View Full Version : Landings question
Cats
September 9th 06, 09:52 AM
I am one of those people with ongoing intermittent landing problems. I
have good patches - managed to get solo recently - and then bad
patches. The bad patches probably co-incide with forgetting to look up
as I start the round-out, so there is no hold-off and a rather heavy
landing, sometimes with a bounce.
I've got my own ideas on how to address this, was curious if anyone
else here has had the same problem and if so, how did you deal with it?
Unfortunately I reckon I developed the bad habit fairly early in my
flying, as it was well-established by the time someone pointed out what
was going on. Since I seem to be reasonably good at doing what I'm
told to do, via a route from ears to hands & feet that misses my brain,
I suspect I've flattered to deceive in the front seat.
Doug Haluza
September 9th 06, 01:30 PM
Sounds like you have identified the most likely cause. I tell students
to watch the spot on approach, then when it is in "point blank range"
there is no need to look at it any more, and it's time to look at the
other end of the runway.
Tom Knauff has students stand near the runway and bend at the knees to
simulate the last part of the landing hold-off. You look down the
runway and note the perspective changes that are the cues you need to
maintain a slow descent. For a comparison you can also look at the
ground near your feet to see how ineffective this is.
Cats wrote:
> I am one of those people with ongoing intermittent landing problems. I
> have good patches - managed to get solo recently - and then bad
> patches. The bad patches probably co-incide with forgetting to look up
> as I start the round-out, so there is no hold-off and a rather heavy
> landing, sometimes with a bounce.
>
> I've got my own ideas on how to address this, was curious if anyone
> else here has had the same problem and if so, how did you deal with it?
> Unfortunately I reckon I developed the bad habit fairly early in my
> flying, as it was well-established by the time someone pointed out what
> was going on. Since I seem to be reasonably good at doing what I'm
> told to do, via a route from ears to hands & feet that misses my brain,
> I suspect I've flattered to deceive in the front seat.
Papa3
September 9th 06, 02:07 PM
Cats wrote:
> I am one of those people with ongoing intermittent landing problems. I
> have good patches - managed to get solo recently - and then bad
> patches. The bad patches probably co-incide with forgetting to look up
> as I start the round-out, so there is no hold-off and a rather heavy
> landing, sometimes with a bounce.
>
I have students sit in the glider while two other folks stand outside:
one levels the wings, the other one stands at the tail. We then lift
the tail to the pitch attitude that approximates approach speed to get
a good feel for that sight picture. I ask the student to carefully
pick some reference points and try to ingrain those in his/her mind.
We then rotate to landing attitude and to the same. I really want the
person to get the idea that they rotat to a certain attitude and then
hold there while speed bleeds off. Obviously, this isn't perfect,
since the rotation really needs to happen a little bit higher up
(grin), but it does give the sense for the amount of pitch change
required.
Depending on the aircraft, the rotation can be pretty significant (e.g.
a 2-33) or pretty subtle (e.g. a G103).
I definitely agree that getting yourself to focus on a point in the
distance (e.g. tree tops at the far end of the runway) makes this whole
process easier. Whatever you do, spend some time on the ground in the
airplane fooling around with this.
Erik Mann
LS8-18 P3
p.s. A good friend of mine did the same thing for me when I was trying
to learn to fly taildraggers in a J3 Cub. It was really helpful to
get a sense for the min and max pitch attitudes required.
bumper
September 9th 06, 04:24 PM
"Cats" > wrote in message
ps.com...
>I am one of those people with ongoing intermittent landing problems. I
> have good patches - managed to get solo recently - and then bad
> patches. The bad patches probably co-incide with forgetting to look up
> as I start the round-out, so there is no hold-off and a rather heavy
> landing, sometimes with a bounce.
>
> I've got my own ideas on how to address this, was curious if anyone
> else here has had the same problem and if so, how did you deal with it?
> Unfortunately I reckon I developed the bad habit fairly early in my
> flying, as it was well-established by the time someone pointed out what
> was going on. Since I seem to be reasonably good at doing what I'm
> told to do, via a route from ears to hands & feet that misses my brain,
> I suspect I've flattered to deceive in the front seat.
