z987k
Well-Known Member
See, I never got the point of having that much energy to dissipate. It's not going to stall at even 30 knots slower than that, so... that's a lot of extra energy to either be floating the runway with or putting into the wings.Yeah, other than new hire training and IOE, I've never flown in the Northeast region, which is fine with me.
There are no short runways in the entire Midwest region. The shortest is 4000 feet, which is a crossing runway at CGI. All of the runways used on a regular basis are 6000+ feet.
I just remember all of the training captains I flew with seemed real nervous about getting slow. They wanted to see 120 knots until we were practically over the runway, then follow the vertical guidance all the way to the ground. Personally, I thought it was overkill, but I do as I'm told. If that's the way they want me to fly, that's how I'll fly.
If it were up to me, I'd have fun getting it down and stopped in 1000 feet on the empty legs.
I always operate under the assumption that I in fact can not roll that runway up and put it down on the other end.