![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Roger Long" om wrote in
message ... [...] You should always be dividing your attention between inside and outside. IMHO, not even close. Not for VFR flight. The airplane is perfectly flyable without ANY reference to the instruments, or anything inside the airplane. Turning base to final is no time to be wasting ANY effort looking at instruments, and is certainly no time to be attempting to use the instruments as feedback for control inputs. A pilot who cannot judge bank angle and coordination without consulting the turn coordinator and attitude indicator is one who needs to get back to the basics. What happens to low hours, and even high hours pilots when they are stressed, is fixating on the view outside the plane and pushing the plane into a stall spin trying to turn too tightly back to the runway centerline. They only do that if they fail to keep the airplane coordinated. One does not need to consult the instrument panel in order to keep the airplane coordinated. [...] Pilots, especially students, should be checking airspeed, etc. all through the pattern. Again, not necessary at all. It's all well and good to keep an eye on things, of course. But any pilot should be able to go extended periods of time in the pattern without looking at the ASI or any other instrument. Airspeed in particular should be second-nature. Pitch and power will result in the desired airspeed, and a pilot familiar with the airplane knows what pitch and power to set in the pattern. Additionally, aircraft noise and control feel gives you reasonably good information about airspeed (within five knots or so). I check my airspeed indicator maybe a couple of times before turning final, and then maybe two or three more times while flying final, assuming everything else is going fine. It's certainly not a significant part of my visual scan. The vast majority of my visual scan is devoted to looking outside the airplane. Pete |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Did the Germans have the Norden bombsight? | Cub Driver | Military Aviation | 106 | May 12th 04 07:18 AM |
How 'bout a thread on the F-22 with no mud slinging, no axe grinding, no emotional diatribes, and just some clear, objective discussion? | Scott Ferrin | Military Aviation | 23 | January 8th 04 12:39 AM |
This post will clear a lot of things up | Jack White | Military Aviation | 0 | September 14th 03 10:52 AM |