see you when you are showing as big of a cross-section as possible. By flashing them the whole underside of your belly made you much easier to see.
In the inside/closed pattern, we'd come up initial and turn into the downwind using one, constant 60* bank turn. When we turned final (rolled off the perch), we'd shoot for a constant 30* turn, with up to 45* permissible.
Most civilian pilots do not have the level of training and proficiency of USN and USAF pilots.
Hmm, how well trained do you think a 15 hour student is? IIRC, first solo in the T-37 was about 15 - 18 hours. And yes, we flew 60 degrees of bank in the pattern.
That's what I was thinking when you said pattern speed was 300 kts, "They'd have to plow me a furrow in the dirt to follow."The outside pattern had defined ground points, so that everyone (well, most everyone) was flying the same pattern.
It wasn't your FOM either. Or CFM.I guess you didn't bother reading the rest of the thread where I corrected myself and said it was the FOM and not the OpSpec. Whatever....and no, I will not publish it.