Hey guys,
I'm trying to finish up one of my ratings, and my syllabus has me doing three night flights (according to part 141) but intertwined with the required touch and go's are steep turns and stalls. I don't have a problem with steeps turns, even at night, but I'm worried about the stalls. Our practice areas are out over the water (about 1 mile off shore), and stalls in a twin are dangerous enough without having the additional issues of reduced spatial orientation introduced into the mix - if you accidentally get into a spin, you're pretty much limited to your T&B coordinator to recover (since you'd be pointing down at the water), which is the eqivalent of trying to recover from a spin in a cloud...not good. Am I wrong to think that this is a dangerous practice, or am I just making too much of it?
Any suggestions on how to ease my apprehension about this?
I'm trying to finish up one of my ratings, and my syllabus has me doing three night flights (according to part 141) but intertwined with the required touch and go's are steep turns and stalls. I don't have a problem with steeps turns, even at night, but I'm worried about the stalls. Our practice areas are out over the water (about 1 mile off shore), and stalls in a twin are dangerous enough without having the additional issues of reduced spatial orientation introduced into the mix - if you accidentally get into a spin, you're pretty much limited to your T&B coordinator to recover (since you'd be pointing down at the water), which is the eqivalent of trying to recover from a spin in a cloud...not good. Am I wrong to think that this is a dangerous practice, or am I just making too much of it?
Any suggestions on how to ease my apprehension about this?