View Full Version : Learning to lean
WingFlaps
March 12th 08, 10:01 AM
The other day I was doing some instrument work brush up for my flight
test. The first five hours of IF I did about 9 moths ago, and at that
time I recall that I did not find it all hard to roll out of turns on
a heading. However that seems to have changed, this week I found it
quite hard to steady the plane after a long rate 1 (TC only as this
was partial panel work). I've been puzzling over this and wonder if
the trouble is that I'm starting to feel the flight more by other
senses -in effect have I developed a sensitivity to the leans as my
body has learned to feed more flight attitude info to my cranium? In
any case, there could not have been a more dramatic demo for why MSFS
is a pale shadow of the reaql thing! Is this to be expected when just
using the TC in partial panel? Any thoughts welcome.
Cheers
Dudley Henriques[_2_]
March 12th 08, 10:46 AM
WingFlaps wrote:
> The other day I was doing some instrument work brush up for my flight
> test. The first five hours of IF I did about 9 moths ago, and at that
> time I recall that I did not find it all hard to roll out of turns on
> a heading. However that seems to have changed, this week I found it
> quite hard to steady the plane after a long rate 1 (TC only as this
> was partial panel work). I've been puzzling over this and wonder if
> the trouble is that I'm starting to feel the flight more by other
> senses -in effect have I developed a sensitivity to the leans as my
> body has learned to feed more flight attitude info to my cranium? In
> any case, there could not have been a more dramatic demo for why MSFS
> is a pale shadow of the reaql thing! Is this to be expected when just
> using the TC in partial panel? Any thoughts welcome.
>
> Cheers
Yes, it's quite common, especially when starting partial panel. It will
pass. That you're aware of it is the biggest step in that direction.
Just relax; concentrate on your scan and fly deliberitely based on what
the panel is telling you.
The usual problem in partial panel work is that you're working the pitot
static instruments. They have lag and you most likely will have a
tendency to wander into your physical senses as you correct due to that
lag. Working partial panel is a longer learning curve as you adjust to
the idiosyncrasies involved.
Don't worry. If you know what's causing the problem, you are well on the
way to solving it :-))
--
Dudley Henriques
Bertie the Bunyip[_24_]
March 12th 08, 10:47 AM
WingFlaps > wrote in news:56f73711-f800-4a62-9621-
:
> The other day I was doing some instrument work brush up for my flight
> test. The first five hours of IF I did about 9 moths ago, and at that
> time I recall that I did not find it all hard to roll out of turns on
> a heading. However that seems to have changed, this week I found it
> quite hard to steady the plane after a long rate 1 (TC only as this
> was partial panel work). I've been puzzling over this and wonder if
> the trouble is that I'm starting to feel the flight more by other
> senses -in effect have I developed a sensitivity to the leans as my
> body has learned to feed more flight attitude info to my cranium? In
> any case, there could not have been a more dramatic demo for why MSFS
> is a pale shadow of the reaql thing! Is this to be expected when just
> using the TC in partial panel? Any thoughts welcome.
>
Unless your gyros are tired out, you've probably just lost the knack. It's
a mechanical thing. Your rate of roll needs to be consstent and smoth and
after that you only need an approximate number of degrees on your heading
to lead the turn.
Bertie
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