Autothrust Blue
“If you jump on my shift, that’s just rude, man.”
Yipe.gUmps check definitely applies on fixed gear aircraft...
http://www.klewtv.com/news/local/Ma...-losing-a-wheel--168568666.html?tab=video&c=y
Yipe.gUmps check definitely applies on fixed gear aircraft...
http://www.klewtv.com/news/local/Ma...-losing-a-wheel--168568666.html?tab=video&c=y
Yeesh. Not a bad landing, though, considering he had to have known that as soon as the strut grazed the ground that things would come to an immediate and potentially very exciting stop. Seems as if he got it slow enough to minimize damage (hope that right wing is okay...). Looks like the prop was still barely spinning when it hit. I suppose that still calls for a total engine rebuild, right?gUmps check definitely applies on fixed gear aircraft...
http://www.klewtv.com/news/local/Ma...-losing-a-wheel--168568666.html?tab=video&c=y
Looks like the prop was still barely spinning when it hit. I suppose that still calls for a total engine rebuild, right? All things considered, he walked away from it, insurance should cover everything else. Nice.
It's a pretty interesting phenomenon. I'll take saving my life over saving the plane/car/house/whatever every single damned time. Not sure why it's even a choice.One of my biggest aggravations is when people try to "save" the airplane. It'd be interesting to see the statistics of fatal vs. non fatal accidents and what percentage were in rentals as opposed to owned/homebuilt. I've seen a least a couple fatal accidents around here where the pilot tried to save "their baby" and were killed trying to make the impossible turn or something similar, and a few where people seemed to say "screw it, this is what insurance is for", balled it up, and walked away relatively unscathed.
This is probably the same group that gets on their student for not calling out "GUMPS" check, as they cross the fence in a 172...
Just the other day I mentioned to my student that we were getting a bit low on approach and asked him what he was going to do about it. He proceeded to yank the power out and pull the yoke to his chestYou guys have more interesting students than me, I have to work to get a spin to develop in a Cessna, really dont know how you can do it accidentally.
What's wrong with that? Your students aren't always going to be flying trainers, and you're not always going to be there to make sure they don't land gear up in their brand new Mooney. I believe in giving a solid foundation, so I teach it in any plane to every student.
What's wrong with that? Your students aren't always going to be flying trainers, and you're not always going to be there to make sure they don't land gear up in their brand new Mooney. I believe in giving a solid foundation, so I teach it in any plane to every student.
Well....ok.
I think the instructors who disagree with you (myself included) are approaching it with a philosophy of "fly the plane you're flying, not the one you used to fly or the one you're going to fly."
An instructor can make a 172 out to have the complexity of a space shuttle by adding a bunch of unnecessary procedures which might pay off at some future date....or might just be a waste of time...or worse, fill the pilot's head with so much information that they begin to forget details which actually *do* matter.
I think it's more important to emphasize a pilot's need for future training, so if they upgrade to a brand new Mooney, they won't be ashamed to take 5, 10, 15, or however many hours of additional training it takes to be proficient in THAT airframe, rather than hopping in and thinking it'll be a super quick transition because their first instructor taught them things like a GUMPS check.
Do you turn on the make believe "boost pump" when you switch tanks in a C172 just to prepare a student who might fly a Cherokee?
I look at a GUMPs check to be pretty universal
Something that I've used in the 737, md88/90 and the 757/767: FGS - flaps, gear, spoilers.
Good idea. That is a universal check. If I ever get to do a person's transition training into an Ercoupe or Cessna 120, I'm definitely using FGS.
Ten points for whoever recognizes why I used the examples I did!
Also very good memory aid in a J3 or Champ.