I am studying for CFI primary. Is it required that I must actually enter and recover from a spin in flight or can I just go through the motions describing exactly the maneuver without entering a spin?
Thanks,
Ryan
Unfortunately, this is what it has come to..."just a few spins..."You can go to an authorized CFI for a spin training endorsement. He will take you through the motions of entry and recovery during the flight and most likely do some ground about spin awareness prior to the flight. The flight will consist of a few spins and he will check to make sure you have a general basis on what to do.
They are real spins. Even though it tends to be a pretty minimal number, the idea is that you know enough to be able to teach them if necessary (that "instructional knowledge" stuff) and, perhaps more important, recognize the signs of an impending one and recover from one that a student may unintentionally cause.I am studying for CFI primary. Is it required that I must actually enter and recover from a spin in flight or can I just go through the motions describing exactly the maneuver without entering a spin?
I am studying for CFI primary. Is it required that I must actually enter and recover from a spin in flight or can I just go through the motions describing exactly the maneuver without entering a spin?
Thanks,
Ryan
Ryan:
I highly recommend seeking out an aerobatics instructor who has a Citabria or Pitts (or something aerobatic) and getting your spin training this way.
Michael
Has anyone (did you?) ever try to wear a parachute in a 152 ???Yes to the above and wear an approved parachute during the training.
I just did mine a few weeks ago and it was a blast!! We took a Super Cub and spun the hell out of it. I was scared at first, because I had never been in a spin and didnt quite have the confidence that what I have been taught would actually recover the aircraft, but after the first one it was awesome.I am studying for CFI primary. Is it required that I must actually enter and recover from a spin in flight or can I just go through the motions describing exactly the maneuver without entering a spin?
Thanks,
Ryan
Is that before of after the initial surprise period? You've already been flying badly enough or distracted enough to put yourself into a low-level spin. I'd guess the surprise/reaction period is long enough for you to hit the ground before you can "instinctively react" to anything.Get comfortable with spins - period. Don't look at this from what is required. If you ever get into a low level spin you must instinctively know what do
Only an opinion, but I don't think the idea of recovery from a low-level unintentional spin is a realistic one.
But what would you have us do? Give up? Don't even try to train yourself into being able, if it is at all humanly possible, to recover at least into a landing attitude before ground impact?
Getting really proficient at spin entry and recovery tends to teach you the process of not getting into the spin to begin with much better than just saying you won't stall or spin.
Like doing 'recoveries from bad landings', you get better at doing good landings.
I agree. See earlier post. Your example? BTDT. Exactly.I dont think it is to save you from the result of bad piloting and bad judgement....
it is to save you from your STUDENTS result of bad piloting and bad judgement.
Any CFI knows that students will do the CRAZIEST things..power on stall and you say "keep the airplane coordinated" or something along those lines and some will STOMP the rudder to the floor and have the airplane on its way to a spin and you as the instructor MUST not only be capable, but comfortable to apply immediate action in a calm and cool manner to correct the situation.
Invaluable
I find it much more plausible that the time is better spent developing prociency at the tasks which might lead to stall spin accidents. A high degree of airspeed control in normal approaches, emergency procedures, go arounds, and takeoffs would effectively eliminate the stall spin problem,
because we are discussing stall/spin training.