ExpressJetter
Pre-Flight
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ExpressJetter
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Is the "hack" to simply visualize the circle and fly it?
Oh, so a different maneuver altogether! Is that why they left?The "hack" is to put tape on your wingtip and keep it aligned with the point during the entire manuever.
I don't know about "old school" but I cover instruments all the time. It has consistently show itself to be the single most effective way to fix problems with maneuvers, especially landings. It even turns out to have an important place when a glass transition is combined with an early aircraft transition.When I was taught turn on point I was taught to not look at the point (that’s the observer’s job), but pick 4 equal distance points 90degrees from each other around the point (easy in iowa around a crossroad when there were field lines every 1/4 mile denoting 80 acres). Then just fly smoothly from one way point to the next, the “observer” will see a perfect turn on point, and that was “from what I was told by old school guys” the reason for turn on point being a required test maneuver. A hold over from way back, WWI era pilot training, but has been kinda shifted to be a training crutch for pattern preparation. I guess I’m old school in thinking that if you can’t land from downwind with a towel over the panel and engine at idle, you should be doing more high altitude slow flight, stalls , and spins until you can feel the plane… I’ve never flown fast and heavies, and I know they would be different, but basic pilotage like turn on point should cross correlate?
Whoa; I wouldn’t go that far now. The PPL ground reference maneuvers do a better job demonstrating the effect of wind on flight path and aircraft control that anything else in my mind.…Arguably, the private ground reference maneuvers, performed at traffic pattern altitudes and traffic pattern speeds, just might have something to do with the traffic pattern…
Something looks wrong there. The wind would have to be coming from the left side (west assuming it’s a north up picture) for the shallower/steeper bank things to make sense.Nice job teaching it completely wrong. However, if someone asked you to invent a fusion maneuver that combined eights-on-pylons with turns around a point perhaps this would be how you would do it.
You're not supposed to keep the wingtip on the point.
View attachment 115266
I guess you are right. The effect of wind on flight path and aircraft control is pretty unimportant in the traffic pattern.Whoa; I wouldn’t go that far now. The PPL ground reference maneuvers do a better job demonstrating the effect of wind on flight path and aircraft control that anything else in my mind.
It's correct. With a strong enough wind from the north, for example, there'd be no bank at all @ 9 o'clock.Something looks wrong there. The wind would have to be coming from the left side (west assuming it’s a north up picture) for the shallower/steeper bank things to make sense.
Ok, I see that. But what about the 12 and 6 o’clock positions. At the 12, the wind from North would be pushing you to the inside of the circle. It’s showing steeper bank there. That would tighten up the turn and take you even farther to the inside. You need shallower there. At the 6, the North wind is pushing you to the outside of the circle. You need steeper bank there to tighten it up and stay on the circle. Wouldn’t you?It's correct. With a strong enough wind from the north, for example, there'd be no bank at all @ 9 o'clock.
Dunno about misinterpreted. If you look back to the very beginning of the thread, you'll see I agree with you. The only difference is, you are thinking in terms of a series of points along the circle. I'm thinking in terms of the circle. That's a pretty minor disctinction.I think what I mean is being misinterpreted, it is still ground reference and the effects of wind must be corrected for, but instead of focusing on the point your flying around focusing on the waypoints you will fly through to make it happen. When I’m turning down wind to base, or base to final I’m looking at the numbers, not a pivot point to turn around, but a location to go to
No because if you try to stay tangent to the radius (12 o'clock) the wind would blow you toward the point — you need to fly a little pointed outward to compensate, which is done by increasing bank slowly. Same for the downwind sector, except pointed inward and shallowing the bank slowly. So the bank angle is the same at 12 and 6 o'clock and both are crabbed into the wind.At the 12, the wind from North would be pushing you to the inside of the circle. It’s showing steeper bank there. That would tighten up the turn and take you even farther to the inside. You need shallower there. At the 6, the North wind is pushing you to the outside of the circle. You need steeper bank there to tighten it up and stay on the circle. Wouldn’t you?
Ok, I see that. But what about the 12 and 6 o’clock positions. At the 12, the wind from North would be pushing you to the inside of the circle. It’s showing steeper bank there. That would tighten up the turn and take you even farther to the inside. You need shallower there. At the 6, the North wind is pushing you to the outside of the circle. You need steeper bank there to tighten it up and stay on the circle. Wouldn’t you?
Ok. I think I’m getting the picture now.The labels steeper and shallower at 12 and 6 are not relative to each other, they are relative to the aircraft's previous position. In other words the bank at 12:00 is steeper than at 9:00, and the bank at 6:00 is shallower than at 3:00.
I guess you are right. The effect of wind on flight path and aircraft control is pretty unimportant in the traffic pattern.
So ..sarcastically or is there a story?So there I was…
Had a guy come to me to get him prepped to renew his CFI. “So teach me a turn about a point…”
AND HE DID! Wow!
Been a CFI (albeit mil comp) for ten years. Can teach it, have taught it… but until a few weeks ago had no clue how good a maneuver it really is, or can be.
That still leave the question...what was the CORRECTLY taught method he showed you?No, was just very impressed! A simple understated maneuver CORRECTLY taught really was a lot more useful than I ever imagined.
I’ve taught a couple students since and it really made a difference.
Kinda goes to show how it’s rarely the what and most often the who.
When I was taught turn on point I was taught to not look at the point (that’s the observer’s job), but pick 4 equal distance points 90degrees from each other around the point (easy in iowa around a crossroad when there were field lines every 1/4 mile denoting 80 acres). Then just fly smoothly from one way point to the next, the “observer” will see a perfect turn on point, and that was “from what I was told by old school guys” the reason for turn on point being a required test maneuver. A hold over from way back, WWI era pilot training, but has been kinda shifted to be a training crutch for pattern preparation. I guess I’m old school in thinking that if you can’t land from downwind with a towel over the panel and engine at idle, you should be doing more high altitude slow flight, stalls , and spins until you can feel the plane… I’ve never flown fast and heavies, and I know they would be different, but basic pilotage like turn on point should cross correlate?
That still leave the question...what was the CORRECTLY taught method he showed you?
No I wouldn'tYou would be surprised how many people get it wrong.
That was a key point for me. One day at the flight school, I listened to a ground lesson on turns around a point. The instructor said something which I ended up incorporating in my teaching. The groundspeed/bank angle/aim point solution is an explanation of theory. But we don't fly theory. We fly real airplanes in the real world where wind predictions are just that - predictions. Theory allows us to anticipate but ultimately its about doing what's needed to fly that constant radius circle and a constant altitude and airspeed.This was one of the ground sessions that took about an hour to complete with Private students.
I based most of my instruction on Bill Kershner's books. Patience was required, due to the non-intuitive nature of the groundspeed/bank angle/aim point solution.