CoffeeIcePapers
Well-Hung Member
The fact that we HAVE instructors who literally freak out when you get to 90 degrees of bank is just not right, IMHO.
GA or military?
The fact that we HAVE instructors who literally freak out when you get to 90 degrees of bank is just not right, IMHO.
GA or military?
I have flown with more than one CFI who is very apprehensive about getting outside the normal 60-degrees-of-bank-steep-turn envelope,
I know of at least one school that has a private/ instrument combined course. Not sure if that is the school.You know, I really don't know. I was hoping someone else had read the article and could comment on what they thought of it. I don't normally pay much attention to, well, anything in the AOPA mag but that article caught my attention because the very topic had come up on here sometime in the not-too-distant past.
In their defense, going beyond 60deg of bank makes me a little nervous in your average Cessna or Piper too. They're just not built for that kind of stress.
Bank angle does not directly equate to airframe stress. The airplane doesn't know which way the horizon is.
Bank angle does not directly equate to airframe stress. The airplane doesn't know which way the horizon is.
yep, you don't have to maintain altitude.
Yes, it's against the rules to intentionally be there (depending on the airplane, depending on where you are, depending on what you're wearing, etc), and I'm not advocating that anyone go out and intentionally violate the rules...but it DOES accidentally happen sometimes during the course of flying. Thus, it SHOULD BE an attitude that a CFI is not nervous about being at, much less executing a recovery from.
This would all be a non-issue if basic acro was a core part of the training program.
Edit to add: I remember a guy who was training with me who was scared to death of stalls and dropping a wing. One day in a 150 he crossed the controls the wrong way in a stall and we started to spin. I reached up and grabbed the controls and locked them there to let it develop. I looked over at him, "Remember P.A.R.E.?" I told him to take his time with it or I would hold the spin. Wouldn't you know, he asked to climb back up to altitude and do it some more.........
Most flight school instructors don't fly around with parachutes, which makes that little maneuver illegal.
tried to illegally roll it 90 degrees
The load factor doesn't exist to maintain altitude. Even in a steady descent, lift should equal weight, or else the aircraft would experience an increasing descent rate, otherwise knowing as "falling". When you roll into a bank, overall lift must increase to prevent this "falling". This increase in lift occurs either through an increase in AoA or an increase in airspeed; either way, the load factor goes up. The descent is produced by an increase in drag, either due to the increased airspeed or increased AoA.
The load factor will increase until the vertical component of lift equals the weight of the aircraft. A 60 degree bank will eventually result in a load factor of 2 and a 41% increase in stall speed.
That's not what this discussion is about. It's about having the experience and confidence to deal with it when you do get there because of factors other than the sole-manipulator-of-the-controls' intent.
No, actually it won't. What's the load factor in 60 degrees of bank and -90 degrees of pitch? What's the load factor when the airplane is fully stalled, falling like a leaf, and at greater than 60 degrees of bank?
What's the load factor if I roll into 60 degrees of bank, and then release all the back pressure on the stick?
My point was that just because you roll 80* does not mean the load factor has to go up and it's very possible to do in a Cessna without going over the load limits. You could be initializing a descent with an increasing falling rate for example, there are quite a few 182's and 206's, 208's, DHC-6(see where this is going) that do this daily.
In the end, it will be 2'gs. You don't need back pressure on the yoke to produce the load factor.
A 60 deg Level turn has a load factor of 2, but that's it.
Not so. You can briefly do an unloaded turn, but any stabilized 60 degree banked turn, descending or not, will be right around 2 g's. This MUST be the case; otherwise the vertical forces wouldn't be equal to weight and the aircraft would be falling like a rock.