>
First, make sure your altimeter is accurately set before launch. Then, when
on short final, carefully watch the altimeter instead of the runway. When at
5 feet AGL, push the stick forward all the way - - hard. While this method
will not usually result in the smoothest of landings, whatever landings you
do manage to accomplish, before being kicked out of your club or banished
from the airfield, will all be pretty much consistent.
all the best,
bumper
kirk.stant
September 9th 06, 05:06 PM
bumper wrote:
> First, make sure your altimeter is accurately set before launch. Then, when
> on short final, carefully watch the altimeter instead of the runway. When at
> 5 feet AGL, push the stick forward all the way - - hard. While this method
> will not usually result in the smoothest of landings, whatever landings you
> do manage to accomplish, before being kicked out of your club or banished
> from the airfield, will all be pretty much consistent.
So, bumper, it started to rain on your way to the gliderport this
morning?
Then again, I must admit I have seen some landings that seem to have
used the procedure you describe - fun to watch, especially it it's a
G-103 being abused.
Something about practicing no-spoiler landings...
Cheers,
Kirk
66
Doug Haluza
September 9th 06, 07:23 PM
Actually, this is not too far from what I was "taught" except that I
was told to watch the airspeed and fly the 2-33 right into the runway
and up on the skid. It wasn't until I was preparing for my commercial
checkride that I had an instructor actually teach me how to land.
bumper wrote:
>
> First, make sure your altimeter is accurately set before launch. Then, when
> on short final, carefully watch the altimeter instead of the runway. When at
> 5 feet AGL, push the stick forward all the way - - hard. While this method
> will not usually result in the smoothest of landings, whatever landings you
> do manage to accomplish, before being kicked out of your club or banished
> from the airfield, will all be pretty much consistent.
>
> all the best,
>
> bumper
Private
September 9th 06, 10:07 PM
"Cats" > wrote in message
ps.com...
>I am one of those people with ongoing intermittent landing problems. I
> have good patches - managed to get solo recently - and then bad
> patches. The bad patches probably co-incide with forgetting to look up
> as I start the round-out, so there is no hold-off and a rather heavy
> landing, sometimes with a bounce.
>
> I've got my own ideas on how to address this, was curious if anyone
> else here has had the same problem and if so, how did you deal with it?
> Unfortunately I reckon I developed the bad habit fairly early in my
> flying, as it was well-established by the time someone pointed out what
> was going on. Since I seem to be reasonably good at doing what I'm
> told to do, via a route from ears to hands & feet that misses my brain,
> I suspect I've flattered to deceive in the front seat.
>
I am not a CFI or CFIG so claim no authority, but/and can only comment on
what worked for me.
It is said by many that the route to good landings is practice, practice,
practice. The key is not to keep practicing your mistakes. Learning to
land in gliders is difficult because it is hard (and expensive) to do enough
of them. Tows are expensive and we seldom make more than a small number of
landings in a training day. IMHE the best way to learn to land is with a
GOOD CFI, in a light tailwheel aircraft and at a small quiet airport. This
will allow you to make many landings in an hour and is much more cost and
time effective than purchasing tows. Gliders require ground crews for
assistance and it is hard to get more than 4 landings /hr. An aircraft
needs no assistance and can easily make 12 or more landings in an hour, and
the cost per landing will be a small fraction of the cost of gliders + tows.
A winch will change the economics but I suspect that the powered aircraft
will still be much cheaper. My personal favorite trainer is the Citabria
but the quality and experience of the CFI is much more important than the
choice of aircraft.
All students do not have identical learning styles. Some wish only to
memorize the mechanics and procedures, while others require a deeper
understanding of why the procedures function. The penny dropped for me
(after hundreds of just fair landings) after I learned the math and I could
understand WHY the flair required that the AOA be increased at a smooth
accelerating RATE as the aircraft slows in the holdoff (hint, think about
the Vsquared part of the lift formula), in order to allow the increasing
drag to bleed off speed and energy . There is a lot going on in the
roundout and again as an aircraft gets close to quitting to fly and the
control feedback (pressures) and visual perception becomes quite subtle.
IMHO, It is our job as pilots to place the aircraft at the right location
and speed (energy) and altitude and with the right attitude so that the
aircraft can decide when it wants to stop flying and land.
