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#1
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Have you ever really taken your aircraft to the bottom edges of its
flight ability and airspeed, and flown it with any degree of precision and of more than just a few moments/minutes? Are you comfortable doing it on the edge or nibble of a stall? Can you do it while holding altitude and desired headings within reasonable limits - depending on your experience? When is the last time you did it just to sharpen your skills without prompting by a CFI in the next seat? When is the last time you spent some diligent time doing stalls and the full range of them with your aircraft? Are you honestly comfortable with your abilities? I know I have to think about it every time I go fly and always find some fault with my performance. In a previous post it appeared I aggravated some pilots or CFI's with saying I felt many pilots didn't know how to fly slowly these days. I have seen a slow errosion of what used to be basic pilot skills and level of performance with too many pilots compared with acceptable standards not that many years ago. Now if that won't open a bucket of worms I'll be surprised. Fact is, just making the FAA minimums doesn't necessarily make you safe or even a good pilot. Care to weigh in on the issues? I'll be polite in my responses in accordance to the way they are presented to me. No axe to grind, no ego to inflate (its big enough already thank you) just a sincere desire to make pilots think a little more about what they are doing when they go flying. You need to make your own mistakes to hopefully learn from them and avoid repetition. Ol Shy & Bashful |
#2
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..... and have you ever done it in an airplane without a stall warning
indicator or an airspeed indicator that drops to 0 before your wing quits flying? Jim wrote in message oups.com... Have you ever really taken your aircraft to the bottom edges of its flight ability and airspeed, and flown it with any degree of precision and of more than just a few moments/minutes? Are you comfortable doing it on the edge or nibble of a stall? Can you do it while holding altitude and desired headings within reasonable limits - depending on your experience? |
#3
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... Have you ever really taken your aircraft to the bottom edges of its flight ability and airspeed, and flown it with any degree of precision and of more than just a few moments/minutes? Are you comfortable doing it on the edge or nibble of a stall? Can you do it while holding altitude and desired headings within reasonable limits - depending on your experience? When is the last time you did it just to sharpen your skills without prompting by a CFI in the next seat? When is the last time you spent some diligent time doing stalls and the full range of them with your aircraft? Are you honestly comfortable with your abilities? I know I have to think about it every time I go fly and always find some fault with my performance. In a previous post it appeared I aggravated some pilots or CFI's with saying I felt many pilots didn't know how to fly slowly these days. I have seen a slow errosion of what used to be basic pilot skills and level of performance with too many pilots compared with acceptable standards not that many years ago. Now if that won't open a bucket of worms I'll be surprised. Fact is, just making the FAA minimums doesn't necessarily make you safe or even a good pilot. Care to weigh in on the issues? I'll be polite in my responses in accordance to the way they are presented to me. No axe to grind, no ego to inflate (its big enough already thank you) just a sincere desire to make pilots think a little more about what they are doing when they go flying. You need to make your own mistakes to hopefully learn from them and avoid repetition. Ol Shy & Bashful I would not have posted in this thread had you not referenced the other thread peripherally in your comments. Your points are well taken, and have validity. It's true that there are many pilots out here who don't spend nearly enough time in the left corner of the envelope, and doing so would make them much safer pilots. I see only one difference between my approach to flying and what you have stated here. I have a problem with your sentence as follows; "You need to make your own mistakes to hopefully learn from them and avoid repetition." In my end of the business thinking like this will kill you. It's for this reason that I never taught my students, both primary and aerobatic, to think this way. Although it's fine to learn from a mistake, and by all means, pilots should learn from mistakes if they live through that mistake, but my thinking on this leans heavily toward the prevention of mistakes, rather than learning from them. Most good pilots I know have no problem understanding that time spent in the left corner is time well spent, and most CFI's doing the job properly spend plenty of time exploring slow flight and flight at and near CLmax with their students. This is especially true of aerobatic instructors. Plainly put, if instructors are not doing this, they are not doing the job properly. It behooves all pilots to stay current by practicing flight in the left corner, and what you have said about that is highly relevant to flight safety. Dudley Henriques International Fighter Pilots Fellowship Commercial Pilot/CFI Retired for private email; make necessary changes between ( ) dhenriques(at)(delete all this)earthlink(dot)net |
#4
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#5
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Jim
