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#1
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I almost snickered a bit after watching this "real life" story about
how a pilot had to land his plane after loosing engine power at 500 feet. After 35 years of flying gliders this looks normal to me. Maybe power planes are really hard to fly. This guy has 4700 hours and he overshot his turn onto the runway and lands way left of the center line. I think the solution is that every new power pilot should be required to have 20 flights in gliders before even stepping into a plane with an engine. http://flash.aopa.org/asf/pilotstori...turn/index.cfm |
#2
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![]() "soartech" wrote in message ... I think the solution is that every new power pilot should be required to have 20 flights in gliders before even stepping into a plane with an engine. I have a lot more time in gliders than in airplanes, but I wouldn't brag too much in advance about my likelihood of making a safe power-off emergency landing in an airplane. Flying a 7 to 1 airplane with little or no glide path control takes a somewhat different skill set than doing the same with a 30 to 1 glider with good spoilers.and (likely) a lower approach speed. Vaughn |
#3
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On Mar 25, 12:15*pm, "vaughn" wrote:
"soartech" wrote in message ... I think the solution is that every new power pilot should be required to have 20 flights in gliders before even stepping into a plane with an engine. I have a lot more time in gliders than in airplanes, but I wouldn't brag too much in advance about my likelihood of making a safe power-off emergency landing in an airplane. *Flying a 7 to 1 airplane with little or no glide path control takes a somewhat different skill set than doing the same with a 30 to 1 glider with good spoilers.and (likely) a lower approach speed. Vaughn this. all my power flying friends seem to think i don't have any reason to sweat an engine failure in an airplane now since i have glider experience. not so. having an engine failure at 500 ft in an airplane and ending up with a successful landing is something to be proud of, I think. You have, at best, 60 seconds to make all the right decisions from that altitude. You'll probably spend at least 1/3 of that time realizing what went wrong and then recovering from the mistakes you made during that realization period. then you have (at best) 40 seconds to determine a course of action and execute. I'll take a real glider any day. |
#4
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On Mar 25, 10:51*am, soartech wrote:
I almost snickered a bit after watching this "real life" story about how a pilot had to land his plane after loosing engine power at 500 feet. After 35 years of flying gliders this looks normal to me. Maybe power planes are really hard to fly. This guy has 4700 hours and he overshot his turn onto the runway and lands way left of the center line. I think the solution is that every new power pilot should be required to have 20 flights in gliders before even stepping into a plane with an engine.http://flash.aopa.org/asf/pilotstori...turn/index.cfm Sad thing is the AOPA site never mention the obvious error that if he had turned left rather than right he could have used the cross runway in a smooth 270 degree turn rather than the 360 degree turn required to go back to the same runway. |
#5
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On Mar 25, 12:26*pm, Tony wrote:
On Mar 25, 12:15*pm, "vaughn" wrote: "soartech" wrote in message .... I think the solution is that every new power pilot should be required to have 20 flights in gliders before even stepping into a plane with an engine. I have a lot more time in gliders than in airplanes, but I wouldn't brag too much in advance about my likelihood of making a safe power-off emergency landing in an airplane. *Flying a 7 to 1 airplane with little or no glide path control takes a somewhat different skill set than doing the same with a 30 to 1 glider with good spoilers.and (likely) a lower approach speed. Vaughn this. all my power flying friends seem to think i don't have any reason to sweat an engine failure in an airplane now since i have glider experience. *not so. *having an engine failure at 500 ft in an airplane and ending up with a successful landing is something to be proud of, I think. *You have, at best, 60 seconds to make all the right decisions from that altitude. *You'll probably spend at least 1/3 of that time realizing what went wrong and then recovering from the mistakes you made during that realization period. *then you have (at best) 40 seconds to determine a course of action and execute. I'll take a real glider any day. Agreed. A normal approach in a glider is very similar to a power on approach in a plane - as long as you don't need to go around. If you want to simulate a power off approach, take a glider with real effective spoilers (the old L13 Blanik will do nicely, not sure if the L23's spoilers are as good), get off tow over the field, pull on full spoilers, then fly the pattern at 60 knots or so (without closing the spoilers). Even more dramatic with a glider like a 1-34 or 2-32 with terminal velocity dive brakes. Actually, its a pretty good training maneuver, and fun - but remember, in a glider you can still close the spoilers if you pooch it; but in a power plane with an engine failure, you have to get it right the first time. This difference may be why power-only pilots think glider pilots are either 1. Stupid or 2. Extremely Skilled! Kirk |
#6
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On Mar 25, 10:51*am, soartech wrote:
I almost snickered a bit after watching this "real life" story about how a pilot had to land his plane after loosing engine power at 500 feet. After 35 years of flying gliders this looks normal to me. Maybe power planes are really hard to fly. This guy has 4700 hours and he overshot his turn onto the runway and lands way left of the center line. I think the solution is that every new power pilot should be required to have 20 flights in gliders before even stepping into a plane with an engine.http://flash.aopa.org/asf/pilotstori...turn/index.cfm Too bad the AOPA site did not point out the obvious error that the pilot could have made a 270 degree left turn onto the cross runway and been much safer than the 360 degree turns required to go back to the same runway. |
