During your flight training you’ll practice several different types of ground reference maneuvers to help you understand the effect wind has on the airplane when flying close to the ground. Here we’ll take a look at s-turns across a road, giving you a pilot’s eye view on how to correctly fly the maneuver.
https://media.flighttrainingcentral.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/05181231/S-Turn-Maneuver-Tips-YT-Thumbnail.jpg10801920studentpltnewshttps://media.flighttrainingcentral.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/05155154/FTC-logo-horizontal-fianl.pngstudentpltnews2020-09-16 12:59:022021-06-08 19:22:45Video tip: S-turns across a road
Perfection – our goal as we complete life’s tasks.While perfection is a goal, it is unlikely to be the result of our labors.At some point in time, we decide those efforts, though not perfect, are “good enough” and move on to our next endeavor.But how do we determine what is good enough?
Usually it is by some self-determinedinternal standard that may be somewhat fluid based on time available, existing resources and our mood at the moment.While our moods can swing, resources can vary, and our daily calendar fluctuates, pilots must deal with Sir Isaac Newton’s Laws of Gravity and Motion which remain constant and unrelenting.Therefore, flexible standards will not work for long in the cockpit as we continually struggle to balance inertia and power, as well as actions and reactions to safely sustain our craft aloft against the ever-present force of gravity.Our standard for “good enough” must be as relentless as those Laws governing matter in the universe.
Fortunately, the FAA, after exhaustive input from our industry, has provided us with the Airman Certification Standards (ACS). These manuals thoroughly describe the maneuvers needed to safely fly an airplane. Because perfection is unrealistic, the ACS also describes the tolerances allowed for conducting those maneuvers. The goal of flight education is to develop skills necessary to conduct these maneuvers within those tolerances.
Last week a flight student came into the office upset over the result of one of his Part 141 stage checks.He had been deficient in several areas largely because he had replaced the ACS with his own ideas of good enough – that weren’t.
How much gas do I need?How many people can I take?I am considering flying to friend’s grass strip.Is it long enough?While gravity is a constant, the answers to this set of questions may vary greatly from aircraft to aircraft.Those answers, however, are available to us in the aircraft’s Pilot Operating Handbook (POH).
The POH is like an encyclopedia for your airplane.
OK for those of you not around when you had to get out of your chair, walk across the room to change to one of three available channels on the TV, encyclopedias were a collection of books providing information on many subjects.Think of them as a paper Google from the 1900s.
Again, the POH provides the performance standard rather than that runway will probably be “good enough.”
There I was, stuck.Why?Although I had practiced “soft field” landings on pavement I had never really landed on a soft field.While taxiing over to the tie downs, evidently I found a really soft spot and the airplane started to sink into the mud.Feeling something amiss, I instantly retarded the throttle rather than advancing it.If only I had reviewed the POH on soft field operations prior to landing here.
While gravity stays the same, seemingly the weather never does.The FAA defines the weather allowed for visual flight, but have you ever flown when there is only a thousand foot ceiling and three miles of visibility?Remember those VFR flight minimums were probably established when pilots were flying Cubs, Champs and Stearmans, usually only a few hundred feet above the ground (no cell phone towers back then) and a top speed of 85 MPH.Perhaps those weather minimums weren’t even safe then and as pilots we subsequently learned an instrument rating was essential as the capabilities of our aircraft increased.
And what about wind?In what crosswind component can you safely land?What crosswind component HAVE you landed?Continuing because you think you are “good enough” to land in that crosswind can result in bruised egos or bent metal.Developing standards with your instructor regarding ceilings, visibility and wind before you fly, when there are no passengers applying pressure, or business deal to conclude, may keep you and your airplane safe.
There I was, in the grass beside the pavement, the Cub pointing at the landing end of the runway. Why?I had arranged to fly with a friend during lunch.As we walked out to the airplane I glanced at the flag which was now indicating a freshening breeze creating a left crosswind whereas all morning it had been hanging limp.That’s interesting, I thought, but there was my friend wanting to go flying and I thought the wind was still “good enough.”It wasn’t.
