Aceman
Pre-Flight
- Joined
- Jan 17, 2024
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- 78
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Aceman
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From all the reading I've been doing this past year and all of my flight experiences throughout my life, I find this statement a bit misleading. It's one thing to keep the airplane straight with no rudder input or rolling/pitching input. However, it's a totally different ballgame when trying to coordinate flight controls in turns and keeping control, glidepath, and coordinated flight while landing/climbing or keeping a turn at 30-degrees with no altitude loss and keeping the same airspeed regardless of the wind conditions. IMO, pure stick-n-rudder is not easy. Yet so many people are able to fly a plane as if it was as simple as driving a car. How is that so?
From all the reading I've been doing this past year and all of my flight experiences throughout my life, I find this statement a bit misleading. It's one thing to keep the airplane straight with no rudder input or rolling/pitching input. However, it's a totally different ballgame when trying to coordinate flight controls in turns and keeping control, glidepath, and coordinated flight while landing/climbing or keeping a turn at 30-degrees with no altitude loss and keeping the same airspeed regardless of the wind conditions. IMO, pure stick-n-rudder is not easy. Yet so many people are able to fly a plane as if it was as simple as driving a car. How is that so?