The Rudder pedals must have been broken and the the throttle stuck at 75% power for sure

I haven't flown a 172 in awhile so I had to look at the ASI and this guy must have been doing at least 80knots crossing the threshold.
Colonel wrote: Fri Sep 04, 2020 2:35 amQuite correct. I am certain that if no one had given himif there is a mechanical aspect
an airplane, he wouldn't have crashed it
People do weird things. I used to play safety pilot for this one fellow and earned all the lunches he ever bought me one day by stopping him from driving his 172 into a hangar. It wasn’t on takeoff or landing or anything so dramatic but we had a ton of power on and he wasn’t doing anything to change that. I yanked the mixture and probably pressed dimples into the firewall with how hard I got on the brakes...mcrit wrote: Fri Sep 04, 2020 10:49 am The natural instinct when you see a windshield full of hangar and grass is to stop, and at the speed he was going he should have been able to. Scratching my head on this one
The @ssholes in Toronto haven't learned yet, that there will be"In the low-speed regime during a dogfight, the F-4 was prone to what was called adverse yaw- normally when the pilot wanted to turn one direction, he only had to move the stick in that direction.
At low speeds and high angles of attack that were commonplace in a dogfight, however, if a pilot pushed the stick to the left, the downward-deflected aileron on the right wing would produce more drag than lift, causing the Phantom to yaw back to the right even though the pilot wanted to turn left.
As the yaw increases, the effective sweep on the left wing decreases and it starts to produce more left and the F-4 snaps to the right and then into a spin.
All this happened nearly instantly and pilots had to compensate for the adverse yaw when rolling left or right by using the rudder aggressively during close air combat- instead of moving the stick into the direction of the turn, the rudder was deflected.
So a left turn meant keeping the stick centered and pushing the left rudder pedal down. This causes the Phantom to yaw to the left and this decreases the effective sweep on the right wing- it therefore creates more lift and the plane now snap rolls into the direction of the turn.
This took a lot of practice and it was suspected that a significant number of Phantom combat losses were due to adverse yaw conditions."
I guess I've been lucky. I've done a fair bit of instruction at different levels and different skills and I've never had a student do a mental ram-dump of that magnitude.Slick Goodlin wrote: Fri Sep 04, 2020 12:32 pmPeople do weird things. I used to play safety pilot for this one fellow and earned all the lunches he ever bought me one day by stopping him from driving his 172 into a hangar. It wasn’t on takeoff or landing or anything so dramatic but we had a ton of power on and he wasn’t doing anything to change that. I yanked the mixture and probably pressed dimples into the firewall with how hard I got on the brakes...mcrit wrote: Fri Sep 04, 2020 10:49 am The natural instinct when you see a windshield full of hangar and grass is to stop, and at the speed he was going he should have been able to. Scratching my head on this one
It seems to be about 10000 rupees an hour. I don't know what the maintanence is like there. I don't know if I would be confident jumping in one.Colonel wrote: Fri Sep 04, 2020 2:35 am
Pretty expensive, I think. It's 1000 rupees for an hour onIndia. Can a guy rent a 172 for cheap?
the 172 but fortunately you can get an ATP for 100 rupees.