tgrayson
New Member
I also teach them that with a static power setting, if they reduce the angle of attack, they will gain airspeed.
If you remove the "with a static power setting," it becomes perfect.
I also teach them that with a static power setting, if they reduce the angle of attack, they will gain airspeed.
If a pilot increases the throttle in level flight, retrims (perhaps without thinking about it), and continues along at the same altitude but a higher airspeed, does he perceive that he has changed his speed with the throttle or the yoke?
Either way, both methods are exactly the same thing.
If the FAA recommends that we use power for airspeed on an instrument approach, why change it on a visual approach?
Unless you're very slow and very close to the ground. No pitching for altitude here. And no powering for airspeed in a glider. The differing rules for different flight regimes are a key that something is amiss with the theory.
If the Seminole truly will keep the same pitch during a power change on approach, then there must be a compensatory nose-down moment provided by the thrust, although I have a hard time imagining it in that airplane (I haven't flown it.) In comparison to the C152, it will clearly lack the nose up moment associated with the prop wash over the horizontal stabilizer. However, the general rule that an aircraft strives to maintain its trimmed airspeed applies to T-tails as well. Adding power and keeping a constant pitch attitude means that the AOA must have decreased, but from your description, the mechanism isn't clear. I still suspect a small trim change.![]()
or if your really high and fast you dont want to pitch for an airspeed either. You will have to use a combination of both, just like if you are slow and low you use both.
That theory works. So do others. The other is that the methodology that is used to teach should be based on the target audience and the instructional goal.If the FAA recommends that we use power for airspeed on an instrument approach, why change it on a visual approach? what about if your doing a visual ILS approach? what about if your doing a VASI approach?
Just teach landings, stalls, slow-flight, cruise, and approaches all on the same method, That's my theory