What a moron. Why did he shut the engine off, and then why did he not try to restart it?
Would have been a NON issue if he had an hour of duel spin training. This is why it should be required training for a PPL.
Would have been a NON issue if he had an hour of duel spin training. This is why it should be required training for a PPL.
Does a "Tipsy Nipper" have the same spin characteristics as a 172?
From reading into things a little, the fellow was a somewhat experienced acro pilot working on an competition sequence. I presume he'd had spin training, but he'd certainly done many spins in that particular airplane. There's an entire associated accident report which is fairly detailed.
Perhaps less "Idiot shoulda had spin training" and more "There but for the grace of god go I"?
~Fox
A rather disturbing occurance, normal spin entry and the spin went flat. Having never done any flat spin training was rather at a loss as to what to do to recover (normal spin recovery techniques don’t work in a flat spin).
Reading his response to the video and what had happened, it leads me to believe he had little to no spin training. He said it was the first time he had been in a flat spin. He strikes me as the large percentage of pilots who have spun a 172, let go of the controls and saw it recover, without having to actually work for it.
Um, how would you conduct spin training then? Spin certified airplanes tend to recover from spins easily enough, so how are you going to make pilots "work for it"?
Spin certified airplanes like a 172 never get passed an incipient spin.
I conduct spin training like it should be done, in an aerobatic aircraft to show that in ANY airplane, the recovery technique will work, if the airplane is in a recoverable configuration ie. spin certified, CG etc. Doing it in most training aircraft is giving pilots a false sense of security for that one time down the road when they are flying some weird airplane that doesn't behave like a trainer.