Maybe you should go fly it before you instruct in it.
No toe brakes but you still had the handbrake.Just review the performance charts so you know what kind of takeoff/landing performance you can expect. The one I flew had no brakes on the instructor side, so that sucked.
I'm instructing in a PA 28, all I have flown up to this piont are cessna. please give me any insight on this plane. From take off, cruis, manuvers to landings. Thanks
Study the POH for an hour.
Other than that, it's the same wing, the same engine, the same weight, same performance as a C-172. The wing is just bolted to a different part of the fuselage.
??? Says who?
Depends on the Piper, but the old heresy bar wings drop like a rock when you cut power.
If it's a 140 it has the Heresy Bar Wing which I for one like better. It won't glide like a 150/172 but much easier to put it in the numbers. Besides that it's just another SE aircraft.
I too used to jump from plane to plane as a rent a pilot. Look at the colors on the airspeed indicator and you'll be good.
Cherokee's still have a handbrake between the pilots.
I've never flown a PA-28 that didn't have toe brakes. I remember some didn't have them on the right side but they all had them on the left.
Lots of them only have toe brakes on the left side.??? Says who?
Lots of them only have toe brakes on the left side.
Oh yeah, and they're easy as can be to fly. It's just an airplane.
I'd guess I've flown 15 140's and 2 maybe 3 didn't have right side brakes. It was an option but since most were purchased for flight schools...
I'm instructing in a PA 28, all I have flown up to this piont are cessna. please give me any insight on this plane. From take off, cruis, manuvers to landings. Thanks
says me who instructed many hours in PA28's with no right-side toe brakes.??? Says who?