Happy landings to all,
Private
September 9th 06, 10:07 PM
This was my experience also. I think the instructors were trying to reduce
the rollout so they did not need to push back as far. We did spend a lot of
time replacing worn skids.
"Doug Haluza" > wrote in message
ups.com...
> Actually, this is not too far from what I was "taught" except that I
> was told to watch the airspeed and fly the 2-33 right into the runway
> and up on the skid. It wasn't until I was preparing for my commercial
> checkride that I had an instructor actually teach me how to land.
>
> bumper wrote:
>>
>> First, make sure your altimeter is accurately set before launch. Then,
>> when
>> on short final, carefully watch the altimeter instead of the runway. When
>> at
>> 5 feet AGL, push the stick forward all the way - - hard. While this
>> method
>> will not usually result in the smoothest of landings, whatever landings
>> you
>> do manage to accomplish, before being kicked out of your club or banished
>> from the airfield, will all be pretty much consistent.
>>
>> all the best,
>>
>> bumper
>
Roger Worden
September 9th 06, 11:33 PM
A couple of possibilities come to mind. Do you think one of these applies?
1. Rounding out too late, and therefore hitting the ground before achieving
a level attitude
2. Rounding out OK but raising the nose too much, then losing speed and
stalling, resulting in a short drop to the ground?
I've noticed a couple of times recently that I got distracted after rounding
out OK (perhaps by needing to correct my direction or to level my wings) and
let my speed get too low. That causes a stall at just a foot or half-foot
above the ground, leading to a bump onto the ground.
"Cats" > wrote in message
ps.com...
> I am one of those people with ongoing intermittent landing problems. I
> have good patches - managed to get solo recently - and then bad
> patches. The bad patches probably co-incide with forgetting to look up
> as I start the round-out, so there is no hold-off and a rather heavy
> landing, sometimes with a bounce.
>
> I've got my own ideas on how to address this, was curious if anyone
> else here has had the same problem and if so, how did you deal with it?
> Unfortunately I reckon I developed the bad habit fairly early in my
> flying, as it was well-established by the time someone pointed out what
> was going on. Since I seem to be reasonably good at doing what I'm
> told to do, via a route from ears to hands & feet that misses my brain,
> I suspect I've flattered to deceive in the front seat.
>
Mike Schumann
September 9th 06, 11:50 PM
My worst landing ever was caused by being too fast when I flaired and then
failing to use the spoilers to help drain energy. I ended up with some
pretty serious PIO and a number of hard bounces.
Mike Schumann
"Roger Worden" > wrote in message
. net...
>A couple of possibilities come to mind. Do you think one of these applies?
>
> 1. Rounding out too late, and therefore hitting the ground before
> achieving
> a level attitude
> 2. Rounding out OK but raising the nose too much, then losing speed and
> stalling, resulting in a short drop to the ground?
>
> I've noticed a couple of times recently that I got distracted after
> rounding
> out OK (perhaps by needing to correct my direction or to level my wings)
> and
> let my speed get too low. That causes a stall at just a foot or half-foot
> above the ground, leading to a bump onto the ground.
>
> "Cats" > wrote in message
> ps.com...
>> I am one of those people with ongoing intermittent landing problems. I
>> have good patches - managed to get solo recently - and then bad
>> patches. The bad patches probably co-incide with forgetting to look up
>> as I start the round-out, so there is no hold-off and a rather heavy
>> landing, sometimes with a bounce.
>>
>> I've got my own ideas on how to address this, was curious if anyone
>> else here has had the same problem and if so, how did you deal with it?
>> Unfortunately I reckon I developed the bad habit fairly early in my
>> flying, as it was well-established by the time someone pointed out what
>> was going on. Since I seem to be reasonably good at doing what I'm
>> told to do, via a route from ears to hands & feet that misses my brain,
>> I suspect I've flattered to deceive in the front seat.
>>
>
>
Don Johnstone
September 10th 06, 01:27 AM
Your description of the way to give a student a look
at the picture they shoul see and therefore the attitude
they should have is spot on. In addition I used to
point out that the point to which they raise their
eyes from looking at the reference point before they
make the attitude change must be as far as their percieved
horizon. If they choose a point too close I would point
out that when they pitch the nose up if the point is
too close they will not be able to see it and therefore
there is a tendency not to pitch up far enough in order
keep their chosen point in view.
