EatSleepFly
Well-Known Member
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Try taking your left foot off the rudder pedal entirely, putting it on the floor during the takeoff roll and using only varying amounts of right rudder pressure. Thanks to the four left-turning tendencies, you won't need any left rudder until well after takeoff. After you've gotten comfortable doing this for takeoffs, try it when you add power for the takeoff portion of a touch & go. It's a useful exercise, try it sometime. But whatever you do, talk to your instructor about it beforehand.
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I wouldn't be comfortable teaching a student take feet off the pedals to overcome an uneasiness using rudder. Thats not how you fly an airplane (one foot on rudder), so why teach a student to do it? This is just one of those things that you'll get over in time. Steering something with your feet is a little unnatural at first, once you get used to it, you'll be fine.
The law of primacy is a powerful thing, and shouldn't be underestimated.
My $.02, take it for what its worth (I know, nothing to you, aloft, we've already established that, so save it).
Try taking your left foot off the rudder pedal entirely, putting it on the floor during the takeoff roll and using only varying amounts of right rudder pressure. Thanks to the four left-turning tendencies, you won't need any left rudder until well after takeoff. After you've gotten comfortable doing this for takeoffs, try it when you add power for the takeoff portion of a touch & go. It's a useful exercise, try it sometime. But whatever you do, talk to your instructor about it beforehand.
[/ QUOTE ]
I wouldn't be comfortable teaching a student take feet off the pedals to overcome an uneasiness using rudder. Thats not how you fly an airplane (one foot on rudder), so why teach a student to do it? This is just one of those things that you'll get over in time. Steering something with your feet is a little unnatural at first, once you get used to it, you'll be fine.
The law of primacy is a powerful thing, and shouldn't be underestimated.
My $.02, take it for what its worth (I know, nothing to you, aloft, we've already established that, so save it).