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On 1 Apr 2005 06:26:48 -0800, "paul kgyy" wrote:
I think the problem is that, with a high-mounted compass, you are looking out the window every time you look at the compass. I'm not sure how examiners deal with this. Some examiners don't care. Others will just tell you your compass heading whenever you ask for it. |
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Well, if you do timed turns and forget all the other nonsense, you
only need to know the heading when the aircraft is straight and level. Looking at a bouncing compass during a turn in the clouds and burning up a bunch of brain cycles at the same time figuring leads and lags and accelerations and decelerations with your attention diverted from the instrument panel, is asking for trouble, if you ask me. When your eyes return to the panel, you will probably find the altitude decreasing rapidly and your airseed increasing rapidly, and then you get to do partial panel unusual attitude recovery for real. By this time ATC is probably on your case about your altitude, and you are wishing you were somewhere else. How about instead (1) look at the compass and note your heading (2) use a compass rose (10 seconds per number on the rose) to calculate the time for your desired turn (4) concentrate on a nice smooth, level turn (5) check your heading after the rollout and (6) tidy up the error, if any. Not nearly as gee-whiz as all the compass gobbledygook, but a whole lot safer, if you ask me. On Fri, 01 Apr 2005 14:06:30 -0600, Ben Jackson wrote: On 2005-04-01, wrote: Some examiners don't care. Others will just tell you your compass heading whenever you ask for it. I always thought that was funny, since the hardest thing for me about the mag compass is reading it. When I practiced compass turns I did it by looking at the mag compass, even though I could see outside. The skill I was trying to learn wasn't attitude instrument flying at that point. |
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