#7
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On Mar 25, 10:26*am, Tony wrote:
On Mar 25, 12:15*pm, "vaughn" wrote: "soartech" wrote in message .... I think the solution is that every new power pilot should be required to have 20 flights in gliders before even stepping into a plane with an engine. I have a lot more time in gliders than in airplanes, but I wouldn't brag too much in advance about my likelihood of making a safe power-off emergency landing in an airplane. *Flying a 7 to 1 airplane with little or no glide path control takes a somewhat different skill set than doing the same with a 30 to 1 glider with good spoilers.and (likely) a lower approach speed. Hi Gang Having landed out in a Lanair ES after a fire and engine out in a tiny field on the western slope of the Sierras where trees dominated the scenery and surviving I believe my gliding experience greatly enhanced my survivability. With a glider at all times one has a bailout site in mind and each landing must be correct. No going around for a second chance. I sense that most power plane only pilots do not put the emphasis that we glider pilots do of mentally planning a landing. Too low push the throttle forward. Too high a go around. Check out the NTSB accident reports on missed landings. I am certain that for about 50% of the missed landings if an experienced glider pilot had been PIC the outcomes would have been different. I really think my own incident with the Lancair would have been very different and tragic without my glider experience. Dave ... I think the solution is that every new power pilot should be required to have 20 flights in gliders before even stepping into a plane with an engine. Vaughn this. all my power flying friends seem to think i don't have any reason to sweat an engine failure in an airplane now since i have glider experience. *not so. *having an engine failure at 500 ft in an airplane and ending up with a successful landing is something to be proud of, I think. *You have, at best, 60 seconds to make all the right decisions from that altitude. *You'll probably spend at least 1/3 of that time realizing what went wrong and then recovering from the mistakes you made during that realization period. *then you have (at best) 40 seconds to determine a course of action and execute. I'll take a real glider any day. |
#8
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Hi Gang
Having landed out in a Lanair ES after a fire and engine out in a tiny field on the western slope of the Sierras where trees dominated the scenery and surviving I believe my gliding experience greatly enhanced my survivability. With a glider at all times one has a bailout site in mind and each landing must be correct. No going around for a second chance. I sense that most power plane only pilots do not put the emphasis that we glider pilots do of planning a landing. Too low push the throttle forward. Too high a go around. Check out the NTSB accident reports on missed landings. I am certain that for about 50% of the missed landings if an experienced glider pilot had been PIC the outcomes would have been different. I really think my own incident with the Lancair would have been very different and tragic without my glider experience. Dave ... I think the solution is that every new power pilot should be required to have 20 flights in gliders before even stepping into a plane with an engine. |
#9
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At 16:51 25 March 2011, soartech wrote:
I almost snickered a bit after watching this "real life" story about how a pilot had to land his plane after loosing engine power at 500 feet. After 35 years of flying gliders this looks normal to me. Maybe power planes are really hard to fly. This guy has 4700 hours and he overshot his turn onto the runway and lands way left of the center line. I think the solution is that every new power pilot should be required to have 20 flights in gliders before even stepping into a plane with an engine. http://flash.aopa.org/asf/pilotstori...turn/index.cfm As A Commercial Glider Pilot who happens to fly alot of Cessna single engine stuff the above comment that Mr. Soartech was snickering at one of our fellow airmans ,less than stellar performance, in a aircraft Completely different than a glider , in what is a hair raising, scary, potentially fatal situation,is sad to me. A 500' engine out is a serious thing. In a glider at 500' you can glide a couple of miles, easy. At something like a 120 ft/ min sink rate. I would like to load Mr. Soartech in a C172 full of fuel, and at max climb attitude,full power, turn off the mags and see how he does. First of all, if you ball it, up the odds are you are going to turn into a fireball. Second, by the time you react, with a surprising very large attitude nose down shove required on the yoke, which you NEVER do in normal flight ops, the airspeed is going to be low and the ground coming up very fast, oh yea and you might have some people in there with you, like your kids. Its not quite like your at 500' at 65 knots in your LS 4 let me tell you. So lets not be to harsh on our fellow aviators, after all the history books are full of World Class level Multi Nationals winners/instructors in gliders that have killed themselves and we continue to do so at a very steady and consistent pace. We land short, we forget to lower the gear, we forget to connect the controls, we forget to turn on the 02, were on the wrong frequency, We hit our friends in thermals we land in the trees! the list goes on. Lets be careful out there this season and watch out for each other. |
#10
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Yes, a 500 ft engine out on takeoff in a light plane is more like a
125 ft rope break. Now do a 180 turn around to land. Try to simulate this emergency some time if you have power license or a friend to fly with. Just be prepared to see how fast the ground comes up. |
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