A lot of my flying is just as you describe it. I frequently show students how to fly with zero indicated and discuss the reasons for it. When they get it figured out they are a lot more relaxed flying in that slow speed regime and pay more attention to other clues. Not uncommon to have them do it under the hood as well. There are no great mysteries about it all, or there shouldn't be. When I fly with low time CFI's I often challenge them to show me precision maneuvers with zero IAS and maintain standards. It helps them to see a different level of performance and increased standards that many have not been exposed to. Take it a step further, while crop dusting, in the turns you are frequently very deep in the stall region to the point the stall warning is always going off. A lot of the pilots I have worked with just turn it off so they aren't distracted by it and simpy fly the airplane by feel. If that can be done safely by hundreds if not thousands of spray pilots, why shouldn't that knowledge and ability be passed along as a part of flight training? Please note: I am not saying it should be done all the time but part of training so they can see how it can be accomplished and safely. I know of a number of fatal accidents that happened because a pilot lost his IAS indications and crashed. That should never have happened with proper training. Were you referring to something specific? I'd enjoy an honest exchange of information and experience. Cheers Rocky aka Ol Shy & Bashful |
#6
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Dudley
Thank you for your reply. On the issue of making mistakes....if a pilot never makes one, what have they learned that will take care of them when the inevitable mistake occurs? Certainly our goal is to show pilots how to avoid mistakes but I can't divorce myself from the knowledge I learned from all those I have made. How to get out again safely is the goal isn't it? Cheers Rocky |
#7
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![]() Jim Burns wrote: .... and have you ever done it in an airplane without a stall warning indicator or an airspeed indicator that drops to 0 before your wing quits flying? If the stall warning is of any use to you, you are not flying slow enough. You need to be below the stall warning. Same for airspeed, what possible use could the ASI be to sit there and hang on the prop? All your indications come thru your ass on this one. |
#8
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The stall warning light in our Aztec is positioned right behind the yoke and
all but impossible to see during landing, so we don't really pay much attention to it or bother to reposition ourselves so it is visible. The buffet on the tail when approaching a stall is quite pronounced and easily felt through the yoke and the seat of your pants. We keep our eyes outside and concentrate on the power settings and the landing approach, crosschecking the airspeed occasionally. My experience with airplanes either without stall warning indicators or airspeed indicators that drop to 0 in slow flight, thus far, has been limited to a C170B and a SuperCub. Both of which are very easy to fly by feel. I think they teach you to keep your eyes out the windows instead of peeled on the instruments. Another common airplane that is fun and highly maneuverable in slow flight is a C182RG. I think the full flap landing configuration stall speed is 37kts, but it won't indicate that correctly so the airspeed indicator isn't where you want your eyes. Jim |
#9
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It would seem to me, that as in anything we wish to be great at, practicing
ANY aspect of flying that you normally don't encounter or do regularly improves your overall knowledge and skills. "Proficient" and "Expert" are certainly not the same. Besides "learning to fly", I play guitar and other instruments. To become better at playing guitar, I often practice things that aren't really played in songs when I play a gig. What it does is make me better at many other things - "mastering" the guitar may be impossible to a part-time guitar player like me, but pushing myself to do things I might not has certainly helped me play better. Whether it is physical or mental, that sort of discipline is, in my opinion, an outstanding trait and shows a true desire to be as good as you can be. Now, maybe there are those who don't want tor need to be that good, but "need" is something you never really know about. Anectodally, Israeli AF pilots learn about systems and engineering of their jets and planes to better understand the entire aspect of flying. In a marginally humerous story (from "Raid on the Sun"), when the Israeli's were learning the F-16 at Hill AFB in Ogen Utah, they asled so many engineering and systems questions, some suspected them of attempted espionage, when in fact they were literally just doing things the "way they learned to". This helped them later modify and affect the Falcons for their raid on the Iraqi nuclear plant. Interestingly enough, many of their question could not be answered by the USAF pilots and trainers, and ended up learning a lot of important aspects of the F-16 from the Israelis. The analogy? Is there such a things as "over preparation"? Were they better pilots for this. I'd argue yes. And, in the end, when you're in a commercial plane or in another situation where your life is in someone else's hands, would you want that pilot to be "proficient", or possibly "over qualified". That's my 2 cents . . . Now I expect people (as usual) to poke holes in everyrthing I wrote, according to the unwritten Newsgroup laws that exist somewhere. and somehow, someone is going to take it personally and begin to flame me unconditionally, whereby someone will rise up in my defense and create a 3-month long posting under this Subject that, in the end, results in life-long animosity between otherwise respectable people who have a lot in common - ha ha! |
#10
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I often like to put the plane into a sharp heawind and slow it to MCA.
If the wind is right, you can get the plan to fly backward. That's right, negative ground speed. |
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