Douglas
Old School KSUX
Hacker15e;1097607 It had to do with how jets with very thin wings fly on final approach said:Hey Hacker.
Is this why you don't power for altitude on final?
Hacker15e;1097607 It had to do with how jets with very thin wings fly on final approach said:Hey Hacker.
Is this why you don't power for altitude on final?
I just disagree with some of the CFI's above that having a target or a reference prevents you from getting a "feel" for the aircraft.
Are you serious? I had my USAF Pilot Slot before you even knew what an aircraft looked like.
I eventually graduated with multiple technical degrees, so I think I had the priorities set correctly. You lay a Dash 1 in front of a civilian Cadet and you had better have your light bill paid, because the lights will be on 7 days a week! Heck, we lived at the detachment once the manuals got there. Our Commander of Cadets was a former B-52 pilot, not a paper pusher, so he knew what Cadets needed and he knew what would help them. We loved that man - we would have done anything for him becasue we KNEW that he would have done anything for us - and he did. How do you think I got in the left seat of a C-5B Galaxy? How do you think I got to sit inside those Tweet/Talon classrooms at Columbus?
I did everything exactly the way I was supposed to, in order to eventually become an Eagle Driver, but family ended up changing my career and my life.
I'm not green to this business - I've just been away for a very long time.
I was USAF pilot qualified while you were probably coming out of elementary school [possibly] - if not a lot sooner. I don't know how things worked were you got yoru Pilot Slot, but where I cam from you got into UPT by obtaining your Cadet Wings. Graduating, was icing on the cake! Are you kidding me! At Detachment 085, that's how things were done. I turned down an appointment to the USAF Academy, for family reasons [not to be discussed here]. I later had to give up my Pilot's Slot [well earned] for those same family reasons. It was the most painful thing I have ever had to voluntarily do.
The Dash 1s, were to give us incentive and insight into what would be expected of us academically. Not to turn us into pilots over night, of course. We wanted to go into UPT having some idea of what we were getting ourselves into and to get as much advantage as possible. That's exactly what a combat pilot does - gain the advantage. That's what we were trying to do. I have an old friend who ended up retiring out of the F-111, sometime after having flown in the first Gulf War. He told me that the work our old Cadet Commander has us doing back at 085, actually helped him in the initial weeks of both the Tweet and the Talon phases of training. So, I know having the manuals actually helped some of us.
I don't think anyone with at least two brain cells remaining in their head, in at least a partially functining neurosynaptic network, thinks that I wrote anything convincing them that I was C-5B qualified. That should have been crystal clear to anyone with real flight experience, especially in the Air Force.
I think you've missed the point a long time ago. And, quite frankly, I'm not even sure you ever understood the question to begin with.
There was an T-38C [you know what that is don't you] that recently went down due to pilot error. Are you sure you were not the IP who trained that poor pilot.
Let me say it again: Light Single Engine Trainer -----> to -----> Twin Engine Single Pilot Certified Light Business Jet in 2 years.
That means, my training must [by definition] be unlike most others. That's why I'm asking these questions [FIRST] and not out wasting my time learning bad habits that only have to be unlearned down the road.
You don't seem to get the premise, here.
Blah, blah, blah. At what point will you drop your faulty ego long enough to actually have an epiphany about what the underlying premise is here? Quite frankly, this thread is not about your and your Tank Killer. This thread is about ME NOT KILLING MYSELF BECAUSE I DID SOMETHING STUPID AFTER HAVING BEEN GIVEN BAD INSTRUCTION BY AN ARROGANT INSTURCTOR WITH AN ATTITUDE SIMILAR TO YOURS.
That's what this thread is about. It is about me staying ALIVE.
Wake up!
I can't believe that under-structure seeking brains like yours are allowed to go anywhere near an Thunderbolt, much less a 117. You have no idea what my total approach to flight training would be, yet you've got me pegged right down to that mythical figure that you seemed to know so well in your last crack about me.
You have been given one question among many questions that I have yet to ask anyone and bingo - just like that, you've got me all mapped out. You presume way too much, my dear friend - way too much. Assumption is the mother of all screw-ups. Stop assuming everything damn thing you can't possibly know about me, or my situation.
No one was lecturing you, but you did allow your ego to pull your pants down in public. Thanks for the worthless contribution to this thread and for being a total waste of my valuable time.
Radar contact terminated 10 miles from nowhere...frequency changed approved. Have a nice day.
I really don't think they meant that instruments shouldn't be referenced.
Covered instrument flying and pure instrument flying are extremes and no CFI would recommend doing 100% of either. Maybe you don't think we agree here, but from how I read it, we are.
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It is starting to feel like "rag on FAA flight instructor" day.
Ok, that has what to do with your idiotic questions and failure to listen the KISS principle?
Which Eagle pilot are you refering to?
My earlier post had nothing to do with "not worrying about lift". It had to do with how jets with very thin wings fly on final approach, when on the back side of the L/Dmax curve. In order to maintain the correct AOA, as well as make the airplane touch down where you need it to, you have to use the stick to pitch for an aim point and use the throttles to maintain your airspeed. The techniques and theoretical discussions posed in this thread are very interesting -- but they don't change the way that these two particular airplanes are flown.