At 13:12 09 September 2006, Papa3 wrote:
>
>Cats wrote:
>> I am one of those people with ongoing intermittent
>>landing problems. I
>> have good patches - managed to get solo recently -
>>and then bad
>> patches. The bad patches probably co-incide with
>>forgetting to look up
>> as I start the round-out, so there is no hold-off
>>and a rather heavy
>> landing, sometimes with a bounce.
>>
>
>
>I have students sit in the glider while two other folks
>stand outside:
>one levels the wings, the other one stands at the tail.
> We then lift
>the tail to the pitch attitude that approximates approach
>speed to get
>a good feel for that sight picture. I ask the student
>to carefully
>pick some reference points and try to ingrain those
>in his/her mind.
>We then rotate to landing attitude and to the same.
> I really want the
>person to get the idea that they rotat to a certain
>attitude and then
>hold there while speed bleeds off. Obviously, this
>isn't perfect,
>since the rotation really needs to happen a little
>bit higher up
>(grin), but it does give the sense for the amount of
>pitch change
>required.
>
>Depending on the aircraft, the rotation can be pretty
>significant (e.g.
>a 2-33) or pretty subtle (e.g. a G103).
>
>I definitely agree that getting yourself to focus on
>a point in the
>distance (e.g. tree tops at the far end of the runway)
>makes this whole
>process easier. Whatever you do, spend some time on
>the ground in the
>airplane fooling around with this.
>
>Erik Mann
>LS8-18 P3
>
>p.s. A good friend of mine did the same thing for me
>when I was trying
>to learn to fly taildraggers in a J3 Cub. It was
>really helpful to
>get a sense for the min and max pitch attitudes required.
>
>
Eric Greenwell
September 10th 06, 05:06 AM
Private wrote:
> It is said by many that the route to good landings is practice, practice,
> practice. The key is not to keep practicing your mistakes. Learning to
> land in gliders is difficult because it is hard (and expensive) to do enough
> of them.
I didn't find this to be true when I was an active CFIG; in fact, our
tow pilot (an airplane instructor) once remarked at how quickly glider
pilots learned to land compared to a student in airplanes. I think the
biggest difference, at least when I was teaching, was we had a 5 to 10
minute discussion after every landing as we pushed the glider back to
the launch point, and sometimes continued the discussion at the launch
point, even if the tow plane was back and ready to tow. This discussion
was very important, because the student had some time to think about the
previous landing, then learned to identify what when wrong and why, and
decide how to correct it.
Most students could do a decent landing in our Blanik after 15 flights,
starting with deciding when to break off the airwork and return to the
airport, entering the pattern, and finally, the actual "landing". I say
"landing" because I think the landing starts with the decision to land,
not the flare.
Contrast this with the "airplane" method, which often involves landing
after landing (touch and goes), with little discussion or time for
reflection. Eventually, the student is able to manage a landing, but
isn't really confident that he/she knows what is right.
> Tows are expensive and we seldom make more than a small number of
> landings in a training day. IMHE the best way to learn to land is with a
> GOOD CFI, in a light tailwheel aircraft and at a small quiet airport. This
> will allow you to make many landings in an hour and is much more cost and
> time effective than purchasing tows.
I haven't tried this technique, so I can't compare it to the glider-only
method, but the $$ will depend greatly on details of charges for the
tows, glider, and CFIG.
> Gliders require ground crews for
> assistance and it is hard to get more than 4 landings /hr.
We did it with the student, the instructor (me), and the tow pilot,
using unassisted takeoffs. Easy in the Blanik on 75'-100' wide pavement.
The first 3 launches were usually with a wing runner, though.
> An aircraft
> needs no assistance and can easily make 12 or more landings in an hour, and
> the cost per landing will be a small fraction of the cost of gliders + tows.
If the discussion and reflection take place between the landings, I
think this would be effective. I know Derek Piggot thinks a motorglider
is ideal for initial training for the reasons mentioned.
--
Note: email address new as of 9/4/2006
Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly
Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA
"Transponders in Sailplanes" on the Soaring Safety Foundation website
www.soaringsafety.org/prevention/articles.html
"A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation" at www.motorglider.org
Private
September 10th 06, 07:31 AM
"Eric Greenwell" > wrote in message
news:JaMMg.924$FS.290@trnddc04...
