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#1
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I'm studying for my written and having an awful time with the
questions dealing with primary/secondary instruments for pitch/bank/power during various phases of flight. The distinctions appear to be senseless hair splitting, and I'm getting them mostly wrong in the practice tests. Some of this is due to my study materials explaining which is the right answer, but not really *why*. Is there any way to logically learn this in a way I have a prayer of remembering, or do I just have to memorize the matrix? Thanks, Jeremy |
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#3
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I'll try. The primary instrument is the needle/indicator that you don't want
to move. For example, using P/S in a level turn, you don't want the altimeter needle to move...it is primary pitch; you want to maintain a standard rate turn, with the indicator not moving from the index, so the turn coordinator is primary bank. The airspeed indicator is primary pitch only when in a constant-speed situation (climb/descent). The attitude indicator is primary ONLY when transitioning from one stable situation to another...for example, to enter a constant speed climb from level flight you initially establish pitch attitude by reference to the attitude indicator, but once you are in the climb the airspeed becomes primary pitch. To level off it is back to the A/I until the altimeter needle stops moving, at which time the altimeter becomes primary pitch again. The FAA loves primary/secondary. Hardly anyone else does, and your instructor should teach you to meld both systems together. Bob Gardner I've got a dandy table on page 2-11 of THE COMPLETE ADVANCED PILOT. Bob Gardner "Jeremy" wrote in message om... I'm studying for my written and having an awful time with the questions dealing with primary/secondary instruments for pitch/bank/power during various phases of flight. The distinctions appear to be senseless hair splitting, and I'm getting them mostly wrong in the practice tests. Some of this is due to my study materials explaining which is the right answer, but not really *why*. Is there any way to logically learn this in a way I have a prayer of remembering, or do I just have to memorize the matrix? Thanks, Jeremy |
#4
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I'm[...] having an awful time with the
questions dealing with primary/secondary instruments for pitch/bank/power during various phases of flight. The distinctions appear to be senseless hair splitting... In saying X is primary for Y, try thinking just WHY you are controlling Y in that phase of flight. For example, in level flight, why are you controlling pitch? The object of level flight is to maintain a constant altitude, so although pitch deviations will turn into altitude and airspeed deviations, it is constant altitude you are attempting to maintain. So, the altimiter would be "primary" for pitch. In a climb, you are likely to want a constant airspeed and rate of climb. The altitude will be changing (it better be!), and the VSI lags, so it's hard to use either as a primary instrument. Airpseed responds right away to pitch deviations, so it's primary. Hold airspeed steady (once you know what it should be) and your climb will be fine. Entering a climb, what would you do? You could use the airspeed as a primary pitch instrument, but you are not (yet) trying to hold a steady airspeed. The attitude indicator is primary, because it gives a direct and rapid readout of the pitch attitude you want. The desired result of your control input when entering a climb is a certain pitch attitude. The attitude indicator gives you that directly. Your airspeed bleeds off and your altitude begins to increase... Once you are climbing, the desired result is a constant airspeed (while you climb, supported by the altimiter). Leveling off is like entering a climb, in reverse. Set the desired (level) pitch attitude, and when things settle in... (and you are no longer climbing or accelerating) hold a constant altitude. Does this help? You still need the supporting instruments (for example, in a climb, check the altimeter to ensure that you are in fact climbing!) but the instrument that gives you the most direct reading of the most immediate desired result of a control input is what you use as a primary instrument. Try that thinking on the other areas of flight control and see if it doesn't help you understand. Jose -- (for Email, make the obvious changes in my address) |
#5
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Jeremy
I had the same problem also, I would get them wrong on the tests untill stopped thinking about the answers and thought about how I actually fly. picture what they are asking, then what you really do when flying and you will probably get it right. Jeremy wrote: I'm studying for my written and having an awful time with the questions dealing with primary/secondary instruments for pitch/bank/power during various phases of flight. The distinctions appear to be senseless hair splitting, and I'm getting them mostly wrong in the practice tests. Some of this is due to my study materials explaining which is the right answer, but not really *why*. Is there any way to logically learn this in a way I have a prayer of remembering, or do I just have to memorize the matrix? Thanks, Jeremy |
#6
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Bob Gardner ) wrote:
I'll try. The primary instrument is the needle/indicator that you don't want to move. snip Wow, I wish I had you for an instrument instructor. As one who also struggled with this matrix, I would have breezed right through this had I thought of it in the way you explained. -- Peter ----== Posted via Newsfeed.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeed.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= 19 East/West-Coast Specialized Servers - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
#7
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I would have breezed right through this had I thought of it in the
way you explained. You also would have had no problem if your instructor had taught you the control/performance methodology. The best way to deal with complexity is to choose a simpler way. ;-) |
#8
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The problem, Greg, is that examiners are told in standardization class to
ask about P/S on orals. Gripes the hell out of most of them because they don't believe it either. Most instrument pilots end up using a combination, or "whatever works." Bob Gardner "Greg Esres" wrote in message ... I would have breezed right through this had I thought of it in the way you explained. You also would have had no problem if your instructor had taught you the control/performance methodology. The best way to deal with complexity is to choose a simpler way. ;-) |
#9
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The problem, Greg, is that examiners are told in standardization
class to ask about P/S on orals. Gripes the hell out of most of them because they don't believe it either. Most instrument pilots end up using a combination, or "whatever works." The current PTS explicitly allows EITHER control/performance or primary/supporting, both on the instrument and instrument instructor checkrides. |
#10
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Thanks for the advice everyone, it helped!
"Jeff" wrote in message ... Jeremy I had the same problem also, I would get them wrong on the tests untill stopped thinking about the answers and thought about how I actually fly. picture what they are asking, then what you really do when flying and you will probably get it right. Jeremy wrote: I'm studying for my written and having an awful time with the questions dealing with primary/secondary instruments for pitch/bank/power during various phases of flight. The distinctions appear to be senseless hair splitting, and I'm getting them mostly wrong in the practice tests. Some of this is due to my study materials explaining which is the right answer, but not really *why*. Is there any way to logically learn this in a way I have a prayer of remembering, or do I just have to memorize the matrix? Thanks, Jeremy |
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