Flying airplanes does not require perfection, but for a successful flying career it does require standards.By taking the time to study the ACS, POH and develop your own for weather, the odds go way up on the likelihood the number of successful landings will be exactly equal to the number of takeoffs, your number of “there I was” stories will be very limited and you can look back on your flying as being “good enough.”
The place: Near Gene Snyder Airport (K62), Falmouth, KY
The aircraft: C182 Skylane
The memory: One of my favorite times of year is the late summer mornings in the Midwest where you routinely get treated to the picturesque valley fog courtesy of the cooler overnight temperatures. And a sign that fall colors are close behind.
Want to share your “Friday Photo” of your solo or checkride moment? Send your photo and description (using the format above) to: [email protected]
https://media.flighttrainingcentral.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/05170619/valley-fog-scaled-1.jpg19202560studentpltnewshttps://media.flighttrainingcentral.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/05155154/FTC-logo-horizontal-fianl.pngstudentpltnews2020-09-11 10:06:192021-06-08 19:22:45Friday photo: valley fog
Microsoft’s release of an all-new flight simulator this month is creating quite a buzz among gamers and flight simulator enthusiasts, but also among pilots. The latest edition of this long-running franchise features stunning graphics, realistic weather, and a variety of general aviation airplanes. Is it fun? Can you use it during flight training? In this video, an experienced pilot and MSFS beta tester shares his thoughts.
https://media.flighttrainingcentral.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/05161733/FS2020-flight-1.jpg7041190studentpltnewshttps://media.flighttrainingcentral.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/05155154/FTC-logo-horizontal-fianl.pngstudentpltnews2020-09-04 09:48:272021-06-08 19:22:45Video: Microsoft Flight Simulator 2020 for pilots
Editor’s Note: Welcome to a four-part series on Chris McGonegle’s experience as a rusty pilot – a relatable category for many. Chris is an Instrument-rated Commercial pilot and product manager with Sporty’s Pilot Shop.
After I earned my Commercial Pilot certificate on June 24th of 2015, I took what some would call a hiatus. Others may classify it as hibernation. I’ll regrettably define my lapse in flying as an ill-advised abandonment from sky commuting. I felt proud of what I had accomplished, while also feeling exhausted at its expense. It took me 1,721 days to earn my Commercial certificate after that first lesson. Contributing factors were responsibilities at home and work, but regardless, my training took longer than it should have.
I’ve been told that I’m critical of myself, and because of that, there were many flights throughout my training that made me feel like a failure. Luckily the flight school recognized this and paired me with a complementary instructor. But even so, I remembered the stings more than the victories. In hindsight, I’ve realized that when I paused my flying, the lack of “stings” was an agreeable feeling and mindset, and one I wasn’t necessarily excited to change. I’d fallen into the trap of “comfortability” which is married to the stunting of growth, and I didn’t see a reason to get back in the plane. The rust had found a new host.
I devoted more and more of my eligible time towards work (because it was actually nice to watch a bank account grow rather than decline) and before I knew it, I hadn’t flown in three months. I’d slipped out of currency to fly with passengers. I’d reassure myself be thinking how easy it would be to knock out three full stop landings a day before I take anyone up—but those rides were never scheduled. Then about a year after I earned my Commercial Pilot certificate, I took a position with another company that wasn’t aviation related in the least. I’d no longer be within earshot of Cessna 172s training the next batch of budding aviators. Sure, the money was good, but was it worth it to lose the sights and sounds of watching airplanes stop for Avgas?
Unbeknownst to my new employer at the time, when they were congratulating me on my one-year anniversary with the company, I was catching up with the realization that my total currency had lapsed. Federal regulation 14 CFR 61.56(c) states that no person may act as pilot in command of an aircraft unless, in the preceding 24 calendar months before the pilot acts as pilot in command, that person has accomplished a flight review in an applicable aircraft for which that pilot is rated, and also received a logbook endorsement from the authorized instructor who gave the review certifying that the person has satisfactorily completed the review. I had fallen out of the recency requirement set by the FAA and was more or less an apostate.