> Private wrote:
>
>> It is said by many that the route to good landings is practice, practice,
>> practice. The key is not to keep practicing your mistakes. Learning to
>> land in gliders is difficult because it is hard (and expensive) to do
>> enough of them.
>
> I didn't find this to be true when I was an active CFIG; in fact, our tow
> pilot (an airplane instructor) once remarked at how quickly glider pilots
> learned to land compared to a student in airplanes. I think the biggest
> difference, at least when I was teaching, was we had a 5 to 10 minute
> discussion after every landing as we pushed the glider back to the launch
> point, and sometimes continued the discussion at the launch point, even if
> the tow plane was back and ready to tow. This discussion was very
> important, because the student had some time to think about the previous
> landing, then learned to identify what when wrong and why, and decide how
> to correct it.
>
> Most students could do a decent landing in our Blanik after 15 flights,
> starting with deciding when to break off the airwork and return to the
> airport, entering the pattern, and finally, the actual "landing". I say
> "landing" because I think the landing starts with the decision to land,
> not the flare.
>
> Contrast this with the "airplane" method, which often involves landing
> after landing (touch and goes), with little discussion or time for
> reflection. Eventually, the student is able to manage a landing, but isn't
> really confident that he/she knows what is right.
I was advised against making touch and goes as they rob the student of
needed practice in the rollout which is the most important part of a
tailwheel landing. I was advised to do stop and goes, and while my stops
were seldom complete they did give me time to reconfigure the aircraft
properly for takeoff. I often notice that pilots doing T&Gs land too fast
and are unable to hold the nosewheel off in a proper (improperly named, full
stall) mains first landing. Some say this is the difference between
tricycle gear (a perfect approach but where the pilot quits flying when the
wheels touch) and a tailwheel (where the wheels touch and then the pilot
gets busy). I did find that the best practice was chopping power on
downwind and making a curving 180 to spot landing (with only a brief power
burst for engine clearing) and using slips for altitude control. At a
controlled field it is called a simulated engine failure and (if approved by
ATC) can allow slipping in front of other aircraft on a typical long
circuit.
>> Tows are expensive and we seldom make more than a small number of
>> landings in a training day. IMHE the best way to learn to land is with a
>> GOOD CFI, in a light tailwheel aircraft and at a small quiet airport.
>> This will allow you to make many landings in an hour and is much more
>> cost and time effective than purchasing tows.
>
> I haven't tried this technique, so I can't compare it to the glider-only
> method, but the $$ will depend greatly on details of charges for the tows,
> glider, and CFIG.
Agreed. Many club operations have very resonable glider rental rates and
the CFIG is often a volunteer but some would suggest that 'you get the
quality you pay for'.
>> Gliders require ground crews for assistance and it is hard to get more
>> than 4 landings /hr.
>
> We did it with the student, the instructor (me), and the tow pilot, using
> unassisted takeoffs. Easy in the Blanik on 75'-100' wide pavement. The
> first 3 launches were usually with a wing runner, though.
>
>> An aircraft needs no assistance and can easily make 12 or more landings
>> in an hour, and the cost per landing will be a small fraction of the cost
>> of gliders + tows.
>
> If the discussion and reflection take place between the landings, I think
> this would be effective. I know Derek Piggot thinks a motorglider is ideal
> for initial training for the reasons mentioned.
I did not feel that I had really learned to land properly and consistently
until I had made several hundred solo landings in several types of aircraft
and in a wide variety of wind and weather. Both the mistakes and the
improvements are now smaller but I am still learning and every landing is
self critiqued.
Tony Verhulst
September 10th 06, 03:07 PM
>> Most students could do a decent landing in our Blanik after 15 flights,
>> starting with deciding when to break off the airwork and return to the
>> airport, entering the pattern, and finally, the actual "landing". I say
>> "landing" because I think the landing starts with the decision to land,
>> not the flare.
Your "landing" is what most folks would call the pattern or circuit,
depending on your country of reference.
