Sinistar
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- Sep 9, 2016
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Brad
@Rajiv Sharma - lots of advice - did you give up?
I have had trouble landings including pilot induced oscillations, hard landing, trouble landing in cross wind, not landing on center line, drifting from center line post touch down, missing touch down point, not flaring at right time etc.
A thread was started in 2015 about that “Jacobson Flare” thing by the same person promoting it here. The 2015 thread reads like a con job. Lol...
Update: I finally got my solo endorsement done yesterday. It only took 67 hours
Thanks everyone for all the support and encouragement.
Update: I finally got my solo endorsement done yesterday. It only took 67 hours
Thanks everyone for all the support and encouragement.
No advice given on the Internet will fix these problems other than you are way overdue for an instructor change.
Hello Everyone
Thanks for the encouragement, I decided to give it another shot. You guys are very helpful. I am very grateful for all the help I got in this forum.
Here is the plan I came up with after listening to several experienced pilots and CFIs.
1. Use gopro camera to record my flying lesson.
Rajiv
I thought I was never going to learn. I bought a cushion to sit higher in the Cessna and two hours later my landing improve tremendously. I solo two lessons after. I am 5 10 and using a cushion.
So, what was it that got everything to click for you?Update: I finally got my solo endorsement done yesterday. It only took 67 hours
Thanks everyone for all the support and encouragement.
So, what was it that got everything to click for you?
Congratulation! Hopefully the rest of your training goes better than the first part did.
On a side note, in reading through these comments, there were an awful lot that seemed to criticize the instructor. Not knowing the particular student, I would have to think that there are a certain number of student pilots that may never be able to solo. Some people just do not have the particular set of skills needed to be a competant pilot able to fly on their own. At what point does a CFI sit down with these students to reevaluate their aspirations and bring them into the context of what is attainable? There have to be occasions where a student will never have the skills necessary and no amount of training will fix it. When is the proper time to "crush someone's dreams"?
I’m 5’11” and my control and landings are much better if I put the seat all the way up, just shy of my head hitting the headliner. I can’t tell you why - but for me it works
I think you skipped the part of the thread where he finally got the solo, post #49. I've been there, done that, when people resurrect these old threads. Go back and read #48 #49, spoiler alert, he didn't give up!Rajiv
Over what time frame had it been during your training? I have been an instructor pilot from everything from a c152 to Boeing’s and can tell you the biggest issue I’ve seen in this regard is long periods of time between lessons. In any event, ask your CFI to try this: while on runway before takeoff roll, set altimeter to read zero (or closest 1000 or 500’ ft increment depending on elev) and note the setting. This is referred to as QFE altimeter setting. Set this on final approach.
This is actually pretty accurate with a stable descent, and will give additional sight reference in correlating what you see to actual height above runway. Think of it as a poor mans radar altimeter. Be sure to be trimmed and stable by 100’ with about 1200-1500 RPM (don’t do idle power approaches as it greatly shortens response time on controls).
You should cross the threshold stripes at 50’ and don’t touch nothing until 10’ on your altimeter. SLIGHTLY flare and float down runway maintaining centerline , eventually you’ll touchdown. Make sure you have a long runway, at least 5k’ to be safe. After mains tires squeak, go smoothly to idle and land the nose wheel with a second flare.
do this until you are comfortable and learn sight picture looking down runway. Then begin slightly reducing power at 10’ QFE, then at 20’, 50’ until comfy going to idle at 50’ and slightly pitching up during power reduction to maintain constant descent and still not flaring until 10’ ish.
we rely a lot on radar altimeter during landing big airplanes, especially initially. Give it a try if you can talk your CFI into it.
hope this helps. Good luck, may the force be with you.
Right after I bought the cherokee, I had the 40 yr old seats rebuilt (immediately after putting in shoulder harnesses) and had my seat built 2 inches higher. When I'm in a 172 or 182, a mere pillow isn't sufficient, I need a step ladder to see over the panel!I’m 5’11” and my control and landings are much better if I put the seat all the way up, just shy of my head hitting the headliner. I can’t tell you why - but for me it works
I FINALLY PASSED CHECK RIDE TODAY !
I want to say a big THANKS to everyone who encouraged me and provided valuable suggestions. I had my check ride today and passed with flying colors (he he). It took me a month to get my check ride done after getting the sign off from my CFI due to weather, DPE availability and airplane availability. It has been a long roller coaster journey to this point. It took me only 19 months (due to International travel, COVID and job switch), 118.4 hours and 3 CFIs to get this private pilot certificate.
Once again, thank you everyone for your support.
I FINALLY PASSED CHECK RIDE TODAY !
I want to say a big THANKS to everyone who encouraged me and provided valuable suggestions. I had my check ride today and passed with flying colors (he he). It took me a month to get my check ride done after getting the sign off from my CFI due to weather, DPE availability and airplane availability. It has been a long roller coaster journey to this point. It took me only 19 months (due to International travel, COVID and job switch), 118.4 hours and 3 CFIs to get this private pilot certificate.
Once again, thank you everyone for your support.