I'm impressed by any guy that has his arm resting on an open window during spin training.
If he was sipping a my-tai with an umbrella I would be even more impressed.
How to be Uber-Cool During Spin Training
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[quote author=Colonel Sanders link=topic=7435.msg20419#msg20419 date=1510081556]
The pilots of Colgan 3407
[/quote]
That one sucked for many reasons but among them was that NASA and the FAA had been cramming the idea down pilots' throats that stalls in icing were tailplane stalls. IIRC they scared the crap out of themselves on an icing study in a Twotter and really pushed it. Since then they've gone back on their position after testing a bunch of other types with fake ice on the tail.
The pilots of Colgan 3407
[/quote]
That one sucked for many reasons but among them was that NASA and the FAA had been cramming the idea down pilots' throats that stalls in icing were tailplane stalls. IIRC they scared the crap out of themselves on an icing study in a Twotter and really pushed it. Since then they've gone back on their position after testing a bunch of other types with fake ice on the tail.
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Yes, they probably would have been alive, my point was the ‘ but it does not apply to every aircraft’
I think it is very important to emphasize this to students.
You simply do not want a student going to let go as a default.
Anyway, the tail plane stall recovery is a shole different isdue. I have a link to that twin otter in icing vid somewhere.
I think it is very important to emphasize this to students.
You simply do not want a student going to let go as a default.
Anyway, the tail plane stall recovery is a shole different isdue. I have a link to that twin otter in icing vid somewhere.
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- Joined: Wed Apr 29, 2015 10:31 am
[quote]You simply do not want a student going to let go as a default[/quote]
Would that really be worse than hauling on a bucket of AOA?
I would agree that a skilled pilot on the stick is probably
better than letting go, but as time goes by, there are less
and less of those. Hence my continual grumpiness.
Fun fact: I suspect many pilots these days could log their
time spent in slow flight in [i]seconds[/i].
Now, you'll have to pardon me - I need to go shout at a
cloud.
[img width=500 height=281]http://i0.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/ori ... 47/297.png[/img]
Would that really be worse than hauling on a bucket of AOA?
I would agree that a skilled pilot on the stick is probably
better than letting go, but as time goes by, there are less
and less of those. Hence my continual grumpiness.
Fun fact: I suspect many pilots these days could log their
time spent in slow flight in [i]seconds[/i].
Now, you'll have to pardon me - I need to go shout at a
cloud.
[img width=500 height=281]http://i0.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/ori ... 47/297.png[/img]
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- Posts: 3450
- Joined: Wed Apr 29, 2015 10:31 am
Spender Suderman tried hands-on vs hand-off spin recovery.
The results may surprise you.
[youtube][/youtube]
Check the altitude loss for Beggs-Mueller - considerably
better than using the "correct" inputs, which I think it's
fair to say, that most pilots won't perform as well as
Spencer did.
In the aerobatic community, some people recommend
using [i]both hands[/i] to pull the throttle back. Not only
does this really get the power off, it forces them to
let go of the stick, and allow the flight controls to trail.
Remember how pilots love to pick up a dropping wing
with aileron? Their instincts are wrong. They aren't
stupid - they just haven't received sufficient correct
training to learn correct, new instincts.
The results may surprise you.
[youtube][/youtube]
Check the altitude loss for Beggs-Mueller - considerably
better than using the "correct" inputs, which I think it's
fair to say, that most pilots won't perform as well as
Spencer did.
In the aerobatic community, some people recommend
using [i]both hands[/i] to pull the throttle back. Not only
does this really get the power off, it forces them to
let go of the stick, and allow the flight controls to trail.
Remember how pilots love to pick up a dropping wing
with aileron? Their instincts are wrong. They aren't
stupid - they just haven't received sufficient correct
training to learn correct, new instincts.
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- Joined: Wed Apr 29, 2015 10:31 am
um, that video wasn't a teaching aid. It was a wonderful
demonstration that often [i]pilots make things worse[/i].
Pilots struggle terribly with this concept. Like Air Canada
pilots that are [b]certain[/b] they can't ever make a mistake, pilots
believe that when they pee in the soup, it improves the
flavour.
[img][/img]
Don't do this:
[img width=500 height=465][/img]
Do this:
[img][/img]
demonstration that often [i]pilots make things worse[/i].
Pilots struggle terribly with this concept. Like Air Canada
pilots that are [b]certain[/b] they can't ever make a mistake, pilots
believe that when they pee in the soup, it improves the
flavour.
[img][/img]
Don't do this:
[img width=500 height=465][/img]
Do this:
[img][/img]
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- Joined: Thu Jul 16, 2015 3:08 am
I'm dying to know the stories behind the pics.
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