> I was advised against making touch and goes as they rob the student of
> needed practice in the rollout which is the most important part of a
> tailwheel landing. I was advised to do stop and goes, and while my stops
> were seldom complete they did give me time to reconfigure the aircraft
> properly for takeoff. I often notice that pilots doing T&Gs land too fast
> and are unable to hold the nosewheel off in a proper (improperly named, full
> stall) mains first landing.
They each have their place. I like touch and goes, if the runway length
is sufficient (don't ask :-) ), because it teaches a student to perform
multiple tasks in a short amount of time - plan and perform the landing,
maintain directional control, add power (torque, and other forces
change), maintain directional control, clean up the flaps, maintain
directional control, re-trim the aircraft, maintain directional control,
..... These are useful skills, IMHO. As for T&G pilots landing too fast
or in an improper attitude, that's the instructors fault, I think.
Tony V.
Vaughn Simon
September 10th 06, 04:23 PM
"Eric Greenwell" > wrote in message
news:JaMMg.924$FS.290@trnddc04...
> Private wrote:
>
>> It is said by many that the route to good landings is practice, practice,
>> practice. The key is not to keep practicing your mistakes. Learning to land
>> in gliders is difficult because it is hard (and expensive) to do enough of
>> them.
>
> I didn't find this to be true when I was an active CFIG;
I agree. Learning how to do a safe takeoff and tow are harder for most
glider students to grasp than the landing itself. With few exceptions, by the
time I felt good enough to solo a student safe landings had ceased to be a
serious issue several flights back; with the final issues involving the
takeoff/tow, consistency, or general judgment .
Vaughn
Cats
September 10th 06, 08:31 PM
Cats wrote:
<intermittent landing grief>
OK guys, maybe I wasn't clear. It's not a question of not being able
to do it at all, it's a question of slipping into back into getting
fixated on the reference point and rounding out too late and hitting
the ground hard enough to bounce and make the guy in the back cringe.
After the problem came back, my own diagnosis was failure to look along
the field once I start the roundout - that after a number of good
landings, I was maybe getting cocky about it and forgetting what I was
doing that worked.
Tried it out today - carefully reminded myself of the need to look
along the field, and produced a good landing every time with & without
the man in the back seat, including my first flight in a single-seater.
My own solution at present is to at least mentally add it on to the
end of 'eventualities' - 'and when I reach the round-out look along the
field'.
Doug Haluza
September 10th 06, 10:02 PM
Try the exercise where you stand alongside (or on) the runway, and bend
at the knees while you look down the runway several times. Do it again
from time to time, especially before a flight. Get used to seeing the
perspective change. Then, when you are landing, you will know to expect
this, and it will help you remember to look up, rather than fixating on
the spot.
Cats wrote:
> Cats wrote:
> <intermittent landing grief>
>
> OK guys, maybe I wasn't clear. It's not a question of not being able
> to do it at all, it's a question of slipping into back into getting
> fixated on the reference point and rounding out too late and hitting
> the ground hard enough to bounce and make the guy in the back cringe.
>
> After the problem came back, my own diagnosis was failure to look along
> the field once I start the roundout - that after a number of good
> landings, I was maybe getting cocky about it and forgetting what I was
> doing that worked.
>
> Tried it out today - carefully reminded myself of the need to look
> along the field, and produced a good landing every time with & without
> the man in the back seat, including my first flight in a single-seater.
> My own solution at present is to at least mentally add it on to the
> end of 'eventualities' - 'and when I reach the round-out look along the
> field'.
Capt. Geoffrey Thorpe
September 10th 06, 11:50 PM
"Tony Verhulst" > wrote in message
. ..
>
<...> >
> They each have their place. I like touch and goes, if the runway length is
> sufficient (don't ask :-) ), because it teaches a student to perform
<...>
I've been known to do 3 or 4 "touch and go's" before the final full stop
landing. And all on the same approch. :-)
--
Geoff
The Sea Hawk at Wow Way d0t Com
remove spaces and make the obvious substitutions to reply by mail
When immigration is outlawed, only outlaws will immigrate.
W.J. \(Bill\) Dean \(U.K.\).
September 11th 06, 01:36 AM
Derek Piggott did exactly the same thing as Tom Knauff, especially when
training instructors.
W.J. (Bill) Dean (U.K.).
Remove "ic" to reply.