Again, if you try to "pitch for airspeed", all you will do is end up landing short and slow or long and fast. If you try to "power for altitude", you will end up....probably anywhere but where you want to land, and probably with a gear strut up through the wing if you're lucky.
The point of the post was that these hard and fast rules that many CFIs like to teach as Gospel really aren't. That there are at least two airplanes I've flown that don't work that way, and I have to suspect that there are others that I have no knowledge of. Many CFIs can't seem to get their head outside the world of a single engine general aviation aircraft.
I'm actually very concerned about lift in both the Eagle and the Talon. Much of the flying in many different flight regimes is performed in direct reference to AOA. Because of the wide potential differences in landing weights, AOA is the only reliable way to set the correct final approach and landing speed (we back it up by computing an actual speed using rules of thumb). When dogfighting, we only know when we are maximum performing in a turn (and in an accelerated stall) based on G and AOA.
If you were any more a sad representation of our Armed Services, I would have to puke on my LCD flat panel. I can't believe the level of pure, unadulterated carelessness and cluelessness coming from one self-appointed Combat Pilot having flown three (3) tours and how many sorties in combat. Give me a break. You are the quintessential mouthpiece in my ear - annoying and intemperate to the hilt and clueless about why or how you got that way, most likely.
You talk down to people like you were some kind of master of the universe pilot. If you were all that, then you would be a TPS graduate by now and/or a regular at Nellis either 64th or 65th - take your pick. So, sell it to some else who does not know any better - you don't know anything about me, pretending that you do is proof positive that you just don't get it.
Don't insult my intelligence with pretending to know something about me, or my plans. I think one of the issues here in this thread, is a little jealousy that I detect merely because of my ability to do what I'm doing. I think a good shrink could nail that one in a heart beat around here. Rest assured my fine feathered Tank Killer Driver, I have worked my rear-end off to get where I am in life to be able to afford the things that I want and/or need. So, don't feel "put out" about all that.
If you are willing to lay down the routine 18 to 36 hour work days, week after week, month after month and year after year, to join the top 1% of the professional ranks in your particular discipline around the world, then you too will be able to have the same options available to you, as I have available to me.
Stop the hate.
I would guess KISS would be your middle name. You have successfully clustered this thread, as you have done in other threads, so this seems to fit your MO. Maybe I should not take that to heart [this is online after all] but instead just realize that it is your ego that make you so deaf and unable to "hear" a premise when it is placed directly between your ears [on purpose].
You STILL don't get what this thread was all about, do you. [lol] Sad, too. The possibilities could have been endless, but instead - they are now nonexistent.
The rest of your post was off-topic nonsequitur hopelessness, thus I won't bother to retire it to the galley of shame where it belongs.
You had better bring a bit more intellect, if you are going to argue with me.
Good night, Chuck Yeager.
The point was lost on all but three (3) people who entered this discussion.
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For the three (3) who "got it," Thank You!![]()
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It is to you three (3) that I say, good luck with your flying careers!![]()
My only question now is...
Am I one of the lucky three (3)?
I sure hope I am.
Hey Hacker.
Is this why you don't power for altitude on final?
Are you serious? I had my USAF Pilot Slot before you even knew what an aircraft looked like.
There was an T-38C [you know what that is don't you] that recently went down due to pilot error. Are you sure you were not the IP who trained that poor pilot.
Sometimes I wonder about the true value of such awards.
They can be highly subjective, not carrying much prestige or simpy come from the wrong corner of the field. :cwm27:
So, my question is this: Would I be stepping too far out in front of my Instructor, if I asked him/her to provide me with pitch/power/trim settings for all phases of normal flight in the aircraft that he/she is giving me instruction? [take-off, climb, cruise, descent, approach and landing]
You could... but most configurations have similarities. In a trainer it is incredibly easy to memorize the "flow." Some chair flying should get you up to speed, and in turn make your time in the cockpit less busy looking at cards.I was thinking that I could put these on a small card, laminate the card and then attach it somewhere to my knee-board, so that each time my IP asks me to do something with the aircraft, I'll at least know immediately how to configure the pitch/power/trim in order to get into the flight attitude requested by my IP.
Sure, these things become rote real quickly.At least this way [I theorize], the basic flight segments [T/O, climb, cruise, descent, approach and landing] can be reduced to flying by the numbers, without a whole lot of time and energy spent trying to 'remember' the how's and why's.
Absolutely. Your instructor should talk over these values before you learn a new maneuver, whether it be a simple take off and climb, or a chandelle later down the road.It would seem to me that my flight training would roll a lot smoother if I knew these values right from the outset for the aircraft that I'm training with - regardless of what that aircraft might be, no?
I'd expect this stuff to be talked about on the ground anyway, but if not, yeah, simply ask.If so, how do I ask for this data, without seeming too forward or too presumptuous? I can't just go up and experiment with it on my own [LOL] until I discover these values for myself.
Changing subjects - I've seen MikeD around these forums for a few years now, and had the opportunity to meet him face to face. He's a good guy, and a good Officer. He's been a tremendous asset to this forum. You certainly don't have to like him, but I'd appreciate it if you apologized for speculating his instructing skills caused a crash where service members died.
What does that even mean?
Dang you keep me guessing.
NVM. Cessna414JJB got it.What does that even mean?
Dang you keep me guessing.