go!
Early in primary training, turning base to final, my instructor said pull out a little power. I take my hand off the throttle and yank the mixture all the way out! About the time I realized it he is screaming NOOOOOO and then it happened...man on man contact. I can still see it, his hand on top of mine as we both are shoving the mixture back in.
I'm not sure what was more upsetting, our man on man contact or the fact I took my hand off the throttle and yanked the red knob all the out when I was asked to pull some power out...sigh hahaha
but did you make sure to add the appropriate amount of power when turning downwind to make sure the plane doesn't fall out of the sky?So I did a few turns around a point to reset and continued my flight in bliss.
These have been fairly tame responses. My most embarrassing was taxiing to the wrong end of the runway and telling the tower I was ready to depart.. had to make a u-turn and taxi all the way down to the other end, with a passenger on board. Granted this was maybe a week after I got my license, and in a plane without a GPS and well before the beautiful foreflight moving map taxi diagrams
but did you make sure to add the appropriate amount of power when turning downwind to make sure the plane doesn't fall out of the sky?
Most of my experiences was in Cherokee and arrows. When I first started flying the club 182 after a 15 year absence in flying. I would close the door. But not lock the handle down. I’d go up and 10 min in I’d hear the door pop open. Damn! I’d land. Pull it closed and on my way and pop again. Probably happened a dozen times. I mention to one of my friends in the club that we need to get the door latch looked at. I show him what I’m doing and what I think is wrong. Then he shows me how to turn door latch to lock. Had a laugh. Felt like a tool. Now it is the most boldly stated part of my preflight checklist.
More than once I was on a “left final”.
Another time I was getting back late at night, after midnight. I was approaching the airport from the west and saw a landing light in the east. The other aircraft was not moving relative to me, so we were approaching head on. I turned and finally realized I was trying to dodge Jupiter.
I pulled the mixture control on roll-out on 27 landing at Oshkosh about 3 weeks ago.
I had sufficient momentum to keep it rolling, and managed a restart while still at a good taxi space, but...aargh...
I've soooo done that too. Frantic evasive maneuvering... Fortunately when alone.The other aircraft was not moving relative to me, so we were approaching head on. I turned and finally realized I was trying to dodge Jupiter.
At the time, neither Leslie or I could tell a Mooney from the Cherokee, which we had actually followed.