For years, dinner conversations would inevitably broach the subject that I had my pilot’s license and I would have to strategically explain why I wasn’t using my hard-earned skill. People would always ask if I could fly them somewhere and I would invariably respond with, “you buy, and I’ll fly,” but I knew that if anyone actually put their money where their mouth was, I’d be in trouble. During my hiatus from flying, I took countless trips with friends or family that required travel using the airlines. I’d randomly make eye contact with a first officer or captain traversing the terminal walkway and a small part of me felt that they could pick up on my orange hue from all the rust, my permanent iron oxide letter. We’d board the flight and I’d crane my neck slightly to catch a glimpse of the flight deck (without causing concern to the flight attendants) and see the glow of familiar avionics or electronic flight bags. I’d take it upon myself to assure anyone nervous in our row why the plane was acting like it was, or how the humming of the gear retracting was supposed to sound like a dying animal. I was in amazement and appreciation of the aerodynamic beauty that went into these fully loaded, one million-pound vessels to become airborne. Instead I was slumming it with the overly anxious passengers counting down the seconds for the drink cart to arrive and remedy their unnecessary tense ride.
Deep down there was a continuous longing in my gut, head, and heart to get back into the front of the airplane. A few months before my path started veering back towards aviation, I remember confidently telling a friend (after he’d asked the last time I went up) that I would get back into flying. Looking back on that moment, I’m not sure if it was the compounded yearning that had caused my voice to sternly relay that I was going back, but I still remember that moment as a course correction, one that would lead to more happiness.
Within a week I messaged my former superior at Sporty’s and asked if he’d want to grab dinner sometime just to catch up; it had been three years anyway, so we were due for a reunion. Unbeknownst to me, a few of my other former coworkers were coming, and it was a really great night at a local barbecue joint. Having all been in sales, eventually the conversation steered towards if I would be open to the idea of working at Sporty’s again and I made it clear that I wasn’t opposed. Fast forward a few weeks and I was signing on the dotted line to return to Sporty’s Pilot Shop as the New Product Manager. Not only was I going to bump elbows with the aviation community, but flying an airplane was one of my required duties! I was ecstatic.
As I settled into my new role and better managed my responsibilities, I started preparing for getting back in the left seat. I’d only been away for three years, but so much had changed or was new in the aviation world. The fleet of Cessna 162s that were an instrumental part of Sporty’s fleet were gone. The 2020 ADS-B Out mandate was a few months away and I was learning a new language that included the terminology “extended squitter” or “universal access transceiver.” There’s a new medical certificate that doesn’t require an AME? Oh, and I can stay instrument current in a Basic Aviation Training Device without an instructor? A lot had changed in the three short years I was away, but I was determined to ramp up as quickly as possible, so I buried myself in study.
I’ve heard the phrase “It’s just like riding a bike” described when getting back into a long-lost skill or activity, but I was very hesitant to compare a Cessna 172 to the 10-speed Schwinn I grew up with. I started my knowledge pilgrimage with a quintessential read; Stick and Rudder by Wolfgang Langewiesche. Next I devoured the Pilot’s Handbook of Aeronautical Knowledge (which I highly recommend all aviators reread every five years or so). I scoured AOPA and online blogs with any mention of “rusty pilot” in the title. I spent a weekend combing through the Flight Review and VFR Communications courses offered by Sporty’s. In hindsight, I realize I spent more time preparing for my return to the left seat than I’d needed to, but I was that guy who strives for 100% on my written tests, and the resources at my disposal gave me that confidence that I could pass this next flying milestone, “with flying colors.”