>
> "Doug Haluza" > wrote in message
> oups.com...
>
> Sounds like you have identified the most likely cause. I tell students
> to watch the spot on approach, then when it is in "point blank range"
> there is no need to look at it any more, and it's time to look at the
> other end of the runway.
>
> Tom Knauff has students stand near the runway and bend at the knees to
> simulate the last part of the landing hold-off. You look down the
> runway and note the perspective changes that are the cues you need to
> maintain a slow descent. For a comparison you can also look at the
> ground near your feet to see how ineffective this is.
>
Bert Willing
September 11th 06, 08:58 AM
Get yourself an instructor.
Don't think that you can learn how to fly by reading posts on a newsgroup.
"Cats" > wrote in message
ps.com...
>I am one of those people with ongoing intermittent landing problems. I
> have good patches - managed to get solo recently - and then bad
> patches. The bad patches probably co-incide with forgetting to look up
> as I start the round-out, so there is no hold-off and a rather heavy
> landing, sometimes with a bounce.
>
> I've got my own ideas on how to address this, was curious if anyone
> else here has had the same problem and if so, how did you deal with it?
> Unfortunately I reckon I developed the bad habit fairly early in my
> flying, as it was well-established by the time someone pointed out what
> was going on. Since I seem to be reasonably good at doing what I'm
> told to do, via a route from ears to hands & feet that misses my brain,
> I suspect I've flattered to deceive in the front seat.
>
>
Cats
September 11th 06, 02:17 PM
Bert Willing wrote:
> Get yourself an instructor.
FFS. Who do you think does my check flights, who decided I could fly a
single seater? Is there anything wrong with asking advice from other
people? After all - what do you think happens at the bar after flying?
Bert Willing
September 11th 06, 04:37 PM
There's nothing wrong by asking questions, and I trust that you came that
far by the help of an instructor.
However, if it comes to basic training, I don't think that advice from a
newsgroup will get you anywhere. You don't know the person who gives you
that advice (he might be no instructor at all), and personal chemistry plays
a strong role in the relation student-instructor.
Now, if you are looking for "after the flights at the bar" talk, then you
are absolutely in the right place with this newsgroup :-)
"Cats" > wrote in message
oups.com...
>
> Bert Willing wrote:
>> Get yourself an instructor.
>
> FFS. Who do you think does my check flights, who decided I could fly a
> single seater? Is there anything wrong with asking advice from other
> people? After all - what do you think happens at the bar after flying?
>
Cats
September 11th 06, 09:45 PM
Bert Willing wrote:
> There's nothing wrong by asking questions,
Hence your previous post?
> and I trust that you came that
> far by the help of an instructor.
So far as I know in the UK there is no other way. I can't speak for
the US of course.
> However, if it comes to basic training, I don't think that advice from a
> newsgroup will get you anywhere. You don't know the person who gives you
> that advice (he might be no instructor at all), and personal chemistry plays
> a strong role in the relation student-instructor.
But I do have the mental capability to think about the advice, turn it
over, compare it with what the instructors are saying (or not saying)
and so on. It's true the person giving the advice may not be an
instructor but that doesn't necessarily invalidate it. At times it
seems that many instructors (and this holds in many areas, not just
gliding) have forgotten what it's like to find things difficult. I may
be pretty new to gliding, but I've been around Usenet for many years
and am well familiar with 'caveat emptor'.
Having read the various bits of advice earlier, it strikes me that many
people have not actually addressed the question I asked - 'how, if you
had this problem, did you deal with it?' but have actually addressed a
whole other lot of questions. Personally doing a knees bend beside the
airfield strikes me as too little, too late. If I'm not aware of the
changing picture some 20' up I will fly the glider into the ground as
that's when the round-out starts. It also struck me that something
simple was sometimes being turned into something complicated.
>
> Now, if you are looking for "after the flights at the bar" talk, then you
> are absolutely in the right place with this newsgroup :-)
>
> "Cats" > wrote in message
> oups.com...
> >
> > Bert Willing wrote:
> >> Get yourself an instructor.
> >
> > FFS. Who do you think does my check flights, who decided I could fly a
> > single seater? Is there anything wrong with asking advice from other
> > people? After all - what do you think happens at the bar after flying?
> >
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