Finally, the day came that I would get back in the left seat with an instructor… I’d reviewed my V-speeds, logged multiple hours chair flying, familiarized myself with the latest avionics, listened to live ATC to get back into the radio jargon. But was I ready to get back up on the horse?
https://media.flighttrainingcentral.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/05170739/Airliner.jpg13562000Chris McGoneglehttps://media.flighttrainingcentral.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/05155154/FTC-logo-horizontal-fianl.pngChris McGonegle2020-08-31 09:27:552023-05-15 10:04:24My experience as a rusty pilot – part II
The moment: Beautiful cloud formation on this early morning departure
The pilot: Eric Radtke
The place: Jack Edwards Airport (KJKA), Gulf Shores, AL
The aircraft: Piper Aztec
The memory: There’s nothing like the serenity of an early morning departure. After a fun week vacationing at the beach, the outer bands of clouds from tropical storm Hanna created this beautiful scene looking east toward Florida into the early morning peeks of sun.
Want to share your “Friday Photo” of your solo or checkride moment? Send your photo and description (using the format above) to: [email protected]
https://media.flighttrainingcentral.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/05161918/aztec-cloud-formation-tropical-storm-1-scaled-3.jpg13672560studentpltnewshttps://media.flighttrainingcentral.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/05155154/FTC-logo-horizontal-fianl.pngstudentpltnews2020-08-28 09:28:282021-06-08 19:22:45Friday photo: early morning departure
Video tip: S-turns across a road
/in Video Tips/by studentpltnewsDuring your flight training you’ll practice several different types of ground reference maneuvers to help you understand the effect wind has on the airplane when flying close to the ground. Here we’ll take a look at s-turns across a road, giving you a pilot’s eye view on how to correctly fly the maneuver.
The video clip below is from Sporty’s complete Learn to Fly Course
Good enough
/in Tips and technique/by studentpltnewsPerfection – our goal as we complete life’s tasks. While perfection is a goal, it is unlikely to be the result of our labors. At some point in time, we decide those efforts, though not perfect, are “good enough” and move on to our next endeavor. But how do we determine what is good enough?
Fortunately, the FAA, after exhaustive input from our industry, has provided us with the Airman Certification Standards (ACS). These manuals thoroughly describe the maneuvers needed to safely fly an airplane. Because perfection is unrealistic, the ACS also describes the tolerances allowed for conducting those maneuvers. The goal of flight education is to develop skills necessary to conduct these maneuvers within those tolerances.
Last week a flight student came into the office upset over the result of one of his Part 141 stage checks. He had been deficient in several areas largely because he had replaced the ACS with his own ideas of good enough – that weren’t.
How much gas do I need? How many people can I take? I am considering flying to friend’s grass strip. Is it long enough? While gravity is a constant, the answers to this set of questions may vary greatly from aircraft to aircraft. Those answers, however, are available to us in the aircraft’s Pilot Operating Handbook (POH).
The POH is like an encyclopedia for your airplane.
OK for those of you not around when you had to get out of your chair, walk across the room to change to one of three available channels on the TV, encyclopedias were a collection of books providing information on many subjects. Think of them as a paper Google from the 1900s.
Again, the POH provides the performance standard rather than that runway will probably be “good enough.”
While gravity stays the same, seemingly the weather never does. The FAA defines the weather allowed for visual flight, but have you ever flown when there is only a thousand foot ceiling and three miles of visibility? Remember those VFR flight minimums were probably established when pilots were flying Cubs, Champs and Stearmans, usually only a few hundred feet above the ground (no cell phone towers back then) and a top speed of 85 MPH. Perhaps those weather minimums weren’t even safe then and as pilots we subsequently learned an instrument rating was essential as the capabilities of our aircraft increased.
And what about wind? In what crosswind component can you safely land? What crosswind component HAVE you landed? Continuing because you think you are “good enough” to land in that crosswind can result in bruised egos or bent metal. Developing standards with your instructor regarding ceilings, visibility and wind before you fly, when there are no passengers applying pressure, or business deal to conclude, may keep you and your airplane safe.
Flying airplanes does not require perfection, but for a successful flying career it does require standards. By taking the time to study the ACS, POH and develop your own for weather, the odds go way up on the likelihood the number of successful landings will be exactly equal to the number of takeoffs, your number of “there I was” stories will be very limited and you can look back on your flying as being “good enough.”
Friday photo: valley fog
/in Friday Photo/by studentpltnewsThe moment: Morning valley fog in Kentucky
The pilot: Bret
The place: Near Gene Snyder Airport (K62), Falmouth, KY
The aircraft: C182 Skylane
The memory: One of my favorite times of year is the late summer mornings in the Midwest where you routinely get treated to the picturesque valley fog courtesy of the cooler overnight temperatures. And a sign that fall colors are close behind.
Want to share your “Friday Photo” of your solo or checkride moment? Send your photo and description (using the format above) to: [email protected]
Video: Microsoft Flight Simulator 2020 for pilots
/in Fun Flying Videos/by studentpltnewsMicrosoft’s release of an all-new flight simulator this month is creating quite a buzz among gamers and flight simulator enthusiasts, but also among pilots. The latest edition of this long-running franchise features stunning graphics, realistic weather, and a variety of general aviation airplanes. Is it fun? Can you use it during flight training? In this video, an experienced pilot and MSFS beta tester shares his thoughts.
Video courtesy of @the_candourist.
My experience as a rusty pilot – part II
/in Personal stories/by Chris McGonegleEditor’s Note: Welcome to a four-part series on Chris McGonegle’s experience as a rusty pilot – a relatable category for many. Chris is an Instrument-rated Commercial pilot and product manager with Sporty’s Pilot Shop.
My Experience as a Rusty Pilot – Part I
My Experience as a Rusty Pilot – Part II
My Experience as a Rusty Pilot – Part III
My Experience as a Rusty Pilot – Part IV
—
Accumulating Rust
After I earned my Commercial Pilot certificate on June 24th of 2015, I took what some would call a hiatus. Others may classify it as hibernation. I’ll regrettably define my lapse in flying as an ill-advised abandonment from sky commuting. I felt proud of what I had accomplished, while also feeling exhausted at its expense. It took me 1,721 days to earn my Commercial certificate after that first lesson. Contributing factors were responsibilities at home and work, but regardless, my training took longer than it should have.
I’ve been told that I’m critical of myself, and because of that, there were many flights throughout my training that made me feel like a failure. Luckily the flight school recognized this and paired me with a complementary instructor. But even so, I remembered the stings more than the victories. In hindsight, I’ve realized that when I paused my flying, the lack of “stings” was an agreeable feeling and mindset, and one I wasn’t necessarily excited to change. I’d fallen into the trap of “comfortability” which is married to the stunting of growth, and I didn’t see a reason to get back in the plane. The rust had found a new host.
I devoted more and more of my eligible time towards work (because it was actually nice to watch a bank account grow rather than decline) and before I knew it, I hadn’t flown in three months. I’d slipped out of currency to fly with passengers. I’d reassure myself be thinking how easy it would be to knock out three full stop landings a day before I take anyone up—but those rides were never scheduled. Then about a year after I earned my Commercial Pilot certificate, I took a position with another company that wasn’t aviation related in the least. I’d no longer be within earshot of Cessna 172s training the next batch of budding aviators. Sure, the money was good, but was it worth it to lose the sights and sounds of watching airplanes stop for Avgas?
Unbeknownst to my new employer at the time, when they were congratulating me on my one-year anniversary with the company, I was catching up with the realization that my total currency had lapsed. Federal regulation 14 CFR 61.56(c) states that no person may act as pilot in command of an aircraft unless, in the preceding 24 calendar months before the pilot acts as pilot in command, that person has accomplished a flight review in an applicable aircraft for which that pilot is rated, and also received a logbook endorsement from the authorized instructor who gave the review certifying that the person has satisfactorily completed the review. I had fallen out of the recency requirement set by the FAA and was more or less an apostate.
For years, dinner conversations would inevitably broach the subject that I had my pilot’s license and I would have to strategically explain why I wasn’t using my hard-earned skill. People would always ask if I could fly them somewhere and I would invariably respond with, “you buy, and I’ll fly,” but I knew that if anyone actually put their money where their mouth was, I’d be in trouble. During my hiatus from flying, I took countless trips with friends or family that required travel using the airlines. I’d randomly make eye contact with a first officer or captain traversing the terminal walkway and a small part of me felt that they could pick up on my orange hue from all the rust, my permanent iron oxide letter. We’d board the flight and I’d crane my neck slightly to catch a glimpse of the flight deck (without causing concern to the flight attendants) and see the glow of familiar avionics or electronic flight bags. I’d take it upon myself to assure anyone nervous in our row why the plane was acting like it was, or how the humming of the gear retracting was supposed to sound like a dying animal. I was in amazement and appreciation of the aerodynamic beauty that went into these fully loaded, one million-pound vessels to become airborne. Instead I was slumming it with the overly anxious passengers counting down the seconds for the drink cart to arrive and remedy their unnecessary tense ride.
Deep down there was a continuous longing in my gut, head, and heart to get back into the front of the airplane. A few months before my path started veering back towards aviation, I remember confidently telling a friend (after he’d asked the last time I went up) that I would get back into flying. Looking back on that moment, I’m not sure if it was the compounded yearning that had caused my voice to sternly relay that I was going back, but I still remember that moment as a course correction, one that would lead to more happiness.
Within a week I messaged my former superior at Sporty’s and asked if he’d want to grab dinner sometime just to catch up; it had been three years anyway, so we were due for a reunion. Unbeknownst to me, a few of my other former coworkers were coming, and it was a really great night at a local barbecue joint. Having all been in sales, eventually the conversation steered towards if I would be open to the idea of working at Sporty’s again and I made it clear that I wasn’t opposed. Fast forward a few weeks and I was signing on the dotted line to return to Sporty’s Pilot Shop as the New Product Manager. Not only was I going to bump elbows with the aviation community, but flying an airplane was one of my required duties! I was ecstatic.
As I settled into my new role and better managed my responsibilities, I started preparing for getting back in the left seat. I’d only been away for three years, but so much had changed or was new in the aviation world. The fleet of Cessna 162s that were an instrumental part of Sporty’s fleet were gone. The 2020 ADS-B Out mandate was a few months away and I was learning a new language that included the terminology “extended squitter” or “universal access transceiver.” There’s a new medical certificate that doesn’t require an AME? Oh, and I can stay instrument current in a Basic Aviation Training Device without an instructor? A lot had changed in the three short years I was away, but I was determined to ramp up as quickly as possible, so I buried myself in study.
I’ve heard the phrase “It’s just like riding a bike” described when getting back into a long-lost skill or activity, but I was very hesitant to compare a Cessna 172 to the 10-speed Schwinn I grew up with. I started my knowledge pilgrimage with a quintessential read; Stick and Rudder by Wolfgang Langewiesche. Next I devoured the Pilot’s Handbook of Aeronautical Knowledge (which I highly recommend all aviators reread every five years or so). I scoured AOPA and online blogs with any mention of “rusty pilot” in the title. I spent a weekend combing through the Flight Review and VFR Communications courses offered by Sporty’s. In hindsight, I realize I spent more time preparing for my return to the left seat than I’d needed to, but I was that guy who strives for 100% on my written tests, and the resources at my disposal gave me that confidence that I could pass this next flying milestone, “with flying colors.”
Finally, the day came that I would get back in the left seat with an instructor… I’d reviewed my V-speeds, logged multiple hours chair flying, familiarized myself with the latest avionics, listened to live ATC to get back into the radio jargon. But was I ready to get back up on the horse?
My Experience as a Rusty Pilot – Part I
My Experience as a Rusty Pilot – Part III
My Experience as a Rusty Pilot – Part IV
Friday photo: early morning departure
/in Friday Photo/by studentpltnewsThe moment: Beautiful cloud formation on this early morning departure
The pilot: Eric Radtke
The place: Jack Edwards Airport (KJKA), Gulf Shores, AL
The aircraft: Piper Aztec
The memory: There’s nothing like the serenity of an early morning departure. After a fun week vacationing at the beach, the outer bands of clouds from tropical storm Hanna created this beautiful scene looking east toward Florida into the early morning peeks of sun.
Want to share your “Friday Photo” of your solo or checkride moment? Send your photo and description (using the format above) to: [email protected]